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Human Connection Is the Key to Our Hybrid Future (thriveglobal.com)

 

The future of the workplace, as many have noted, is going to be hybrid — with most companies opting for some combination of in-person and remote work. Knowing what this hybrid workplace will look like is, in a sense, the easy part. But more important, and more complicated, is the how: How are we going to work together effectively in this hybrid world? How can companies set people up for success and create environments that foster creativity, belonging and a sense of purpose when their workforce is distributed? It’s going to take a more human workplace, centered above all on relationships — with our colleagues, with our friends and families and with technology. Companies that realize this, and act on it, will be poised to win the future.

Our collective experience of the pandemic has taught us so much about the importance of relationships — in every aspect of our lives. As so much was stripped away, we learned what we truly value and what we can live without. For many of us, human connection was what we missed most — a non-negotiable pillar of our happiness and well-being. And as we emerge from the pandemic, we havea renewed appreciation for how central our relationships are in our lives.

This centrality is backed by ample research. The Harvard Study of Adult Development, a longitudinal study that began following Harvard sophomores in 1938 and is still running, found that close relationships arethe single biggest factor in our happiness —more thanmoney, fame and other outward forms of success. According to Gallup, employees who reported having a close friend at work are seven times more likely to be engaged in their jobs. And perhaps not surprisingly, our relationships directly impact our health, with studies showing that our social ties boost our immune system and increase our longevity.

Ultimately, the quality of our relationships — both at work and at home — is deeply connected to our well-being. Companies are realizing that human qualities like empathy, compassion, creativity and collaboration are increasingly essential. They’re also the building blocks of relationships. But they rise and fall along with our well-being. So making a more human-focused workplace is about designing well-being into the fabric of work itself, and moving away from the idea of well-being as an add-on. Leaders and managers who role-model a more human-focused way of working by being open and authentic about taking care of their own well-being will give permission for others to do the same.

To read more of Arianna Huffington and Jen Fisher's article, please click here.

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