HR Magazine - Levitt Consulting
Transcription
HR Magazine - Levitt Consulting
A Humanistic Approach to ff & # New office designs can boost employee BY DOTT'TINIC BNNCIVENGA he next, greatest idea for Hewlett-Packard Co.'s multifuncionpinter/fax,/copy machines and high performance ink jet printers may be bom on a new sort of boulevard for dreamers. communication and productivity while cutting overhead. But organizations can't Nestled in a 1.1-million-square-foot research and development facility about 25 miles north of San Diego-amid 3,000 ofEce cubicles-sit 14 environmental engineers and site services employees' They spend their days in an open area filled with portable fumiture. Their work space is a free-form enperiment where teamwork is emphasized and personal space is kept to a minimum. Cutting through the area is a boulelard, where Sroups of computer and engineering employees from other divisions can congregate on thet way to the coffee machine to informally discuss ideas and approaches to new Projects. "It's kind of a research and development program truly take advantage of for office Robert C. Jakubowski, a Hewlett-Packard Co' environments," workplace strategist. "We are creating more oPen space for teams says where people can interact impromptu." those cutting-edge designs This pilot project, one of seven ongoing at the site, began in companies June 1997. It is one of many office design oiperiments are conducting to trim real estate costs and improve communica- unless HR gets involved. tion, performance and productivity. In some cases, companies are abandoning the onesize'fits-all concept of using either cubicles or offices. Instea4 they are adopting a hybrid approach in which oPen sPaces--{omplete with video and projection screens-are available for team projects and group 58 HRMAcAzINT Mancs 1998 discussions, and private spaces are used for work that requires deep concentration. Employees who need solitude may have their own offices. Those who do not may-for short periods-use small portable booths, such as the "personal harbors" developed by Steelcase Inc. \Arhile these nerv approaches to offrce space may produce dif ferent space configurations, the,y share a critical element: They r,r,ork bestlvhen HR is involved in the process. \{-hen most organizations are designing office spaces, they need to consider their employees-their human resources-and the way *rose indir''iduals do theirjobs. And drat means HR professionals are, or should be, included in the office redesigr teams from the outset as a matter of successful business strategy. "The HR professional is the key to the success of projects like this," says.|akuborvski. "It's tr,vo sides of the same coin." Or.,rnconmvc PAST DESTcN MrsrAr(ES When companies introduced the cubicle concept in the late 1970s, they failed to tie design to employee productivit,v. Employers "didn't change the work environment" lvhen they M,A.nr:H 1998 HRNLILr\7tNE 69 t added cubicles, says Gary E. Wheeler, former president of the American Society of Interior Designers and the national director for interiors at Perkins & Wi[, an architecture, engineering and interiors firm based in Chicago. "About five or six years ago, companies said, 'This isn't soMng a problem, it's actually creating more problems."' Cubicles-which were intended to improve communicaLionoften had the opposite effect because employees became concerned about priracy. "If people can't control the communication, they actually communicate less," says Bill Sims, a Cornell University professor of facility management and planning. Sims is also the author of Team Space: Creating and Managing Enuironment To Support Highly Productiae Teamwork, to be published by the International Development Research Council in Atlanta this month. To solve the problems caused by cubicles, orgarrizations need to transforrn their physical offices to ones that encourage cooperative work. Companies need to adopt a "caves and common areas" approach. This provides employees small, quiet places to work, as as well their own tearn areas for spontaneous collaborztion, Sims says. For example, o{fices might include more open space and dedi cated project rooms. By setting aside rooms for the duration of a project, rather than scheduling them hourly, employers allow workers to keep brainstorming and development ideas posted as long as they wish, which should help them remain focused on a specific mission. The key is to integrate the physical environment with technolo gy, management practices and work practices. This allows employees to move where they are needed and "to work where they are the most productive a:rd will be supported," Sims says. Evaluation of work space begins with thejob, experts say. Some 70 HRMAGAZTNE MARCH 1998 jobs dictate that an employee always have an of;fice. In other jobs, employees frequently interact with coworkers and should probably work in open spaces. For example, softlvare programmers or copywriters may need totally private space, but HR executives might spend most of their time in an open area and need access to private rooms only for interviewing. Customer service departments may work better in totally open areas, where it will be easier for employees to help one another answer customer queries. "It's an alignment between space and a team's mission,,, says Janis R. Evink, a research specialisr in the Ideation Group at Haworth Inc., an office furniture manufacturer in Holland, Mich. Organizations that want to stick with cubicles should consider some options. Stagger the cubicles, rather than line them up in groups of sk or eight, suggests Wheeler. "If I can see them, they can hea.r me," Wheeler says. "You should start breaking the 1ine of sight and encouraging people to talk into the (cubicle) corners, not the hall." Nrwvrews oN DFsrt;N The dominant feature of new office environments is the central street or boulevard that cuts through a variety of departments and GARY QUES.\DA/HEDRICH BLESSINC MlrcH 1998 HRM'rc,rzrNr. 71 s human resources profesr qrtio.]