The study shows that most workers (89%) say organisations want employees back in the office as much as possible, while 91% of non-managers believe employees wish for much more flexibility. It also identifies that almost half (44%) of those interviewed went back to the office full time, although 71% of these workers would prefer to spend at least one day at home and 56% two days or more.
The survey suggests multiple explanations for the tension between companies' leadership and most employees — factors like age, commuting length, and the current working model all impact the opinions. But the most significant differences are influenced by the position in the company.
Only 21% of those interviewed believe management and teams agree on the best working model. Managers and non-managers have different views about productivity, why people want a hybrid model, and companies want them in the office.
Most managers (58%) agree workers can be equally productive at home or in the office, but one in four (24%) say workers are more effective in the company. Only 12% of employees believe this to be true.
Although managers and non-managers agree that spending time with families is the main reason for hybrid work, there is an almost 20 percentage points difference between the two groups. While 53% of managers think family time is the main reason for working at home, 70% of non-managers say this is the biggest motivation.
The impact of this clash is severe for businesses. A large majority of workers (93%) state that flexibility is essential when deciding to accept a new job or stay in their current role. Companies that are not understanding how vital flexibility has become are losing staff. Approximately one in three managers have lost or risk losing team members over their flexibility policies. Businesses with rigid working models concentrated 75% of these losses.
Almost a third of employees (27%) think companies don't know why the office is essential. The insistence on going back, they believe, is motivated by tradition or leaders feeling the office is a physical representation of their professional success.
Almost half of those surveyed (46%) believe the hybrid model will continue to be a central part of work for the foreseeable future and close to one-third (31%) believe the office will be fragmented or decentralised and moved closer to where people live.