Physical Health Plan
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Fitness
  • Mental Health
  • Recipes
  • Workouts
  • Food & Nutrition
  • Home
  • Fitness
  • Mental Health
  • Recipes
  • Workouts
  • Food & Nutrition
No Result
View All Result
Physical Health Plan
No Result
View All Result
Home Uncategorized

One or Two Days in the Office Is the ‘Sweet Spot’ of Hybrid Work

Related articles

What Should You Do If You’re in a Car Accident While Out of State?

Case study: Snapsheet’s virtual claims management technology

ust one or two days in the office is the ideal setup for hybrid work, according to a new study, as it provides workers with the flexibility they crave without the isolation of going fully remote.

The findings, in a paper from Harvard Business School, were based on an experiment in the summer of 2020 where 130 administrative workers were randomly assigned to one of three groups over nine weeks. Some spent less than 25% of their work days in the office, some were in more than 40% of the time, while a third “intermediate” cohort landed in the middle, translating to a day or two per week. That subset turned out more original work than the other groups, and “this difference was significant,” the authors wrote.

“Intermediate hybrid work is plausibly the sweet spot, where workers enjoy flexibility and yet are not as isolated compared to peers who are predominantly working from home,” said the paper, co-authored by Harvard associate professor Prithwiraj Choudhury. “Intermediate hybrid might offer the best of both worlds.”

The study, a rarity in that it examines actual hybrid worker outcomes rather than just their preferences, comes as companies like Apple Inc., Bank of America Corp. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google are nudging workers back into the office without a clear sense of the ideal balance between remote and in-person schedules.

Research co-authored by Stanford University professor Nick Bloom has found that employers expect nearly a quarter of working days to be spent at home going forward, but a “sizable gap” exists between what employers and employees desire when it comes to the days required to be in the office.

That discrepancy was made clear by a survey released Tuesday of 200 senior executives, who said that primarily re mote workers are disadvantaged and have fewer opportunities compared with those who work mostly in the office. The survey, commissioned by Vyopta Inc., which helps companies manage their workplace collaboration and communication systems, also found that leaders simply don’t trust most staffers’ ability to work remotely. Still, nearly half of the executives surveyed said they failed to give workers the tools to be as engaged as their in-person counterparts.

Choudhury’s research will likely frustrate bosses — not to mention civic leaders like New York City Mayor Eric Adams — who have prodded workers to get back to their desks most of the time, arguing that collaboration and corporate culture suffer when people work from home. The Harvard paper analyzed more than 30,000 emails sent by the administrative workers, using textual analysis to gauge the novelty of their output. It found that the hybrid group performed better, and got better ratings from managers, than those who were primarily at home or mainly in the office.

In addition, the researchers analyzed polling data from the start of the pandemic to conclude that those who come into the office just a few days a week don’t feel they’re missing out on things like mentorship, as fully-remote workers sometimes do.

“Work from home arrangements allow workers to capture the benefits of a productive and enjoyable workplace almost as much as those workers who are always in the office,” the paper said. “Our results consistently suggest that intermediate levels of WFH may result in both enhanced novelty of work products and greater work-related communication.”

The key with hybrid arrangements, though, is organizing things so that teams are in the office together on the same days, preventing the problem of workers commuting in only to spend half their day on Zoom calls with remote colleagues.

“You want people to try and come in together, so office time is together time,” Bloom said by email. “Well-organized hybrid does seem to be the sweet spot.”

Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

[Read More…]

Previous Post

Court Won’t Intervene on Request to Show Morgan & Morgan’s Relationship with Doctors

Next Post

Putting diversity at the heart of business culture

Related Posts

Uncategorized

What Should You Do If You’re in a Car Accident While Out of State?

October 9, 2024
Uncategorized

Case study: Snapsheet’s virtual claims management technology

May 20, 2022
Uncategorized

Arbella Insurance partners up to launch Insurance Academy

May 20, 2022
Uncategorized

Ford Recalls 39,000 U.S. SUVs After Engine Fire Reports

May 20, 2022
Uncategorized

Growth of Massive New Mexico Wildfire Slowed

May 20, 2022
Uncategorized

Policies’ Arbitration, AOB Endorsements are Unconstitutional, Florida Lawsuit Claims

May 20, 2022

Search..

No Result
View All Result

Subscribe Us

By clicking submit, I authorize Physical Health Plan and its affiliated companies to: (1) use, sell, and share my information for marketing purposes, including cross-context behavioral advertising, as described in our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, (2) supplement the information that I provide with additional information lawfully obtained from other sources, like demographic data from public sources, interests inferred from web page views, or other data relevant to what might interest me, like past purchase or location data, (3) contact me or enable others to contact me by email with offers for goods and services from any category at the email address provided, and (4) retain my information while I am engaging with marketing messages that I receive and for a reasonable amount of time thereafter. I understand I can opt out at any time through an email that I receive, or by clicking here

Recommended

Step by Step Instructions to Choose the Right Running Chews

December 24, 2021

Hot Yoga Is No Better for You Than Regular Yoga, Study Says

December 23, 2021
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms Of Service
  • Unsubscribe
  • Privacy Choices

© 2025 Physical Health Plan. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Fitness
  • Mental Health
  • Recipes
  • Workouts
  • Food & Nutrition

© 2025 Physical Health Plan. All Rights Reserved.

Skip to content
Open toolbar Accessibility Tools

Accessibility Tools

  • Increase TextIncrease Text
  • Decrease TextDecrease Text
  • GrayscaleGrayscale
  • High ContrastHigh Contrast
  • Negative ContrastNegative Contrast
  • Light BackgroundLight Background
  • Links UnderlineLinks Underline
  • Readable FontReadable Font
  • Reset Reset