Workers Concerned That Workplace Freedom Will Disappear in 2022 According to New RingCentral Survey
The results bring to light a big disparity between business decision makers1 and workers2 across the following elements. Some highlights include:
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Isolation:
46% of business decision makers felt isolated and lonely, while working from home compared to only34% of workers -
Impact of loneliness on ability to do their job:
47% of the business decision makers who feel lonely due to remote work, believe it is impacting their ability to do their job -
Desire to connect more:
43% of business decision makers say they want to connect more with employees and therefore want to return to the office compared to only16% of workers -
Meeting new colleagues:
59% of business decision makers claim that they are working with colleagues they have never met compared to only36% of workers, which is rapidly driving the desire of business decision makers to go back to the office -
Confidence in return to office plans:
74% of business decision makers are confident in their employer’s plan for return to office vs.52% of workers
Conversely, the survey results also bring to life that workers are happier now than they were at the beginning of the pandemic and have adjusted to either working remotely or in a hybrid environment. For additional highlights on how workers are feeling, click here.
“Our survey clearly indicates that while workers are feeling stable and settled, business decision makers have a greater desire to come to the office,” said
Additional survey highlights include:
1. The world has adapted and stabilized: respondents are happier, healthier, and more empathetic than ever:
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50% of workers report being happier at work - Parents are two times more likely to indicate that they are happier now than they were pre-pandemic than those that do not have children.
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57% say working hybrid or remotely during COVID made them more empathetic towards people -
74% ofU.S. workers believe COVID has led to increased reliance on collaboration tools
2. The Great Divide:
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Gen Z and Millennials vs. Gen X and Boomers
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43% of Gen Z and millennials are likely to seek new employment if forced back to the office compared to24% of Gen X and boomers
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Parents vs. Non parents
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46% of parents will seek another job if their current employer changes the work model to a more in-person approach to working while only27% of non parents are likely to change their jobs if forced to go back to the office
-
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Business Decision Makers vs. Non-Business Decision Makers:
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49% of business decision-makers prefer working in an office compared to38% of non-decision makers
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3. The feelings of return to work ring true across the world
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In both
Australia andFrance ,86% of workers believe their employers are making their work environments as safe as possible to reduce their risk of contracting COVID.- 6-in-10 Australian workers would still rather work from home than in the office.
-
In
France , the majority of French parents are more likely to consider remote work.
-
In the
UK , while84% of workers are confident in their employer’s return to work plans,66% of office workers claimed that they prefer to continue working from home as opposed to in the office -
In
Germany , while93% of workers are confident in their employer’s return to work plans, 1 in 3 still expect to work from home
4. Human connection has changed forever but not vanished:
The study has found that there is a certain sense of stability and neutrality in today’s workers. While
- Physical distance isn’t a barrier: 60 percent of Americans don’t feel isolated in a work-from-home environment and claimed that connecting online through voice/video was as good as in-person communication.
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69% say connecting online through voice or video calls is as good as in-person for work-related tasks -
4 out of 5 (
78% ) colleagues who use voice communications say they feel more connected to each other -
54% say connecting online through voice or video calls is as good as in-person for work-related tasks -
62% of American workers believe that voice or video calls can be as effective as in-person communication for building personal relationships with coworkers
For more information on the study, click here.
1 Business decision makers are defined as those with senior title, influence purchasers, influence hiring, financial responsibility, and approve work schedules for employees
2 Workers are defined as those who do not fall under any of the above listed categories
About
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211201005353/en/
650-513-8712
jyotsna.grover@ringcentral.com
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