Hybrid Neighborhood collaboration room

The New Hybrid Neighborhood

A workplace worth the commute

Despite employers’ best efforts to entice everyone back to the office, people are dragging their feet. Their reluctance isn’t about COVID. If you look at the data, far more people have been to a restaurant, movie theater or traveled on an airplane than who’ve gone to the office, according to the Kastle Back to Work Barometer. People’s resistance doesn’t seem to be about flexible work either. Hybrid work has been embraced by 71% of global leaders. They are giving people the option to work two-to-three days from home or other locations.

Steelcase lounge meeting space in neighborhood

Hesitancy to return theories range from the dread of wearing work clothes to long commutes. But maybe the most obvious reason is being overlooked. Do people believe anything has really changed if everything looks the same?

In offices around the world, organizations have adopted hybrid work policies. However, they haven’t changed their offices to support the new realities of hybrid work. Some say they’re waiting until employees are back in the office to make changes. But hybrid work means people will come and go at different times. Without changes, the office is often likely to feel empty and lack energy. After two years of isolation, who wants that? Hybrid work also means people will spend a lot more time on video calls. So, they will look for more privacy to meet with remote teammates. Or worse, they’ll do video meetings in the open and become the hybrid version of the office loud talker.

Hybrid work policies will work better if an organization’s space changes in tandem.

The new era of hybrid work means people will have choices about where to work and, in many ways, the office has to work even harder to attract people and keep them coming back. Offices will need to earn people’s commute by meeting a new set of needs: support hybrid work, establish connections, create a sense of belonging and promote wellbeing — all of which suffered during the pandemic.

Steelcase west elm couch meeting space in hybrid neighborhood

A NEW INSPIRATION

This requires a shakeup in thinking about the future of the office. The workplace should draw inspiration from a new source — the vibrant communities in which we live. Jane Jacobs, author of “The Death and Life of Great American Cities,” argued decades ago people need diverse neighborhoods to thrive. Places where homes, bustling sidewalks, shops, parks and public spaces come together and “exist in extraordinary variety.”

WHY A HYBRID NEIGHBORHOOD?

A hybrid neighborhood exudes vitality and energy — nothing is static — places and activities adapt and change. The neighborhood is where people form relationships, feel a sense of belonging and build trust.

Today, organizational psychologist and author Adam Grant agrees. “A better vision for a workplace is a community — a place where people bond around shared values, feel valued as human beings, and have a voice in decisions that affect them,” says Grant. The best neighborhoods are ones that foster inclusion and exude personality, where ideas are born and trends are launched.

This is what people at work need more than ever before.

Steelcase collaboration room in hybrid neighborhood

BUILDING A HYBRID NEIGHBORHOOD AT WORK

Organizations can create diverse neighborhoods in their workplace as a tangible way to communicate their values and shift their culture. The workplace can create the same energy and connection people feel in a cafe or in the privacy of their own home.

Neighborhoods at work, like the ones people live in, are a homebase for people and teams, departments or project teams. They include a variety of interconnected spaces that support different types of work, a mixture of uses and the natural flow. They include:

  • Individual spaces assigned to one person or shared amongst the team
  • Collaboration spaces for in-person and virtual interactions that support the different ways people need to come together
  • Places with appropriate privacy for individual heads down work or finding solitude and rejuvenation
  • Areas to gather, socialize and learn with teammates
Steelcase privacy screens in hybrid neighborhood

Neighborhoods become a destination. People feel comfortable and confident they can find their teammates and the tools they need to do their work.

For a neighborhood to truly work for people it has to be based on a fundamentally new employee experience.

A Framework for Employee Experiences

  • Equity: Create a more equitable and inclusive experience for all participants. Set a design goal to eliminate the gap between co-located​ and remote employees.
  • Engagement: Design settings for a range of experiences that help people participate fully, focus deeply and stay in flow longer.
  • Ease: Design a variety of​ intuitive virtual and physical experiences ​that are easy to navigate and control​.

4 KEY DESIGN PRINCIPLES

Every neighborhood has its own distinctive character — four key design principles guide their creation.

Me + We

Just as city neighborhoods have homes and shared spaces, the new neighborhood at work supports both individual and team work​. The amount of space for each will vary, but they support people doing different types of work throughout the day. They help people make quick shifts and give people more options and autonomy over their day.

