HR Advocates Help Create the Right Work Space

What is the cost of not attracting the right people with the right skills to your company? What’s the cost of high turnover? Or frequent absences due to illness? Human resources (HR) professionals know the value of addressing common employee-related issues. Leaders from multi-national and government organizations as well as major recruitment agencies came together at the Steelcase WorkLife Center in Dubai to share how the physical environment can be a tool to improve employee engagement with guidance from HR.

WIN-WIN OPPORTUNITY

“Human resources needs to be strategic, not just transactional and operational,” said Kimi Sokhi, senior manager of engagement & wellness, HR workforce & volunteers at Expo 2020. When organizations focus on efficiency, employees can be asked to do the work of more than one person and feel increasing pressure to boost productivity. Yet, research tells us more than one-third of people in the world’s largest economies are disengaged at work (Steelcase Global Report: Engagement and the Global Workplace). Human resources leaders asked: What if instead of applying more pressure, we could improve engagement?

For Expo 2020, an opportunity to address employee engagement arose when they decided to change locations. “We have a new building we’re moving into soon. I made sure to be part of the discussion when leadership, facilities and real estate were talking about the physical space,” said Sokhi. Procurement looks at the commercial aspect of the space, she says. Real estate focuses on getting the most use out of the area. Human resources, she emphasizes, gives a voice to the wellbeing of employees — the need for ergonomicsstanding desks and collaborative areas for building relationships.

Experts gathered for a roundtable discussion at the Steelcase WorkLife Center in Dubai in January 2018.

“We don’t want to make changes to the space or simply add more workstations without considering the impact on the people working there,” says Karin Vidic, Steelcase human resources director for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA). “We have to consider the company’s plans. Does the space need to be flexible to accommodate a change in workforce? Do people need to be at individual desks all day? Or is a more flexible, mobile space better suited to the ways people are working? When all the factors are considered, it can be a win-win for everyone.”

WHAT PEOPLE WANT

The Steelcase Global Report is the first research of its kind to show a clear correlation between highly engaged employees and people who are highly satisfied with their work environment. In fact, the most satisfied workers have a lot of choice and control over where they get their work done. Recent Steelcase researchrevealed 53 percent of people say they can’t find the right type of spaces they need at work and 40 percent say they don’t have enough informal spaces (See Infographics). Recruiters at the roundtable reinforced that idea.

“When I am out trying to get the best talent into people’s businesses, the work space is a main factor. It works hand-in-hand with culture,” says Daisy Smith, Charterhouse associate director. “The best talent, millennial candidates, don’t want to walk in every day to an office with four white walls and sit in the same desk. They want flexibility to work in different spaces.”