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Microsoft's Work Trend Index report reflects on one year of remote workThe results of Microsoft's first-annual Work Trend Index, The Next Great Disruption is Hybrid Work - Are We Ready?, has revealed seven hybrid work trends every business leader needs to know as we enter this new era of work. ![]() Image source: Getty Images The report indicates that business leaders should resist the urge to see hybrid work as business as usual. It will require the rethinking of long-held assumptions. “The choices you make today will impact your organisation for years to come. It’s a moment that requires clear vision and a growth mindset,” says Jared Spataro, corporate vice president for Microsoft 365. “These decisions will impact everything from how you shape culture, to how you attract and retain talent, to how you can better foster collaboration and innovation.” The findings suggest that this last year has fundamentally changed the nature of work:
It also shows that we are on the cusp of a workplace disruption:
In short, addressing flexible work will impact who stays, who goes, and who joins a company. To help organisations through the transition, the 2021 Work Trend Index outlines findings from a study of more than 30,000 people in 31 countries and analyses trillions of aggregate productivity and labour signals across Microsoft 365 and LinkedIn. It also includes perspectives from experts who have studied collaboration, social capital, and space design at work for decades. The report uncovers seven hybrid work trends every business leader needs to know as we enter this new era of work:
In addition to uncovering what’s at stake with the future of work, the Work Trend Index identifies five strategies for business leaders as they begin to make the necessary shift:
“During this pandemic we’ve observed a swift acceleration of certain pre-Covid trends. But perhaps one of the most exciting trends is this rise in remote work. As opportunity is democratised with remote work and talent movement, we’ll see a spread of skills across the country and this is the time for business leaders to take the opportunity to access to different skills and talent not previously available to them,” says Karin Kimbrough, chief economist, LinkedIn. To view the full findings, visit Microsoft’s Worklab, a digital publication about the future of work. |