Microsoft Upgrades Hybrid Work Tools
March 17, 2022
Microsoft released its second
annual Work Trend Index report, “Great
Expectations: Making Hybrid Work Work.”
The company also announced new features across Microsoft
Teams, Microsoft 365, Surface Hub and Microsoft Viva to
empower hybrid work and address employees’ new expectations
for the workplace.
After sitting on the cusp of hybrid work for more than a
year, many companies are at a long-awaited inflection point:
the lived experience of hybrid work.
One thing from the research
is clear: We are not the same people who went home to work
in early 2020. The past two years have left a lasting
imprint, fundamentally changing how people define the role
of work in their lives. The challenge ahead for every
organization is to meet employees’ great new expectations
head on while balancing business outcomes in an
unpredictable economy.
To help leaders navigate the
shift, the 2022 Work Trend Index outlines five urgent trends
from an external study of 31,000 people in 31 countries
along with an analysis of trillions of productivity signals
in Microsoft 365 and labor trends on LinkedIn:
- Employees have a
new “worth it” equation. Fifty-three percent of
employees say they’re more likely to prioritize their
health and well-being over work than they were before
the pandemic. And the Great Reshuffle isn’t over:
Fifty-two percent of Generation Z and millennials are
likely to consider changing employers in the year ahead,
up 3% year over year.
- Managers feel
wedged between leadership and employee Fifty
percent of leaders say their companies are planning a
return to full-time in-person work in the year ahead.
Fifty-four percent of managers say leadership at their
companies is out of touch with employee expectations,
and 74% of managers say they don’t have the influence or
resources to drive change for their teams.
- Leaders need to
make the office worth the commute. Thirty-eight
percent of hybrid employees say their biggest challenge
is knowing when and why to come into the office, yet
only 28% of leaders have created team agreements to
define these new norms.
- Flexible work
doesn’t have to mean “always on.” After two
years, weekly meeting time for the average Teams user is
up 252%, and chats sent per person each week is up 32% —
and still climbing. While workday span has increased by
46 minutes, after-hours and weekend work are up 28% and
14%, respectively.
- Rebuilding
social capital looks different in a hybrid world.
With 51% of hybrid workers considering a shift to full
remote work in the year ahead, companies cannot rely
solely on the office to recoup the social capital we’ve
lost over the past two years. Forty-three percent of
leaders say relationship-building is the greatest
challenge of having employees work in a hybrid or remote
environment.
“There’s no erasing the lived
experience and lasting impact of the past two years, as
flexibility and well-being have become non-negotiables for
employees,” said Jared Spataro, corporate vice president,
Modern Work, Microsoft. “By embracing and adapting to these
new expectations, organizations can set their people and
their business up for long-term success.”
As the company marks five
years since the launch of Teams, more than 270 million
people rely on Teams for hybrid work.
Making hybrid work work
for everyone will require intentional leadership around
how, when and where to work — and technology has a key role
to play. Today the company is introducing new product
innovation designed to improve the hybrid work experience.
-
Available in public
preview at the end of the month, Teams Connect
shared channels enable collaboration with
people inside and outside the organization from a shared
workspace.
- To bridge the gap
between digital and physical workspaces, a new meeting
layout for Teams Rooms, front row, is
now available in preview.
- The new AI-powered
Microsoft Surface Hub 2 Smart Camera
uses automatic framing technology to dynamically adjust
your Teams video feed to provide remote team members
with a dynamic view of in-room interactions.
- New touch-enabled
display solutions for Teams Rooms from Neat
and Yealink are in the process
of being certified for Teams Rooms on Android. These
devices combine audio, video, touch display and compute
in a single unit — allowing easy deployment and enhanced
collaboration experiences.
- The language
interpretation feature in Teams enables live
interpreters to convert what the speaker says into
another language in near real time. The meeting
organizer can assign interpreters and select up to 16
source and target language combinations, while attendees
will hear the translation.
- Microsoft
Whiteboard in Teams offers a rich set of new
capabilities that bring visual collaboration to life,
including collaboration cursors, more than 50 new
templates, contextual reactions, and the ability to open
existing boards and collaborate with external colleagues
in Teams meetings.
- To improve hybrid
brainstorming, completion of action items and making
decisions together without having to switch context or
apps, Microsoft is introducing Loop components
in Outlook mail. RSVPing for a meeting
in Outlook now allows attendees to note whether
they plan to join in person or virtually.
- Microsoft is introducing
a new offering in Microsoft Teams Phone
called Operator Connect Mobile, in
partnership with some of the world’s largest telecom
operators. This assigns a single business-provided
mobile phone number for desktop and mobile devices,
making it seamless to move calls across networks and
devices with no interruptions.
- With vibrant and fun
styling, over 1,800 new 3D fluent emojis
can infuse expression and playfulness into messages. And
with the skin tone selector, users have
the option to pick emojis that better represents
themselves.
- To support flexible work
styles, two PowerPoint experiences, cameo
and recording studio, are being brought
together. This will make it possible for presenters to
deliver presentations with PowerPoint Live in Teams,
whether or not they attend the meeting.
- A new feature called the
Inspiration library is coming to
Microsoft
Viva
in public preview as part of the Viva Insights app in
Teams. The library is designed to give employees,
managers and leaders easy access to thought leadership
and best practices from top sources such as “Harvard
Business Review” and “Thrive.”
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