The corporate world is at a crossroads. A global, top-down push for a full-time return to the office, championed by giants like Amazon and Barclays, is clashing with a workforce that has grown accustomed to the flexibility and focus of remote work. The result? A widespread standoff that is costing businesses dearly.
According to a 2024 US survey from Resume Builder, as reported in Forbes magazine, eight in ten employers report losing valuable talent due to rigid return-to-work mandates. While our own recent UK survey revealed two-thirds of workers aged 25-34 are ready to quit if forced back full-time. The message is clear: offices need to be transformed.
The fundamental flaw is the environment people are being forced into. Our latest research, which surveyed over 2,000 UK office employees, reveals a stark reality: nearly three-quarters (71%) of employees feel their office doesn’t support their return, while fewer than one in three employees feel their office fully supports their productivity.
Why? Because too many office environments are still falling short — from distracting noise and harsh lighting to rigid layouts and lack of personal control — meaning there’s a fundamental disconnect from how people actually work today.
The multi-layered challenge of modern workplaces
Today’s workforce has experienced the benefits of personalised home environments where they can control lighting, temperature, noise levels, and workspace configuration. The traditional open-plan office, by contrast, offers little to no personal control and often fails to accommodate diverse work styles and needs.
The detrimental impact of office noise remains clear. More than eight in 10 employees report that excessive noise negatively impacts their work, leading to difficulty concentrating, irritation, and stress. This is according to our latest research laid out in a whitepaper titled, Shaping Future-Ready Work Spaces for The Great Return to the Office. Many people resort to measures like wearing headphones, choosing to work from home, or working in isolation when at the office so they can escape noise. All of which undermine both the desire to be at the office, and a fulfilling workplace culture.
Modern workers have grown accustomed to choosing their optimal work environment for different tasks. At home, they might use a quiet bedroom for deep focus, the dining table for video calls, or a comfortable sofa for reading. Traditional offices, with their rigid layouts and limited space variety, simply don’t offer this flexibility. Without diverse zones for different types of work—from focused individual tasks to collaborative brainstorming—employees feel constrained and less productive.
At the same time offices still lack ‘home comforts’. Poor air quality, inadequate natural light, uncomfortable temperatures, and lack of connection to nature all contribute to workplace dissatisfaction. The absence of biophilic design elements—such as plants, natural materials, and outdoor views—has been linked to increased stress and reduced cognitive performance. When employees spend the majority of their waking hours in sterile, windowless environments, their physical and mental wellbeing inevitably suffers.
And this can stretch to technology set-ups and physical workspaces. Many offices still operate with outdated technology, uncomfortable seating, and inflexible workstations. After experiencing the comfort of their own ergonomic setups at home, employees are reluctant to return to environments that cause physical discomfort or technological frustration. The lack of adjustable desks, proper monitor positioning, and ergonomic seating contributes to both physical strain and reduced productivity.
Your blueprint for a high-performance office
The solution isn’t to abandon the office but to completely reimagine it. The office needs to become a high-performing environment, and one that prioritises health, wellbeing, productivity, and collaboration. We need to create ‘destination’ workspaces that employees want to return to.
Jean Hewitt’s Three ‘Cs’ for inclusive design can be applied here. They are:
1. Embrace Jean Hewitt’s three ‘Cs’ for inclusive design:
- Clarity: Create intuitive, easy-to-navigate spaces with clear signage and logical layouts to reduce cognitive overload. Ensure consistent design language throughout the space.
- Control: Empower employees by providing personal control over their environment—adjustable lighting, temperature controls, booking systems for different types of spaces, and noise management options.
- Calm: Design dedicated quiet zones and retreat spaces where individuals can reset and recover from sensory overstimulation, complete with comfortable seating and minimal visual distractions.
2. Implement the Flourish Model
Developed during our “Workplace Reimagined” roundtable, this model focuses on three interconnected pillars:
- Environment: Engage all the senses positively through biophilic design, flexible furniture arrangements, varied lighting options, temperature zoning, and comprehensive acoustic treatment. Provide personal control wherever possible.
- Emotion: Foster psychological safety and positive emotions through comfortable, aesthetically pleasing design, natural materials, warm colour palettes, and spaces that encourage both collaboration and restoration.
- Economics: Recognise that investing in a comprehensive, high-quality environment boosts retention, productivity, and collaboration, while cutting corners leads to absenteeism, turnover, and reduced performance.
3. Adopt Professor Clements-Croome’s five-point plan
- Acoustic Zoning: Intentionally design and manage separate areas for quiet, focused work and social, collaborative activities, with appropriate sound masking and absorption.
- Natural Elements: Incorporate plants, maximise natural daylight, provide views of nature, and use natural materials and textures to reduce stress and improve cognitive function.
- Varied Workspaces: Offer a rich ecosystem of environments—quiet pods, collaborative spaces, social areas, phone booths, informal meeting spots, and comfortable lounges—to suit different tasks, preferences, and energy levels.
- Cognitive Breaks: Design spaces that actively encourage micro-breaks and movement, including walking paths, stretching areas, meditation rooms, and outdoor spaces.
- Wellness-Driven Policies: Support comprehensive employee health with ergonomic furniture, adjustable workstations, air quality monitoring, circadian lighting systems, and holistic wellness programs.
The business case for comprehensive nvestment
For many businesses the temptation exists to focus on single solutions, or cut costs on environmental improvements. However, the cost of a suboptimal workplace is far greater than most businesses realise. Poor acoustics, uncomfortable temperatures, inadequate lighting, and inflexible layouts don’t just reduce productivity—they actively repel talent.
The modern office must function as an integrated ecosystem where every element works together. Sleek interior designs are undermined if the acoustics are poor, or the lighting is harsh. Beautiful natural light loses its impact if the furniture is uncomfortable or the technology unreliable.
The “Great Return to Office” doesn’t have to be a battle. By addressing the full spectrum of workplace challenges—from acoustics and lighting to flexibility and wellness—you can create an environment that doesn’t just meet basic functional needs but actively enhances human performance and satisfaction.
The sound of success is a workplace that recognises the complex, interconnected nature of human performance and designs accordingly. Your office is not just a cost centre; it’s a strategic asset that can define your ability to attract, retain, and enable exceptional talent. The question isn’t whether you can afford to invest in a comprehensive workplace transformation—it’s whether you can afford not to.
With a design background and over 20 years in the acoustics industry, Ben has developed a keen eye for driving business growth by analysing key trends and performance across the built environment. With sharp building regulatory changes, Ben’s role is fuelled by evolving attitudes towards delivering safe and comfortable working environments for all. His passion centres on championing sustainable acoustic solutions that help improve health and wellbeing while lowering contributions to CO2 emissions.
Appointed Managing Director of family-owned Oscar Acoustics in 2017, Ben remains heavily involved in all areas of the business. He uses his technical knowledge to advance company and product innovation and leverages his design expertise to assist architects and contractors in bringing concepts and projects to fruition.
