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What is Hybrid Work?

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Not too long ago, working from home was, for most office workers, a one-off—a privilege doled out for special circumstances such as a sick child, inclement weather, or even meeting the cable guy (who always quotes an eight-hour arrival window).

But now, due to a once-in-a-lifetime reshaping of our workplaces, courtesy of a global pandemic, hybrid work is here to stay. The transformation to distributed teams has been driven by technology, employee preferences, and economics. The result: being “in person” has given way to collaboration from a distance while still finding ways to ensure innovation thrives. And workers (not all, but most—we'll get to this in a moment) are thriving without stressful commutes and distracting workplaces

What is hybrid work?

So, what is hybrid work, officially? The hybrid work model is a combination of in-office and remote work policies with hybrid employees switching between work environments as desired or as needed by the organization. For some employers, hybrid work means some workers will be fully remote. For others, employees sometimes commute to an office while working offsite at other times.

What are the benefits of hybrid work?

Employees are speaking up: they expect a blend of in-person work and offsite work that can be done anywhere—from home, a coffee shop, or while on the road (perhaps in a camper van). This employee preference for greater flexibility is a byproduct of pandemic times when cloud-based productivity suites, storage, and remote access tools such as Parsec for Teams showed hybrid teams could remain as connected as they were when they sat shoulder to shoulder in the office. The vibe is less “office first” and more “collaboration can happen anywhere.”

  1. Choose your own productivity model

    We all know the traditional office work model: whether you're an early riser or a burn-the-midnight-oil type, your presence is requested from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. When organizations shift to the hybrid work environment, business leaders often allow remote employees to choose when they are most productive. Night owls can log in later in the day, and early birds can get going first thing. Flexible schedules mean employees can customize their unique inner clocks to their workday—everyone can work when they are most productive.

    But we're all different, of course, and productivity levels vary for each person. Hybrid work arrangements allow employees to make the most of flexible scheduling and even flexible locations. For some, the best place to brainstorm is through in-person collaboration around a conference table. Others do their best work from home, chatting on Slack channels or jumping into QA testing with colleagues using a remote access app like Parsec.

  2. Achieve better work-life balance

    Sorry, Taco Tuesday and food truck fans. Pre-pandemic office perks such as free snacks and lunch aren't cutting it as incentives for today's workforce. What matters most to more and more employees now is an emphasis on prioritizing their personal lives. A recent survey of Microsoft employees, for example, discovered that 47 percent of employees are putting family and personal needs first over work. And 53 percent—notably parents (55 percent) and women (56 percent)—report prioritizing their health and wellbeing over work more than before the pandemic. Savvy employers who understand their employees' priorities will make a variety of options, including variations on these hybrid work models, available to their people.

    But hybrid work isn't a cure-all or something to be forced onto workers with little forethought. Some workers are reporting hybrid work exhaustion as they shuffle back and forth between the office and home. For these professionals, the commute becomes a chore—deep work is interrupted by colleagues stopping to chat, and the whipsaw feeling of “where am I today?” is disorienting. That's why so many American workers are choosing to find fully remote long-term positions with none of the back and forth of a hybrid model.

    Take note that hybrid work doesn't have to be three days at the office, two days offsite. If employees have no say in the hybrid work schedule, the arrangement is more likely to go off the rails. When remote-capable employees are shoved into a schedule that simply mimics the old full-time office schedule of M-F and part of the office is the worker's home, a mishmash occurs. Employees can start to feel micromanaged. It's crucial that the definition of hybrid work is fleshed out and agreed upon by both employee and employer.

  3. Hire talent from anywhere

    Hybrid work has made the world more connected, with borders and different time zones a detail, not a detour. While someone half a world away may not share the same work hours, using hybrid work technology such as remote access apps means colleagues can collaborate asynchronously.

    Upwork estimates that within ten years, 73 percent of teams will have flexible work arrangements to accommodate remote members. The ability to work remotely means flexibility not just for employees but for hiring managers, too. According to the latest research by the International Workplace Group, 77 percent of firms globally report that they've already introduced flexible working policies to attract and retain top talent—something that hasn't gone unnoticed by workers themselves.

    In a survey of company leaders using Parsec for Teams, 73 percent report that supporting remote hires has helped them diversify their talent pools, and 64 percent report adding full-time remote workers from different locations. Need an expert contractor to come in and problem-solve for six months before a buzzy launch? The survey found 45.5 percent of respondents report adding remote freelancers or contracted remote workers, too. Rather than arbitrarily limiting their talent pools to people who live within easy commuting distance, this shift is an opportunity for companies of all sizes to address diversity in a way that goes beyond existing frameworks.

  4. Downsize real estate for cost savings

    Do we really need cube farms and perfectly manicured office plants? Companies large and small are rethinking their real estate footprints. With fewer workers in the office, it's time to examine how much office space is needed. Downsizing may reduce real estate overhead by 30 percent. Regardless of how much space organizations need or don't need, taking a hard look at how hybrid work affects physical spaces is a part of rethinking the workplace of the future.

