Encouraging your people back to the office and ensuring they want to keep coming requires a thorough plan and communication strategy. You want your employees to feel excited, inspired and safe when they return. A good starting point is recapping the importance of the physical workplace.

Before you start: Remember the benefits of the workplace

Leadership teams need to be aligned on the benefits of being in the office. This makes planning easier and ensures these key messages are communicated clearly to employees. Some of the key benefits include:

Strengthen company culture

Remote working has left some employees feeling disconnected from the business and their colleagues. The office provides the perfect setting to reignite company culture.

Download checklist here


Anomaly, London

1. Develop a return to the office plan

The return to the office is multi-faceted, making a comprehensive plan a necessity. Which employees will have responsibility for rolling out the plan? How will you address employees that are reluctant to return? How will you communicate the plan? How will flexibility and autonomy of the individual be retained whilst balancing what the business needs?

Here are some of things you need to do to create a back-to-the-office plan:

  • 1.1 Form a back-to-the-office team, including:

    • Human Resources
    • Property teams
    • Someone from the board
    • Facilities management
    • Wellbeing champion and/or diversity and inclusion representative
    • The IT department
  • 1.2 Collect data to inform all your changes

    • Workplace survey
    • Focus groups to hear more detailed feedback (can be done virtually)
    • Interviews with department heads to gather their needs

    Ask your people about:

    • Their expectations (how many days they need/ want to be in the office)
    • Their anxieties and concerns
    • What they expect from the office upon their return

    Note: a good workplace consultant can help with the survey and discovery process.

  • 1.3 Hybrid working

    If you plan to adopt hybrid working, define and clearly communicate your hybrid working policy.

    • Set out expectations for mandatory office days
    • Confirm office hours when people are in the office
    • Plan for the maximum number of people on site, including employees and visitors
    • Create a company-wide shared calendar so employees can see when colleagues will be in the office
    • Enhance meeting rooms with technology that support equal experiences for all attendees, whether in the room or on video
Hyundai, Leatherhead

2. Make the office a 'destination'

Employees have increased expectations of what the office is and should provide. Chances are that you will need to reimagine your workplace to meet those expectations. To exceed those expectations, you need to make your workplace a destination – somewhere they'll want to be.

  • 2.2 Provide collaboration spaces

    Assess the number of breakout and collaboration spaces. With the return to offices your staff will need more spaces for collaboration. Numerous research studies have shown this to be the primary reason people want to go back to the office.

    • Provide more sofas and comfortable seating
    • Install high tables for impromptu team meetings
    • Have plenty of white boards or interactive smart boards for collaboration
    • Stock fridges with drinks and snacks
    • Equip spaces with technology to ensure those remotely can access and input equally
    • Install space booking technology so staff can reserve rooms; this will also help to track usage
  • 2.3 Undergo a furniture audit

    • Determine what to keep or refurbish
    • Donate, recycle or upcycle unwanted items including offering unwanted items to employees for their home working
    • Determine what new furniture is needed
    • Consider environmental credentials of new items
    • Consider staff wellbeing when selecting furniture, ensuring choices meet all diversity, equity and inclusion considerations
  • 2.4 Create more focus areas

    • Assess the number of focus areas and quiet spaces as many people will have been used to quiet working at home
    • Consider installing phone booths for private phone calls
    • Upgrade soundproofing on all rooms to prevent frustration
  • 2.5 Provide wellbeing spaces

    • Consider spaces for; chilling out, decompression, mother and baby, prayer, mental health and first aid
    • Add biophilia to include: natural light, living walls, plants, water features
    • Establish guidance about what wellbeing spaces are for and how staff can use them
  • 2.6 Give people the comforts of home

    • Establish guidance for employees on how they can personalise their space
    • Offer tailored ergonomic solutions such as anti-glare screens and lumbar support
    • Give people sit-stand desks to encourage movement to help them feel better
    • Provide a variety of spaces for people to work
  • 2.7 Use graphics to create a sense of purpose

    • Use your brand colours and logos to strengthen the sense of belonging
    • Visually communicate the brand identity and ethos through photographs and iconography
    • Use a graphic wall to tell a story of the brand's history and vision
  • 2.1 Determine how many desks you need

    As fewer people will be using the office at the same time, take the opportunity to reduce the number of workstations. This will enable you to create a variety of spaces that people will love.

The Body Shop, London

3. Communication

A communications strategy is crucial to underpin your return-to-the-office plan.

You'll need to have your key messages agreed and ready to share frequently across multiple channels. This is your chance to extol the benefits of the office so that people can buy into the return.

BAE / Royal Navy, Portsmouth
  • 3.1 Recruit internally for 'back-to-the-office' champions

    • People who advocate being in the office
    • Social influencers
    • Skilled motivators
    • Know your business inside-out
    • Natural communicators
  • 3.2 Include in your communications plan the following channels

    • Emails, including newsletters and direct communications from the board
    • Meetings and 'town hall' events
    • Intranet postings
    • Explainer videos
    • Conference calls
    • Posters
    • Leaflets
    • FAQs
    • Office etiquette guides

4. Implement your plan

  • 4.1 Make the physical changes to your office

    • Share your employee research with a workplace designer to give ideas on how to implement a destination workplace
    • Engage a fit out company to make the changes before people return
  • 4.2 Create a 'welcome back' event

    • Host an event on the first day back. Go over the practicalities of the return but also treat it as a celebratory event. Include a talk from the most senior person
    • Provide food, snacks and drinks
    • Train front of house staff with key messages
  • 4.3 Give people room to work

    • Re-orientate desks following the space plan assessment
    • Retain a clear desk policy
    • Ensure some desks have more space around them for employees who may be nervous about social distancing
    • Identity pinch-points and how these could be alleviated
  • 4.4 Prepare meeting rooms and communal areas

    • Ensure cleaning materials are available
    • Widen walkways where possible
    • Ensure complete compliance with building and fire regulations
    • Make sure all meeting room audio visual is tested and working properly
  • 4.5 Lead by example

    • As your people return, your leaders must lead by example. If your company mandates that employees are in Tuesday to Thursday, senior leaders must be present on those days or all will be lost
  • 4.6 Check services are in order

    Air quality monitoring and control is a primary factor in the health of the work environment and a key concern for staff on the return to the office.

    Heating and ventilation :

    • Full and rigorous inspection prior to returning to the office
    • Ensure optimum levels of air change and ventilation can be achieved
    • Ongoing occupancy monitoring and measuring to maintain optimum levels

    Touch points:

    • Frequent touch points should be considered as priority cleaning areas including WCs flush/taps, biometric pads, kitchens and door handles
Bottomline Technologies, Theale

5. Review

Hybrid work is an evolving process. What works now may not in six months, so be prepared to adapt constantly. Regular communication with employees through surveys and informal chats is essential.

  • 5.1 Follow-up research

    • Run a follow-up staff survey to see how things are working
    • Undertake a utilisation study to see how the space is being used
    • Gather feedback from the 'back-to-the-office' champions
  • 5.2 Measure the success

    • How much of the office is being utilised
    • Absentee data
    • Recruitment and retention statistics
    • Levels of engagement and motivation
    • Diversity and inclusion measures
    • Staff wellbeing statistics
    • Productivity statistics
Morgan Sindall, London
BAE / Royal Navy, Portsmouth