Conference News August 2020 | Page 35

BACK TO WORK September is when many organisations predict that their staff will return to the office. Jill Hawkins explores how this can be achieved safely any large corporations are expecting that half of their employees will be back to the office in September according to a CNBC survey, while various pieces of industry research state that between 30% and 80% of agencies expect to follow suit. Opening an office again is not as simple as introducing hand sanitiser and removing desks; the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) is carrying out spot checks on the businesses that have reopened since the UK went into lockdown and in June alone they undertook nearly 4,000 checks. Sam Wilson of specialist sustainability consultancy Syntiro Associates has been working with creative agencies to ensure that their offices and their staff are ready for the return. “Creative agencies have a particularly unique way of working,” comments Wilson. “Creative and client service teams rely on close collaboration, conversations and team working, and that presents its own unique challenges for office working that meets guidelines.” Wilson advises that agencies need to properly examine and challenge the ‘why’ before jumping straight into the ‘when’ and ‘how’. “A return to the office is along two key dimensions,” she says. “The first dimension is to consider what you want to achieve, and this will no doubt be a hybrid model of office and home working. This is an exciting opportunity to bake-in sustainability through reducing travel and emissions, reducing use of resource and providing flexible working arrangements which are supportive of diverse talent and needs. There is a real opportunity here for agencies to show the way to brands and gain real competitive advantage by doing so.” It is essential to ask staff for their input on what they want and need. “Government guidelines state that staff should be consulted so you must make sure that you have gauged their appetite for 35 returning to Back to Work the office and addressed any concerns they may have.” Wilson advises agencies on how to build a Strategic Roadmap as an essential part of the return to office process. “You need to know where you want to get to before you devise your plan and undertake your risk assessment; your destination may not be where you assumed it would be. “Leadership teams must not leave these issues to the facilities management or ops people alone,” says Wilson. “We are considering and changing the way that the life blood of an agency works, its people and talent, so it is fundamental that these decisions involve the leadership team, HR and every department. You need to find out what each team needs to be able to do their jobs. Ultimately the risk assessment has to take this into account so it’s best to get those people involved from the outset. “The second dimension, and most obvious step is around creating a healthy and safe environment that is compliant and effective, that meets regulations, manages risk and meets insurance demands but is also an appropriate one in which people can work and give their best,” comments Wilson. Havas Group’s UK headquarters (Havas KX) is situated at Pancras Square, King’s Cross and houses around 2,000 employees working across 26 different creative, advertising, experiential, integrated or media agencies and organisations. “We opened Havas KX on the 1 June to all staff, but we are bringing everyone back in stages,” says Joe Nettleton, who is head of facilities for Havas Group. “Our initial risk assessment was based on bringing about 30% of our staff (about 600 people) back across all businesses. The building services team came in for two weeks in order to prepare the building and apply all of the new signage and www.conference-news.co.uk