Fixed-to-Fluid

Great neighborhoods evolve when new people move in or a new store opens. At work, change is constant, sometimes in small ways as teams need to grow, or collaborate. A hybrid neighborhood is modular and flexible — embracing change instead of resisting it.

Open + Enclosed

Privacy in the office has become even more important during the pandemic. People struggled with open office plans, after working from home, and are sensitive to their privacy. Great neighborhoods blend private and public spaces, making the neighborhood diverse and dynamic.

Braiding Digital + Physical

Urban planners are creating smart cities and hybrid office neighborhoods need to do the same. Video meetings are a new norm in the office and everyone needs to interact equally. The technology needs to be easy to use, but also the right space and size.

Receive our Newsletter

To receive our newsletter, including new editions of spaces and other digital content, fill out the form:

Magic Valley Entrance

Magic Valley Electric & Magic Services: Building Something Different

   When Magic Valley Electric (MVE) decided to build their first office in Eastern Idaho, they wanted something special. It had to be a place that reflected their values and was also an exciting place to work. Owner and President Billy Salts started the company in 2013 because he wanted to create something different in the trade. The company has two wings. Magic Valley Electric offers electrical for new construction, including agriculture, industrial, commercial, express, automation, and solar, while Magic Services (established in 2019) provides electrical, plumbing, and HVAC for the residential market. The expansive offering is not the only thing that sets the company apart. According to Salts, “We have an amazing team, and that comes from our core values. We hire and fire off our core values: attitude, character, integrity, vision, and determination. They are our true north.”

Magic Valley Owner: Billy Salts
Billy Salts
Magic Valley Owner & President

“We have an amazing team, and that comes from our core values. We hire and fire off our core values: attitude, character, integrity, vision, and determination. They are our true north.”

Billy Salts

Building Something Different

     Salts started in the trade after graduating from high school with no intention of starting a business later. However, after loving the work and moving up in some great companies, he wanted to create something special in the trade. “None of us knew what culture was back then, and the construction industry has always been a little behind the times regarding treating and valuing people. I wanted to be transparent with my team and empower them to be leaders in the company. I wanted to see people succeed and one day take my position. My vision was to build something different; something focused on our team.”

Magic Valley Conference Room
Conference Room With Workstations Behind

Bright Colors & Open Sightlines

Thanks to their values and excellent team, Magic has just moved into its new location in Boise. When you walk into the building, it looks very different than other electrical contractors. With bright colors, clean furnishings, and open sightlines, it creates an energetic atmosphere that makes it an amazing place to work. It is the same way for all the offices. With such a unique space, no one would know how close Magic came to looking like everyone else.

Environment Affects Culture

In 2018, just before finalizing design plans for Magic Services’ building in Jerome, Salts visited DMA, a lighting vendor in Boise. He had an office design that he didn’t love but was ready to move forward with when a chance encounter changed things. While walking through DMA, he noticed how great their desks looked. The owner quickly shared that the Steelcase desks had come from OEC down the road. Salts stopped by the OEC showroom to investigate and was blown away. “I remember taking a ton of pictures. We were about to move forward with an expensive build that, while special to us, wasn’t going to be different. After leaving OEC, we stopped everything and redesigned our entire office. Our culture is so important, and our environment makes it so much better.”

Magic Valley Workstations
Workstations

Culture In Action at Magic Valley Electric

The strong culture at Magic and MVE has enabled them to accomplish a massive project recently when they landed a solar project for Circle D Farms. By pulling together their whole team, 215 solar trackers were installed on 43 different sites in the Minidoka and Murtaugh counties. The entire project was done in-house, including six miles of trenching, thirteen-hundred yards of concrete, and a very tight deadline. “It took every one of us from our admin team to everybody in the field to make it happen, and we finished within two days of the deadline. It challenged us to dig deep, and that is when our culture really showed up. Our people were smiling and running and gunning and when we finished, it was a celebration. So many of us grew from it, and now we know we can take on even more.”

With teamwork as the focus and a great new office to support its new Boise team, the Team at Magic and MVE is excited to see what the future has in store.

See the full album today!

