{"title":"COVID-19, digitization and hybrid workspaces: A critical inflection point for public sector governance and workforce development","authors":"Jeffrey Roy","doi":"10.1111/capa.12475","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Whereas the physical office setting has long been the bedrock of public sector operations, COVID-19 starkly disrupted this enduring reality with an unprecedented reliance on remote work arrangements through parts of 2020 and 2021. As Ruth Porat of Google observed, bringing workers back to the office would prove a good deal more complex than sending them home. This caution is reflected in numerous professional and Statistics Canada surveys (further summarized below) that reveal a diverse set of attitudes and preferences in terms of where, when, and how to undertake professional responsibilities. If there is any broad takeaway from the pandemic, it lies in the absence of uniformity of what workers desire going forward as well as what individuals and organizations deem as optimal (Duxbury in Evans, <span>2022</span>; Roy, <span>2022</span>).</p><p>Looking ahead, the essence of a hybrid organization and workforce goes beyond binary choices between working in a physical office or working remotely. Ideally, and in contrast to both remote work prior to COVID-19 and predominantly virtual teams during COVID-19, hybrid models enable the seamless alignment of both in-person and virtual settings within innovative and flexible workspaces designed to strengthen both individual and collective performance capacities. In reality, governments are struggling to devise optimal hybrid mixes, accentuating workforce challenges that were apparent prior to the pandemic (Clarke, <span>2019</span>; Cukier, <span>2019</span>; Roy, <span>2013</span>).</p><p>In canvassing federal and provincial government pronouncements throughout 2021 and early 2022, there does seem to be widening agreement on the need for flexibility and adaption going forward, with the Government of Canada, for example, committed to developing hybrid frameworks and models in manners expected to deviate across departments and agencies. One CBC News investigation profiled the varying and still-nascent hybrid responses of federal entities (Kupfer, <span>2022</span>). In 2021, the Bank of Canada announced a permanent hybrid model for its staff—while in the private sector, Ottawa-based Shopify has declared an end to the era of office-centricity. Canadian banks have also announced varying plans to embrace hybrid strategies, with both financial services and technology two important industries in terms of the public sector's competition for managerial talent.</p><p>Within this evolving context, the purpose of this brief article is threefold: first, to present some emerging pandemic trends in terms of attitudes and expectations of Canadian public servants; second, to propose three key design principles for leveraging the hybrid opportunity as a basis for governance innovation and strengthened workforce development; and third, to put forth some guidance for how the relevance, utility, deployment, and impacts of these principles can be better examined and assessed by scholars and students of public administration.</p><p>In broad terms, most Canadian workers are seeking and expecting a mixture of returning to an office setting and working from home. Carleton University's Linda Duxbury has sought to synthesize findings from remote work surveys of over 26 000 Canadian employees during the pandemic. As of early 2022, she has found that: roughly one-quarter of all workers who were in an office prior to COVID-19 are keen to return full-time; one-quarter would remain full-time at home if given that option; and roughly one-half prefer some mixture of both settings (Evans, <span>2022</span>). In delving more specifically into the Canadian public sector, my preliminary research draws from (virtual) classroom interactions with roughly 100 mid-career public servants from across Canada, as well as exploratory interviews with ten senior managers at the Deputy or Assistant Deputy Minister level (Roy, <span>2022</span>).</p><p>With respect to the governance and policies of hybrid workspace strategies, three design principles offer useful guidance: differentiation, engagement, and inclusion (Roy, <span>2022</span>). On the one hand, these principles denote three broad conceptual directions for exploring and crafting hybrid strategies—as informed by preliminary evidence gathered to date as well as wider and inter-related research on digital government reforms in recent years. On the other hand, these principles also represent avenues for future research based upon more specific investigations and critical inquiry to test their broad validity and explore various sub-themes reflected by each one. The remainder of this article will focus primarily on this latter realm.</p><p>As a principle, the notion of differentiation is partly grounded in underlying digital government scholarly discussions about the contours of centralized coordination and planning versus decentralized flexibility for varying organizational units (Clarke, <span>2019</span>; Clarke et al., <span>2017</span>; Roy, <span>2020</span>). In underscoring the importance of differentiation, Gratton makes the case that managers must consider and address four distinct elements of worker and managerial experiences and perspectives that vary considerably across organizational and functional facets of the public sector: jobs and tasks, employee preferences; project workflows; and inclusion and fairness (Gratton, <span>2021</span>).</p><p>We return separately and in greater detail to inclusion below, but the other elements noted by Gratton provide a basis of future empirical investigations by scholars about whether and how hybrid arrangements are shaping both individual and collective experiences, actions, and outcomes. Much of this work must be qualitative: while the various consultancy and government's own workforce surveys can legitimately be critiqued and dissected on methodological grounds, the breadth and consistency of these surveys provide a platform for some basic trends and starting points.</p><p>Labour relations and the evolving roles and views of public service unions are also important for shaping the relative embracement of differentiation as a principle: while labor organizations have generally conveyed support for hybrid flexibility, there may well be demands for greater clarity and commonality for their memberships as a whole in terms of hybrid models and policies, potentially a constraint around differentiation. As Duxbury implies in characterizing government's laggardness relative to private companies in terms of hybrid experimentation and deployments, there is also a basis for comparative investigations of hybrid models across public and private sectors—specifically in non-unionized environments, and whether more or less differentiation occurs and the extent to which labour organizations are a factor in such contrasts.