Learn more about workplace flexibility, its benefits, and the skills that workers and employers use to stay flexible.
What Is Workplace Flexibility?
Workplace flexibility emphasizes the willingness and ability to adapt to change, particularly regarding how and when work gets done. In a flexible workplace, the needs of both employee and employer are met. Workplace flexibility is often used as a tool for retaining and engaging employees. It can also help an organization reach its goals thanks to improved productivity.
Alternate names: Flexible work arrangement, work-life balance
There are different types of workplace flexibility, including the following:
Informal flexibility is occasional, is agreed on between an employee and a manager, and has little impact on others in the workplace.Formal flexibility is typically an ongoing arrangement that is different from a team’s standard hours and work location. It could include working remotely or a change in schedule.
How Does Workplace Flexibility Work?
There are various ways that workplace flexibility can be implemented by workers and employers.
Flexible Employees
Workers with an orientation toward flexibility don’t say, “It’s not my job” or “Do I have to?” when they are asked to take on a new assignment. Instead, flexible employees modify their approach to tasks based on the preferences of stakeholders and the unique demands of each situation. Flexibility on the part of a worker could be to adjust the hours they work—coming in early, staying late, or working on an off day—to accommodate the needs of the company. Here are some examples of the ways workers can demonstrate flexibility.
Learning complex new software that will increase efficiencyListening carefully to constructive criticism as part of a performance reviewOffering to cover the responsibilities of a colleague while they are ill or on vacationOffering to work extra hours during a year-end crunchPushing aside the work planned for the day to respond to an emerging problemWorking overtime to help a colleague meet a deadline
Employees with a flexible attitude keep the company’s objectives in mind and work to achieve them, tailoring their efforts to the mission at hand.
Flexible Employers
Flexibility skills are also relevant to the approach that management takes to handling employees. Flexible managers treat employees as individuals and make an effort to accommodate personal styles and needs. For example, one employee may require more structure in their job duties and another may function better working independently. Managers will often need to adjust schedules and delegate routine tasks as they focus on reaching the company’s priorities. Some examples of workplace flexibility on the part of a manager include:
Analyzing the style and preferences of individual subordinates Praising the work of a productive employee more frequently because she craves feedback Providing release time for parents to attend school programsRewarding subordinates who make impactful suggestions
Flexible Schedules
Workplace flexibility can also refer specifically to regular work arrangements that promote work-life balance, as opposed to one-off accommodations for special circumstances. These work arrangements typically include flexible schedules outside of the traditional 9-to-5. Flextime: Employers with a flextime policy allow their workers to stagger arrival and departure times as necessary. Telecommuting: Not every employee needs (or wants) to work in an office; telecommuting lets them work from elsewhere, such as a home office or coworking space. They may telecommute during special conditions, such as inclement weather, or on a daily basis. Condensed schedules: Rather than a five-day workweek, a condensed schedule fits the same amount of work over a shorter amount of time, such as three or four days, giving the employee an additional day or two off during the week. Reduced schedules: Working fewer hours than the standard workweek constitutes a reduced or part-time schedule.
Benefits of Workplace Flexibility
A flexible work environment has many benefits. It helps workers achieve greater work-life balance, leading to increased employee satisfaction and improved morale. That in turn means employee turnover is reduced, as is the cost to recruit and train new hires. Loyalty, engagement, and retention are improved, which helps a company’s productivity and its bottom line. Employers that permit telecommuting, or working from home, can reduce overhead with less need for office space; working from home can also have a beneficial environmental impact by eliminating lengthy commutes. Flexible employees, for their part, are willing to do whatever is necessary to get the task accomplished, whether that means taking on more responsibilities, doing different tasks, or doing more at work. Thus, they have more to offer their employer than employees who can only do one or two tasks. Having employees who are willing to step outside their job description means employers don’t need to find others to take on more work.