Change may well be on the horizon and is accelerating exponentially. At the beginning of 2020, many supply chain companies were firmly thrust into a remote working trajectory, a watershed year for digital transformation within the workplace. For the past year, the high-speed mass adoption of flexible working required employers to redefine and re-examine the workplace. If flexible agility, cloud computing, and centralizing data are signs of permanent change, what does this mean for supply chain and procurement organizations?
Our latest Career Insight, ‘Performance over Presence’ offers an in-depth analysis into the hybrid-remote approach; a business model which intertwines telecommuting with working present on-site. If the evolving experience-based hybrid approach is to be established, institutions may be likely to explore the potential benefits and caveats to this structure.
With this newfound employee sentiment, does the hybrid-remote model support workers and simultaneously avoid an eroding of company culture? How can leaders manage performance with geographically dispersed teams? Can hybrid working arrangements prevent a cacophony between employers and employees?
At DSJ Global, these are the questions that have defined our post-pandemic conversations. Perhaps, the hybrid approach allows employees to be part of an integrated strategy and offers a window into a more purpose-driven and brighter future for the workplace, regardless of the market conditions.