Do you remember where you were when everything changed? Early 2020 signaled a seismic shift in how people work that will have implications for decades to come. But we didn’t see it at the time. We were integrating new terms into our vocabulary like “coronavirus,” “new norm” and “unprecedented times.” By early in the second quarter of 2020, virtually every company was bragging about how quickly they pivoted their workforce to work from home. Not only were those boasts premature (there is a big difference between having an effective work-from-home workforce and simply applying the technology for people to take calls from home), but many missed the bigger picture. The employee experience had changed.
Fast-forward to three years later. When you think about “flexibility" what comes to mind? There used to be two different definitions.
So what changed? Interestingly, companies adopted the employee definition in 2020. As part of the deal to have everyone work remotely, the door opened to different types of scheduling flexibility that gave employees options. At this point, it seemed like everything was aligned. And for a while, they were. Beneath the surface, however, there was another change going on. People were changing how they worked.
Employees had fundamentally changed how they worked. But we didn’t notice. Victory had been declared on having moved everyone to work-from-home - and eventually “hybrid working” as we started to come back into the office a few days a week.
We didn’t catch this shift until companies started to bring employees back into the office because that's when the friction hit. The friction was the combination of employee preferences changing and a weakened economy requiring companies to ensure they were maximizing productivity and profitability.
How do we respond? Here are 3 steps to point you in the right direction:
It is the new reality, not just with your employees but with other companies as well. So there isn’t a way to avoid this by just hiring new staff. This change isn’t necessarily a bad thing. It means you need to re-calibrate and adjust accordingly. Think through the ramifications of this type of flexibility in your contact center. Some considerations:
It’s important to think through how you measure and manage these metrics to ensure you know what the new baseline is.
Next, you need to reassess how productivity targets are set up for success (or failure). How do you measure success?
You can choose to respond to this in a few ways.
This should be an active agreement to ensure expectations are clear on both sides. Develop an action plan and include your employees in this.
Once you determine how you want to respond, I highly recommend a new “contract” or agreement with your employees. If you do reset your targets, ensure you are communicating why the change is being made and the new expectations. Ultimately, productivity needs to be achieved. If it’s an aspirational target that nobody hits, then you’ll struggle to get your agents where your customers need them. It’s not about making people work harder, it’s about getting the right number of agents at the right time so your customers can connect with you.
I’ve talked with operations leaders who have done this a few different ways.
In summary, the landscape has changed in terms of flexibility in the workplace. Many businesses have not yet caught on and are trying to either make things go back to the old way (e.g. just bringing staff back into the office) or are trying to make scheduling flexibility work in place of what employees really want in flexibility. Either approach will cause your best performers to flee. Great employees have options and the companies that adjust to the new flexible needs of employees will attract and retain the best talent.