Receive our Newsletter

To receive our newsletter, including new editions of spaces and other digital content, fill out the form below:

Compromise Blog 3 Header

The Great Workplace Compromise Part 3: Managing Remotely

Dave was sent home on Friday the 13th. In true spooky fashion he got back from lunch having no idea what was going on as his coworkers walked past him, carrying laptops and monitors. His entire office was being sent to work from home with no specifications on what equipment they could take or how long they would be gone. Some individuals brought home task chairs, while others who rode their bikes had to beg for a ride home with their gear. It was a little unnerving and understandably so. Now, Dave would be managing remotely for the next two years.

Managing Remotely: Dave Stout
Dave Stout
Test Development Engineer in Boise
onsemi

When Managing Remotely, Make Information Accessible     

Unlike many who were sent home, Dave was partially prepared for remote work. As the manager of test engineering for onsemi’s industrial and commercial sensor division, Dave is used to managing teams in Meridian, Taiwan, and Bangalore, India. “Managing remotely is not a new thing for me, but I definitely think working from home is new for the individual contributors.” Dave started managing a local team before taking on his remote groups, so he had to learn a different management style. This semi-prepared him to help foster the development and the transition of other people from working

strictly in the office to working out. “In a way, it was perfect preparation for when we all came home for COVID. It allowed me to use similar methodologies for my local team. In the beginning, I spent a lot of time showing employees how to find information on what they were doing in different systems. Before, they could ask someone down the row from them. Now, it is more efficient for them to check our system.”

Eliminate Distractions

     However, managing remotely is different than working remotely yourself. “I have a wife and three kids (two kids at the time) and a dog. The kids didn’t have school and figured that since I was home, I could play. So, it was not just an adjustment for me but for my kids and my wife, who already worked from home full time. We had to figure out how to coexist during working hours while two kids were doing school online, and my wife and I had constant conference calls.”

Once everything settled down, Dave discovered that he got more done at home than at work. “I love working from home. My kids know not to bother me, whereas when I am working at the office, someone will come to talk to me, and I’ll get distracted. I feel like I’m a lot more efficient at home because I can eliminate the distractions of the workplace.”

“When there are issues, we will have daily meetings for a few minutes. I can ask if there are any problems I can help with and be done in five minutes compared to an entire hour. “

Dave Stout

Do Five Minute Remote Check-Ins

     Unfortunately, working from home does not work for everyone. Some of Dave’s team needs to be in the office to be most productive, while others split their time. With this new flexibility, Dave has implemented some procedures he does with his overseas teams. “When there are issues, we will have daily meetings for a few minutes. I can ask if there are any problems I can help with and be done in five minutes compared to an entire hour. It is a way we can stay in tune with each other as if we were talking over the cube wall.” 

“Working from home allows me to be more creative, energized, focused, and intentional at work and with my family.”

Dave Stout

Use Your Flexible Schedule To Be With Your Family

     Maintaining a good work/life balance is hard in the tech industry because it is cutthroat and busy. It can often look like eight-to-ten-hour days in the office with additional work at home. For Dave, working from home helped relieve the stress and find balance. “With my first two kids, I didn’t spend nearly as much time with them as I could with my third child when she was born. When the first two kids were born, I took three or four weeks off, and then it was back to work. There was a lot of growth in the first two years of their life that I wasn’t there for. “

“At home, I can walk into the kitchen, and there’s my 18-month-old running around and running up to me. I get to spend more time seeing her develop and participating in her development. My other kids come home from school now, and I can spend time with them. Then I get back to work after they go to bed and catch India as they are coming online. Working from home allows me to be more creative, energized, focused, and intentional at work and with my family.”

Man managing remotely while sitting at a green desk

Solve Problems In -Person

     As great as it is to work from home, there are times when Dave chooses to go into the office. Typically, it has to do with solving problems. “When we are jotting down ideas to solve problems, it is important to have someone’s full attention and brainpower. People don’t have their cameras on working from home, so I don’t know if they are actually paying attention. A lot of times, they are multitasking. So, when I need someone’s full attention, I’ll ask for us to sit around a table and hash it out, which gets better results. The other thing is the personal relationship with employees. Having face-to-face contact is important for developing relationships. It is easy to turn off a computer screen at home and not form relationships, so improving my relationship with my team will always pull me back into the office.”

*Dave will be featured in our next edition discussing how onsemi is handling the work from home compromise.

Read Part 1 and Part 2 of the Great Workplace Compromise now!

Receive our Newsletter

To receive our newsletter, including new editions of spaces and other digital content, fill out the form below: