If the way we work is going to change, offices are going to change, too
Organizations looking at how workspaces need to function as people return to them
Communications director Nedjma Belbahri doesn't miss the olddays at Square Enix Montral, before the pandemic pushed everybody home.
That's because shewasn't working for the mobile game developer until after that happened.
"They closed the office on the Friday and I started on the Monday," said Belbahri, rewinding the storyback to March 2020.
The company soon shipped computers, chairs and other equipment to its staffso they could set up shop at home.It wasn't an easy shift for everyone, but they made it work.
Today, Square Enix Montral is a few months into a gradual process of bringing its employeesback to the office with staff consent and with adjustments to how things work there.
"I don't think things need to be the same," Belbahrisaid. "I think we need to stop hoping to go back [to the way things were]because no one's going to go back."
At organizations across Canada, decision-makers are looking at how their physical workspaces need to function, as they plan how their people will make use of them in the future even if their staffend up spending less time there in the long term.
In some cases, that's spurring changes to those spaces, including office equipment and infrastructure upgrades, as well asa rethinkof the ways people will work there.
'Work is about people'
In September, Square Enix Montral began allowing its staff to return to its downtown office on a voluntary basis.
Just a handful of people went at first, but that number is slowly ticking upward.Belbahri said about 20 people a fraction ofthe150 local staffare heading into the office each day at this point.
Belbahri said internal surveys show three main reasons team members want to be there: to socialize, toget out of the house and tocollaborate with colleagues.
"So, work is not about work work is about people," she said.
But their officeis different than it used to be, as staff don't have their own machines to use at work anymore becausethose devices are at their homes.
Instead, they haveto book the use of a floating workstation for a particular day.
Another change? All the drawersthat used to sit under the desks are gone.
"We actually sold them off," Belbahrisaid, noting they've been replaced with lockers because "nobody was going to store things at their deskanymore."
An app for that
At the nearby localoffices ofSAP Canada amultinational software company that employs more than3,000 people acrossits Canadian workforce staff are also using technology to plan out their use of office space.
Specifically, employees at this newly opened Montreal facility where SAP Canada is piloting future-of-work ideas have an app for that.
"You can, through this app, schedule your day and book the areas [where] you intend to work," said Megan Smith, the head of HR at SAP Canada.
That's key in an office that lacks assigned seating.
The app also lets employees see who else will be in the office on a given day, so they can determine who they plan to interact with.
Accelerated trends
Smith said the tech sector had been highly focused on hybrid workfor some time, but thesearrangementshave become "way more pervasively accepted" during the pandemic.
"We definitely had certain functions that were considered office functions, and now pretty much everything's on the table as a job that could be done remotely," she said.
Sheila Botting, a Toronto-based executive withcommercial real estate firm Avison Young Canada, agrees that changes happening pre-pandemic have picked up momentum amid a broader adoption of flexible work.
"Now we all understand that we can work anywhere, any time, any place with anyone in any way that we want," Botting said.
That has real estate implications as organizations may decide they need less space now than before the pandemic.
Botting said commercial real estate tenants typically lease spacein five- or 10-year increments. But thosewith leases expiring in the next fewyears arethinking about their changing needs.
"They're saying to themselves: 'Well, what is the art of the possible? What could our future workplace look like?'"
Looking ahead
ATB Financial, a provincial Crown corporation thatemploys more than 5,000 people in Alberta,has been thinking a lot about how its workspaces work for its staff.
"How we work together is a critical enabler of our culture," Tara Lockyer, ATB's chief people officer, said in astatement.
"In recent years, we've started to rethink how we allocate and occupy space to ensure we're using our workspaces as efficiently as possible and enabling the work we're actually doing."
ATB has corporate staff it hopes to see spending more time in its workplaces next year.
Team leaders willdetermine "the optimal mix" of future in-person work, Lockyer said.
Touchless features, better air filtration
Telecommunications giant Telusis aiming to reopen its offices early next year but the company expects90 per cent of its staff will still be working remotely.
"We believe the workplace of the future will be increasingly virtual," Jennifer Anquetil, the company's director of people and culture, said in an emailed statement.
Anquetilsaid leaders at Telus are being encouraged to move toward a world where the office is a place to collaborate and meet with team members, on whateverschedule "makes sense for the individual and their team."
The company, which employs 29,000 people nationwide, is in the midst of"transforming its officespaces,"Anquetilsaid.
Some of the heath-and-safety-minded changes include the integration of more touchless doors and enhanced air filtration "where possible," she said.
Headed for hybrid
ATB Financial,Microsoft Canada, SAP Canada, Telusand some of Canada's big banksare among the large employers signalling they'll embrace a more flexible future.
The federal government,the country's largest employer, is thinking about doing the same.
Most public servants remain working at home,the Treasury Board Secretariat of Canada said via email though updatedguidelinespermit more of them to"work together in larger numbers" again.
However,the board pointed to recent remarks by Treasury Board President Mona Fortier about the direction the public service is headed.
And it said the governmentwillcontinue "to build flexibility into our work models, including hybrid work, where this is possible and where it makes sense."