    Industry research firm Gartner estimates that remote work will allow organizations to hire and support 40 percent more workers in the same amount of office space. Parsec also allows companies that depend on render farms to ship that storage off-site into lower cost space away from the main office. 53 percent of Parsec for Teams admins have already reduced office space to support long-term remote work.

Hybrid work solutions for creative teams

Until recently, creative teams were left out of the great remote work wave. If creatives worked with large, graphic-intensive files, they were tied to a studio and its storage capacity and processing power. But with the advent of remote desktop apps, the hardware can live at a central location, and the creatives can work from anywhere with internet access. Parsec lets teams access the specialized hardware they need wherever they happen to be.

For VFX artists, illustrators, and post-producers, that means the freedom to work wherever inspiration hits, whether that’s at home or halfway around the world. For engineering teams, it means a more efficient allocation of processing power and the ability to work on multiple projects simultaneously. In fact, 86 percent of creatives and engineers working through Parsec report saving time working remotely, and 57 percent are saving more than an hour each day.

For the business, all that time serves up happier employees, lower turnover, and reduced overhead.

Parsec features that make it possible:

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60 FPS 4K/UHD playback

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Near-zero latency sync between audio and video

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Perfect absolute and relative mouse handling

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4:4:4 chroma sample encoding

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Pressure-sensitive drawing tablet and pen support

Enabling testing, user research and QA with hybrid work

Before the pandemic disrupted the status quo, most game developers relied on a tried-and-true method of testing and user research called dev kits. Console games need to be tested on specialized dev kits to create a realistic experience—emulators just aren't going to fly. And players need to be on-site with developers to ensure privacy and security for both the OEM and the game studio. With social distancing restrictions in place, game testing became functionally impossible at the height of the pandemic.

The answer? Embracing a built-for-business secure access remote desktop app such as Parsec for Teams. Game developers can host Parsec directly on development machines, allowing clients to stream the build from thousands of miles away without any loss in quality or reaction time. Developers, players, and the media can play the game live, watch the gameplay live from a third location, or record the feed with third party tools to review later.

How to deal with large files and avoid versioning conflicts

One of the biggest headaches dealing with large files such as game builds and VFX renders is the simple act of sharing the file among team members. Uploading and downloading to a shared cloud drive from a local machine can take hours, even with a fast connection. And maintaining local copies is a recipe for version conflicts that must be manually resolved.

In choosing remote access technology, ask the question: is it possible for my team to share files quickly and without versioning conflicts? With Parsec, teams can all share access to the same remote machine or render farm, which skips the need to move files between workstations and ensures that the master file stays clean and secure. Twenty-eight percent of Parsec for Teams users report saving significant amounts of time in avoiding these idle upload, download, and rendering times.

Challenges of moving to hybrid work

The advantages of hybrid work environments (flexibility, choosing one's own schedule, multiple locations) can act as a disadvantage if organizations aren't careful. People want to have confidence they can work collaboratively with their colleagues, and that their contributions to the organization are valued—wherever they work.

Organizations should ask these two basic questions when planning for hybrid work:

How do we work together when we are onsite? Offsite?

To start, leaders in an organization should consider how their people work together. Is the business made up of large numbers of people working independently or interdependently? Interdependent teams lean on each other in their daily work, collaborating and reacting in real time. People working independently labor together less often and thrive with more autonomy because they complete tasks on their own in less time.

Communication is key

In a hybrid workplace, managers of independent teams need to put communication front and center. It's almost impossible to over-communicate. Workers need to know how to be accountable for their projects, and they also need to know how to ask for help if they need it. Don't forget team building and investing in creative ways to foster the right corporate culture.

As a follow up, leaders can ask:

What value does coming to the office bring to my people?

Once hybrid work policies are in place, it's super important that organizations check in to monitor morale and employee engagement, along with just defining clear job responsibilities and tracking KPIs. What worked in one season might not be a smash hit in another. By conducting regular temperature checks and earnestly listening to employee feedback, you can make sure you're creating a secure environment for your employees as your organization's flexible working model evolves in the coming years.

How Parsec can help

As the world transitions to the reality of flexible workplaces, a hybrid or remote-first model, and unlocked efficiencies, Parsec is committed to connecting teams to each other and their work.

Create from anywhere with Parsec

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    Parsec's proprietary technology eliminates lag—access your hardware in seconds with near-zero latency

  • Mouse cursor aiming at center of bullseye iconResponsive Control

    Plug in a keyboard, mouse, drawing tablet, or gamepad, and do your job with unparalleled input accuracy & control

  • Video play button iconGorgeous Video

    Stream silky smooth, 60FPS 4K/UHD interactive desktop video in vivid color across multiple monitors

We're here to help

To learn how Parsec can enable your company to make the transition to hybrid work, get in touch. We're here to help.