$,$:;qffi+#ffi must be used to reach coffee and vending machines or cafeterias. These corridors provide a place for spontaneous interaction amons employees. Often these corridors are wider than other halls and lead to a work or team area with tables, wall rails for cot fee cups, and whiteboards for writing or drawing. By providing this space, companies encourage "informal lear-ning and networking" that can result in new ways to improve performance, says Arlyn Vogelmann, a strategic planner in the Boston office of Gensler Architecture Design & Planning Worldwide. "Companies need to be really creative about how peo ple interact and support creativity within the workplace. Ideas and intellectual capital are the name of the game"' The shift in design mirrors changing perceptions about the best way to develop products or selices, as gatherings by a coffee machine are no longer presumed to be focused on the latest episode of Seinfeld. "In the past, standing at the water cooler was frowned upon as gossiping-now it's encouraged," Wheeler says. "That's where new ideas happen." A 72 HRM,q.GAZtNe M-rtc;n 1998 survey released this January by the Center for Workforce Development in Newton, Mass., supports Wheeler's views. For the employees of the seven companies examined, informal learn- ing "served to fuIfilI most learning needs, perhaps as much as 70 percenL" according to Monika Aring, co-director of the research project. The study toncluded that employers thar encourage z o F o o ts 9 I 1 o interaction between workers of differ- 3 ent skill levels-can help employees acquire criticaljob skills more o g informal learning-such as E quickly and easily. One of the companies in the study, Siemens Power Transmission and Distribution in Raleigh, N.C., learned that employees were using the lunchroom to cary on informal discus- sions about workplace problems. The company encouraged fur- ther communication by installing flip charts and overhead projectors in the area. Such casual meetings may be the best chance for employees from other departments to meet informally. AsJakubowski points out, "Knowledge creation is not a scheduled event." Snaoorrmvc rr{E TRANSTTToN At Hewlett-Packard's San Diego site, the HR department now serves as the liaison among the designers, site seruice staJf and employees. HR serves to ensure that an office redesign "works for the company and for the employees," Janet Di Prinzio, HR "We services manager at the San Diego site. are used to dealing with people. We can say 'This is an issue,' and really look at what says the root cause is. We know the customer." For example, when Hewlett-Packard began planning a new building at the site about two years ago, Di Prinzio facilitated a series of employee meetings to discuss the new design, proposed work space areas, furliture and how employees would work best in the new area. Their ideas, which helped employees develop a sense of ownership, were shared with the company management and the design team. ResoMng problems and calming fears may be the primary roles for HR professionals. Often, the change-management process begins with convincing skeptical workers that giving up their pri- vate ofiices-a status synbol of success and achievement*will be good for them and the company. "By bringing HR into the discussion, we find ways of looking at space differently," says Wheeler. "They bring a more humanistic approach to it. They have a different point of view of what makes people happy or satisfied." Once the HR staff meets with employees to identifi imporrant issues, designers have a better understanding of what they will need to provide to replace the status of an office, such as better computers or other technology, or more team space. "It's a tradeoff," \4rheeler says. "There has to be an identifiable give-and-take. If employees are willing to try something new, we make sure we pro- vide other things that reward them in other areas, so they want to do this, as opposed to being forced to do this." + M.qr.cH 1998 HRMecezrNr. 73 That sensitivity to employee concerns played a critical role in 1996 when Owens Coming moved 1,200 employees from its 2& story tower in Toledo to a new, three-story building down the street. The move served as the impetus for the company to flatten itsorganizationa1Structure,Createanewworkcultureand improve customer service. The new building uses the boulelard concept by allotting its atrium as team sPace. Making sure the changeover was successful fell to the HR department, which developed the change-management strategy, organized teams to incliide members of each department, surveyed employees, and helped address and ease their concerns while the new building was under construction. "There became an increasing awareness of the physical structure of a building and how it can modifr the way people interact," says D.gr,Levitq Ph,Dt an Owens Corning organizational develop ment consultant, who was then a workplace specialist charged with leading the change-management efforts at the time. "The whole new world of work is really based on knowledge and the speed with which we can share knowledge." Beginning in February 1996, Owens Coming developed committees around five integral parts of the new culture: improving customer focus; creating ad hoc teams across department boundaries; learning and sharing best practices; eliminating paper in favor of digital fiIes; and embracing technology that allows employees to communicate infortnation throughout the company. The transition team worked from April through September 1996, and each of the nine business unis provided a team member for the five 74 HRMAGAzTNE MARCH 1998 committees. * "We wanted to help employees make a cultural transformation to a new way of working before they moved in, so that when they moved, they'd say 'This is great,"' Levitt says. "(HR) understood the vision and rationale and we could help the company drive the change." The transition team also helped address the fears expressed by about a third of the employees, who thought the new building was too small for all of them and that the company would have to con- duct a m{or downsizing. The new building "held more people," says Levitt. "It wasjust the way it was laid out." Th,anrrnrTc ErvrpI-oaaEEs ro * usE NEw spACEs HR's design-related duties don't end when a redesign or move is completed. HR will need to train employees on the ways to work in the new environment and help employees establish new rules or protocols for the workplace. "You can't take people and pull them out of the