Flexible Work Models are ways of working that give employees greater freedom to decide where, when, and how to collaborate with one another and to interact with customers.
Flexible Work Models are ways of working that give employees greater freedom to decide where, when, and how to collaborate with one another and to interact with customers. Depending on business and employee needs, companies may consider a range of options, such as the following examples:
Where to work options:
Employees always work in the office
Employees work in the office most of the time but have flexibility to work remotely
Employees work remotely most of the time, with occasional visits to the office or other locations for team building, collaboration, and training
Employees have flexibility to choose where they work
Managers, departments, or teams determine on-site days
When to work options:
Employees work during set hours and set time frames
Employees work more focused hours for the same output (for example, the four-day work week)
Employees work the same number of hours but with freedom to choose when those hours take place
Employees set their own work hours to complete their objectives
Managers, departments, or teams determine collaboration hours
How to work options:
Employees work full time for an employer (typically 40-hour weeks, but can vary)
Employees work part-time hours (typically less than 30 hours per week)
Employees work for themselves or an agency (including gig workers, freelancers, etc.)
Usage and satisfaction among survey respondents
How Do You Implement Flexible Work Models?
Companies that have successfully deployed Flexible Work Models take some or all the following steps:
Collect data on employee preferences on flexibility by segment population
Analyze business needs and how flexibility can improve business performance (including impact on productivity, ability to collaborate, retention, etc.)
Develop a working model that balances the needs of the business with employees’ preferences and expectations, sometimes tailoring working models to different groups by department, team, location, etc.
Ensure that the models offer support and enable an equitable treatment of the workforce
Educate employees about the options at their disposal
Test new work models, collect feedback, monitor outcomes, and adjust the solutions
Train leaders to manage a flexible workforce effectively
Birkinshaw, Julian, Maya Gudka, and Vittorio D’Amato. “The Blinkered Boss: How Has Managerial Behavior Changed with the Shift to Virtual Working?” California Management Review, Vol. 63(4) 5–26, 2021.
Cappelli, Peter. The Future of the Office: Work from Home, Remote Work, and the Hard Choices We All Face, Wharton School Press, 2021.
Elliott, Brian, Sheela Subramanian, and Helen Kupp. How the Future Works: Leading Flexible Teams to Do the Best Work of Their Lives. Wiley, 2022.
Fayard, Anne-Laure, John Weeks, and Mahwesh Khan. “Designing the Hybrid Office.” Harvard Business Review, March–April 2021.
Gratton, Lynda. “How to Do Hybrid Right.” Harvard Business Review, May–June 2021.
Gratton, Lynda. “Four Principles to Ensure Hybrid Work Is Productive Work.” MIT Sloan Management Review, November 09, 2020
Knight, Caroline, Doina Olaru, Julie Anne Lee, and Sharon K. Parker. “The Loneliness of the Hybrid Worker.” MIT Sloan Management Review, May 02, 2022.