Navigating the latest trends in teleworking, mobility, and open office concepts and deciding what's best for your organization can be challenging for an organization’s management team. However, before considering the details, the management team must stop and ask: What solution best fits the goals of our organization?
Open offices. Mobility. Teleworking. Huddle rooms. Getaway booths. Touchdown stations. Rustic lodge break rooms with gas fireplaces. There are a hundred other buzzwords related to office concepts that are all the rage today. They conjure images of fun and innovative workplaces akin to the renowned Google or Facebook campuses. After all, who wouldn’t want to work in an office with an employee work lounge that looks like a neighborhood Starbucks? But when reality sets in, and you start to think seriously about planning space for your organization, how do you navigate the options and decide the best fit for your organization?
Before you start to think about how many days a week your employees can work from home or run out to pick up the latest issue of Progressive Architecture to pore through pictures of chic offices, there is a critical first step that you need to accomplish. You must identify the goals of your project.
As obvious as this sounds, many organizations either miss this step entirely or don’t take the time to ensure consensus with the desired outcome. In addition, many organizations try to accomplish too many goals with their projects. Any of these – not identifying plans, not getting organizational support, or expecting too much – could result in a very disappointing outcome.
There are a variety of reasons for doing an office space transformation project. Some of the more common goals include:
Identifying Goals
There are many ways to identify your goals. The first and easiest is whether you are responding to a directive or mandate. In the current economic climate, many organizations facing budget shortfalls must cut expenses, and real estate costs are one of the most prominent target areas. If this is the case in your organization, your primary goal is to reduce your rent and possibly real estate maintenance costs. Other common goals driven by organizational mandates are reducing the overall square footage, reducing the office utilization rate, or resizing the space to accommodate future personnel or workload.
Another way to identify an office space transformation project's goal is to start with the results – what you hope to accomplish when the project is complete. Say, for example, your employees currently work in individual offices and rarely interact, except when filling their coffee mugs in the morning or attending meetings in the conference room.
That may be okay if their work is mainly heads-down, focused, and concentrative. But if you want to establish a more collaborative environment with a stronger sense of community, the result of your project – your goal – would be an office with a mix of space types that support concentrative work but that also encourage teamwork and communication. Asking, “What exactly do we hope to accomplish with this project?” often leads directly to the primary goal. The answer could include implementing a culture of collaboration, improving work productivity, enhancing work-life balance, or attracting and retaining top talent.
Identifying your goals will help you establish the project's direction and whether any additional work is required. Some examples of questions you may come up with, and the possible next steps, include:
In one of our recent office space transformation projects, an organization with multiple offices and divisions situated in separate locations planned to consolidate its operations in an existing building with sufficient space for the entire organization. As part of this consolidation effort, it hoped to achieve some efficiencies by sharing administrative services duplicated across its divisions (such as human resources and secretarial functions).
However, the management team members in charge of the project have yet to define these goals at the outset clearly, nor did they communicate them to the division managers to obtain feedback or gain their support.
When we began the project, it became clear that there needed to be a clearer understanding of the goals. Although the management team was well-intentioned, the resistance from the division managers indicated that they did not believe that their very different work functions could be consolidated, nor did they think that their divisions could function with shared administrative services. They could not accept the idea that they would succeed in the new workspace envisioned by the management team. Project development barely got started and then came to an abrupt halt!
Had the management team initially articulated their goals to the division staff and gained consensus from the employees at the onset of the project, they would have had a much better opportunity to have a smooth project planning process. Instead, by not clearly articulating their goals at the onset, the planning process was delayed by months until a consensus was reached. The outcome was successful, but the initial disagreements still proved costly regarding trust within the organization.
Once you have determined the goal or goals of your office space transformation project, you are still at the beginning phase of the effort. But accomplishing this initial step will make the remaining steps more straightforward. All of these steps, including introducing the plan, gaining consensus among the managers and workforce, identifying the potential challenges and opportunities, establishing a clear project plan, and assessing the effort's success, require a clear understanding of the project goals.
After all, if you can’t articulate why you are doing the project or what you hope to accomplish, it won’t matter how many issues of Progressive Architecture you read.