</p><p>For understanding employee engagement, the utility of qualitative studies should once again not be under-estimated. At a broad level, it remains important to track and establish the contours of government initiatives for employee engagement, and to seek to ascertain whether existing professional surveys reveal growing or lessening levels of employee engagement and trust. While peer-reviewed scholarly surveys can be useful here—particularly in providing an evolving baseline and measurable benchmarks over time, the equally essential role for qualitative investigation is to seek to identify and determine the strength of linkages between engagement processes, organizational trust, and performance.</p><p>On the relationship between hybrid and inclusion, we can postulate three ways in which the deployment of hybrid workspace models can potentially widen and deepen inclusion: first, by expanding the geographic scope of recruitment; second, by creating more flexible and diverse career progressions for traditionally and historically marginalized employees by lessening the behavioural vices and biases engrained in both formalized structures and informal expectations intertwined with in-person presenteeism; and third, by facilitating new forms of interactions and community-building at least partly through virtual means that can lessen barriers through broadened awareness and acceptance of diversity.</p><p>Yet whether any such expansion and deepening of inclusion happens depends upon many factors, including the underlying importance of physical proximity in historically marginalizing many from career advancement opportunities and leadership positions. Two important research questions arise: first, to what degree are workforce inequalities intertwined with physical proximity and the time and locational confines of office presenteeism; and second, is the gradual and uneven emergence of hybrid models one that widens or narrows inclusion?</p><p>To investigate and devise informed responses to such broad questions, data collection is crucial and more specified themes must be developed. Samuel and Robertson suggest five critical elements of data gathering for understanding and gauging the inter-relationships between hybrid work arrangements and inclusion: i) who's spending more time at the office and who's spending more time at home; ii) who gets to choose when to be at the office; iii) how does time in the office shape the path to promotion; iv) how are remote management tactics used; and v) how does time in or out of the office predict employee engagement and retention (Samuel & Robertson, <span>2021</span>)?</p><p>Along with such quantitative data metrics, more qualitative case studies of departmental and agency experiences can enable a richer appreciation of individualized experiences and perceptions, and whether or not the managerial traditionalism of the public sector is being lessened or reinforced by hybrid arrangements. It also bears underlining just how much room for improvement remains in the public sector with respect to diversity and inclusion. Across the Government of Canada's senior managerial echelon (the Executive or “EX” cadre of roughly 6200 managers), roughly 11.5% of positions in 2020 were held by all visible minorities combined, without one ethnic minority alone reaching the 3% threshold of the 11.5% total (Treasury Board of Canada, <span>2020</span>). Similarly, a 2021 CBC News investigation found that across Metro Vancouver, nearly 80% of all senior government managers and elected officials are Caucasian (McElroy, <span>2020</span>).</p><p>Whether hybrid models lead to improvements or constraints in pursuing the sorts of diversity and inclusion aims that governments themselves have championed is thus a key dimension of human resource management and workforce development going forward. One important aspect of hybrid work arrangements in need of greater attention (for policy and governance reforms and scholarly research) is the growing inter-relatedness of human resource policy systems, training and development frameworks, and digital governance strategies, a dynamic already apparent prior to COVID-19 but also tremendously reinforced by the pandemic (Cukier, <span>2019</span>; Roy, <span>2022</span>; Roy et al., <span>2022</span>). Comparative studies across the public, private, and non-profit sectors may also prove revealing in terms of understanding this dimension's evolution—and whether hybrid arrangements ultimately shape the inclusivity aspects of recruitment and retention for governments if and as hybrid offerings expand in other sectors.</p><p>With COVID-19 seemingly destined to become an endemic and enduring reality, governments seem to be balancing a desire to signal a return to normalcy (in suggesting and in some cases even encouraging a return to offices) with a cautious acceptance and exploration of hybrid workspace models within their own ranks. There is a significant risk of a lost opportunity if this tenuous balance is tilted by an underlying reflex of traditionalism and presenteeism that seeks to revive physical office settings as the nucleus of workplace governance. For scholars and practitioners alike, seeking a better understanding of the emerging scope of hybrid acceptance and experimentation is an essential task in shaping the future of public sector governance in a post-pandemic and increasingly digital environment.</p>","PeriodicalId":46145,"journal":{"name":"Canadian Public Administration-Administration Publique Du Canada","volume":"65 3","pages":"569-575"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-06-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9349511/pdf/CAPA-9999-0.pdf","citationCount":"8","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Canadian Public Administration-Administration Publique Du Canada","FirstCategoryId":"91","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/capa.12475","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"管理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 8
Abstract
Whereas the physical office setting has long been the bedrock of public sector operations, COVID-19 starkly disrupted this enduring reality with an unprecedented reliance on remote work arrangements through parts of 2020 and 2021. As Ruth Porat of Google observed, bringing workers back to the office would prove a good deal more complex than sending them home. This caution is reflected in numerous professional and Statistics Canada surveys (further summarized below) that reveal a diverse set of attitudes and preferences in terms of where, when, and how to undertake professional responsibilities. If there is any broad takeaway from the pandemic, it lies in the absence of uniformity of what workers desire going forward as well as what individuals and organizations deem as optimal (Duxbury in Evans, 2022; Roy, 2022).