environment they are in now and drop them in without any explanation or proto- cols," says Eric LeMay, corporate communications director of Mencs 1998 HRMacazrNs 75 !F Callison Architecture in Seattle. "It won't work. A lot of companies U say 'We tried the open ofiice and it didn't work.' It probably didn t work because they didn't set up rules and protocols about how z employees should use that space, compared to the old space." ! o f, O HR issues arise even in companies that preach the open environment creed. "I've had to coach people about how to address people, as things as like loud voices and how to deal with internrptions," well says Callison's HR Director, Kattrleen Maurel. Resolving issues about noise and privacy are the two major complaints about open environments. At Hewlett-Packard's San Diego facility, placing the finance department in an open environ- ment appeared to be a solid idea, but some staff recently complained about a lack of privary, Di Prinzio says. "They always had food out, they were always having grouP conversations, there was a lot of activity," she says. "The downside was they didn't feel they had any privacy." While overall square footage in the San Diego site, which is in its full year of experimenting with design, remained the same, suraeys indicate that employees in the pilot progmms are more satsecond 76 HRMAGAZTNT M.lncs 1998 f 7h." James E. Hackert, president and CEO of V V Steetc^e Inc., is inspired by an idea, he no longer has A to w"alk down a long hallway and bang on doors to share it. Instead, he can get some fast feedback by turning his chair toward Robert Ballard, the executive vice president of busi or any of the other top 25 Steelcase execu- ness operations, tives sitting nearby in the open area. For the past two years, Steelcase-a leading office fumiture manufacturer-put its own design theories to the test by knocking down the walls of its executive suites in is Grand Rapids, Mich,, headquarters. Now executives and their assistants are grouped in business "neighborhoods" based onjob firnction and responsibility. They use either cubicles or personal harbors-the portable, telephone booth-like pri- vate offices the firm manufactures, says Dan Wiljanen, Steelcase's HR director. The area also contains tearn space and a communications center with screens, overhead projectors, computer ports and electrical outlets. While the evidence is anecdotal, so far, the experiment seems to be working. "The number of activities we engage in as a leadership team increased because of the proximity," Wrfianen says. "With an increasing number of interactions, people become much more fumiliar with one another and it Promotes a more positive work relationship. We've gotten to know our colleagrres a lot better over the last couple of years, and that facittates problem solving." steelcase cut down on formal meetings by leaving one hour-between 8 a.m. and 9 a.m.--open for informal discussions. Impromptu meetings conducted throughout the day are shorter and lead to faster decisions than before the move, says Wiljanen. Steelcase is awaiting the resuls of a study of the move being conducted by Cornell University. In planning the move, the HR department worked with the facilities department and designers to ensure that the executives understood what would take place and how it would affect each individual. HR also acted to address potential problems. The executives spent about six months in a temporary space and were divided into three teams to develop behavior protocols, to determine their technical requirements and to examine different furniture choices. The company also built a firll-scale, plywood mock-up to give the executives a better idea of the new, open layout. More and more companies are using mock-ups to allow employees to test the design and identi$ problems in adlance. role in a more expensive mock-up developed by Callison Architecture in Seattle and several other partners. Rather than describing how a new office should look, Callison built a 5,000-square-foot office, known as "Future @ Work,,, which contains office Steelcase also played a desrgns for 2007, says Eric kMay, Qallison's corporate communications director, and former exhibit managerwith Future @ Work. As ofJanuary, about 1,700 corpoftlte executives, HR professionals and facilities managers have toured the odribit, which contains a wide array of futuristic furniture, electronic devices and screens in open sPace to illustrate how the firm believes offices will be designed. The mock work h"b fR professionals grasp the breadth of a project, coordinate employee input into the design process, and facilitate meetings with management and design teams. The site, which cost more than $3 million to build, opened inJune and was developed with companies including AT&T Wteless Services, SeaFirst Bank and Barclay Dean Interiors. stations and exhibits Mancs 1998 HRMacezrNr, 77 isfied with their work areas, have more flexibility in their work processes and have been able to do more teaming,Jakubowski says. The HR staff has helped the site serices group conduct its to "categG needs-assessment progmms and face-toface interviews rize and quantify" the needs of each business unit, says Jakubowski. Flexibility and mobility were identified as two critical employee needs. To provide flexibility, virtually all the furniture components can be made mobile: Corner stations that hold computers are on rollers; special wiring allows employees to use their computers and telephones anywhere in the facility, rather than being tied to a specific work station; file cabinets are on rollers; whole bookshelves can be removed; and work station walls are not attached to central cubicle spines, so work areas can be reconfig- ured quickly. Employees who need privacy can use portable, enclosed work areas. "We have been searching to find different ways to prepare for the future and notjust sit there and wait for change to happen," Jakubowski says. "We need to stay awake in terms of getting out in front and attending to intemal customer needs." lt Domi,nic Benciumgao a Naa York-based u,riter who has bem coaering HR isxus for snm years, has bem contributing to HPJ|'lagazine for three years. 78 HRMAGAzTNE MARCH 1998
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