Big firms ‘double down on office mandates’ as hybrid proves more productive

-

According to a report by sales software firm Pipedrive released on Wednesday, 8 percent of large firms now require staff back in the office, compared with 4 percent of micro-companies. Despite this, 57 percent of employees still work in hybrid arrangements, one in five are fully remote and a third say they are more productive outside the office.

The report shows a strong relationship between job satisfaction and results. Staff who are very satisfied with their work model achieve 69 percent of sales targets, while those who are very dissatisfied reach only 29 percent.

Hybrid and four-day week schedules show the highest satisfaction levels. Workers on four-day weeks rated their work-life balance at 4.10 out of five, with 69 percent saying productivity improved. But mismatches in preference can impact performance as employees required to work remotely despite preferring the office hit only 40 percent of their sales targets last year.

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Overtime also appears ineffective. While three-quarters of employees said they work beyond their contracted hours, those sticking to standard hours were more likely to hit their goals.

AI and flexibility form a new performance foundation

Sales performance across the sector has dipped, with just 57 percent of professionals hitting their targets in 2024, the lowest in five years. However, companies combining flexible models with artificial intelligence tools are seeing better outcomes.

More than a third of sales staff and four in 10 marketers have adopted AI, particularly for content generation, lead scoring and material summaries. Among users, 74 percent report improved productivity and half report stronger performance. Two-thirds say AI saves them up to five hours a week.

Younger workers are leading adoption, with those aged 18 to 25 twice as likely to use AI compared with over-65s and report better work-life balance as a result.

“The old formula of longer hours for greater results is broken,” said Sean Evers, vice president of sales and partner at Pipedrive. “Today, teams must have the tools, autonomy and trust they need to thrive in a very different working and economic environment. AI and working flexibility are the new foundation for high performance. But technology alone is not the cure for burnout; leadership must prioritise well-being and sustainable productivity to nurture the human talent at the heart of high performing businesses.”

Evers said his company had experienced “great leaps and bounds in pro-flexible policy in the UK, with the Flexible Working Act mandating that companies ‘must consider flexible working requests in a reasonable manner’”.

He added that the “research revealed that those who are very satisfied with current work models is about twice as high among those working mainly or fully remotely compared to those working fully on-site. For enterprise teams, presenteeism in the office is not working. Hybridity, alongside strategic AI adoption, will prove the drivers for modern business”.

Practical strategies for employers navigating hybrid and RTO

Experts suggest that employers can avoid the pitfalls of rigid RTO mandates by:

  • Focusing on performance outcomes rather than office attendance
  • Gathering employee feedback before changing work arrangements
  • Introducing office days gradually to prevent disengagement
  • Ensuring hybrid frameworks are clearly structured and communicated
  • Addressing proximity bias by linking promotions to results, not presence
  • Using mentoring and digital collaboration tools to support career development
  • Taking steps to prevent overwork, given the lack of correlation between long hours and results

Balancing flexibility and business objectives

Independent research reinforces the scale of resistance to rigid office requirements. Surveys by King’s Business School show that less than half of UK workers would agree to return to the office five days a week, down from more than half three years ago. The share of employees prepared to quit if forced back full-time has doubled, with women and parents among the most resistant.

Academics recommend formalising hybrid policies, investing in remote work technology and coordinating office attendance strategically to preserve collaboration while protecting work-life balance.

Return-to-office mandates are becoming more common among large companies, but hybrid and remote models continue to drive satisfaction, productivity and retention, observers say. Employers are being urged to combine flexibility with investment in technology, employee input and cultural change if they want to sustain performance in a shifting workplace landscape.

William Furney is a Managing Editor at Black and White Trading Ltd based in Kingston upon Hull, UK. He is a prolific author and contributor at Workplace Wellbeing Professional, with over 127 published posts covering HR, employee engagement, and workplace wellbeing topics. His writing focuses on contemporary employment issues including pension schemes, employee health, financial struggles affecting workers, and broader workplace trends.

Latest news

Transgender staff excluded from single-sex toilets under new equality guidance

Transgender people must be excluded from single-sex toilets and changing rooms that correspond with their lived gender under updated...

Simon Coker: Closing the emotional gap – why AI in the workplace is as much a human challenge as a technological one

AI adoption is transforming how work gets done across every sector. But its deeper impact is less visible: it is reshaping how people feel about their work.

Employment tribunal delays stretch towards 2030 as lawyers warn system is nearing collapse

Employment tribunal hearings are being delayed for years as lawyers warn mounting backlogs are undermining workplace justice.

Keeping culture and purpose at the centre of a growing fintech

A fintech people leader explains how culture, wellbeing and purpose are being protected during rapid business growth.
- Advertisement -

Migrant worker with no right to work in UK wins discrimination case against employer

An employment tribunal has ruled that a migrant worker without the legal right to work in Britain can still pursue successful discrimination claims.

Government to replace some GP sick notes with return-to-work plans

Workers in four English regions will be directed towards personalised health and employment support as ministers test alternatives to GP-issued fit notes.

Must read

Kirsty Taylor: Customer Service. Or Do We Mean Disservice?

All too often customer service is just the name of a department. The UK doesn’t sparkle when it comes to customer service standards, especially in larger organisations. Since very high standards of customer service are close to my working heart, regular readers of this blog will have heard me gnash my teeth over a number of bad service experience over the years. Quite a few involve telecoms companies, but incidents of poor service are not localised only to this area.

Jimmy Fong: The role of applicant authentication in hiring compliance

The latest technology means that businesses can verify the identity of job applicants while respecting both data privacy laws and hiring compliance regulations, says Jimmy Fong.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you