Looking ahead, the essence of a hybrid organization and workforce goes beyond binary choices between working in a physical office or working remotely. Ideally, and in contrast to both remote work prior to COVID-19 and predominantly virtual teams during COVID-19, hybrid models enable the seamless alignment of both in-person and virtual settings within innovative and flexible workspaces designed to strengthen both individual and collective performance capacities. In reality, governments are struggling to devise optimal hybrid mixes, accentuating workforce challenges that were apparent prior to the pandemic (Clarke, 2019; Cukier, 2019; Roy, 2013).
In canvassing federal and provincial government pronouncements throughout 2021 and early 2022, there does seem to be widening agreement on the need for flexibility and adaption going forward, with the Government of Canada, for example, committed to developing hybrid frameworks and models in manners expected to deviate across departments and agencies. One CBC News investigation profiled the varying and still-nascent hybrid responses of federal entities (Kupfer, 2022). In 2021, the Bank of Canada announced a permanent hybrid model for its staff—while in the private sector, Ottawa-based Shopify has declared an end to the era of office-centricity. Canadian banks have also announced varying plans to embrace hybrid strategies, with both financial services and technology two important industries in terms of the public sector's competition for managerial talent.
Within this evolving context, the purpose of this brief article is threefold: first, to present some emerging pandemic trends in terms of attitudes and expectations of Canadian public servants; second, to propose three key design principles for leveraging the hybrid opportunity as a basis for governance innovation and strengthened workforce development; and third, to put forth some guidance for how the relevance, utility, deployment, and impacts of these principles can be better examined and assessed by scholars and students of public administration.
In broad terms, most Canadian workers are seeking and expecting a mixture of returning to an office setting and working from home. Carleton University's Linda Duxbury has sought to synthesize findings from remote work surveys of over 26 000 Canadian employees during the pandemic. As of early 2022, she has found that: roughly one-quarter of all workers who were in an office prior to COVID-19 are keen to return full-time; one-quarter would remain full-time at home if given that option; and roughly one-half prefer some mixture of both settings (Evans, 2022). In delving more specifically into the Canadian public sector, my preliminary research draws from (virtual) classroom interactions with roughly 100 mid-career public servants from across Canada, as well as exploratory interviews with ten senior managers at the Deputy or Assistant Deputy Minister level (Roy, 2022).
With respect to the governance and policies of hybrid workspace strategies, three design principles offer useful guidance: differentiation, engagement, and inclusion (Roy, 2022). On the one hand, these principles denote three broad conceptual directions for exploring and crafting hybrid strategies—as informed by preliminary evidence gathered to date as well as wider and inter-related research on digital government reforms in recent years. On the other hand, these principles also represent avenues for future research based upon more specific investigations and critical inquiry to test their broad validity and explore various sub-themes reflected by each one. The remainder of this article will focus primarily on this latter realm.
As a principle, the notion of differentiation is partly grounded in underlying digital government scholarly discussions about the contours of centralized coordination and planning versus decentralized flexibility for varying organizational units (Clarke, 2019; Clarke et al., 2017; Roy, 2020). In underscoring the importance of differentiation, Gratton makes the case that managers must consider and address four distinct elements of worker and managerial experiences and perspectives that vary considerably across organizational and functional facets of the public sector: jobs and tasks, employee preferences; project workflows; and inclusion and fairness (Gratton, 2021).
We return separately and in greater detail to inclusion below, but the other elements noted by Gratton provide a basis of future empirical investigations by scholars about whether and how hybrid arrangements are shaping both individual and collective experiences, actions, and outcomes. Much of this work must be qualitative: while the various consultancy and government's own workforce surveys can legitimately be critiqued and dissected on methodological grounds, the breadth and consistency of these surveys provide a platform for some basic trends and starting points.
Labour relations and the evolving roles and views of public service unions are also important for shaping the relative embracement of differentiation as a principle: while labor organizations have generally conveyed support for hybrid flexibility, there may well be demands for greater clarity and commonality for their memberships as a whole in terms of hybrid models and policies, potentially a constraint around differentiation. As Duxbury implies in characterizing government's laggardness relative to private companies in terms of hybrid experimentation and deployments, there is also a basis for comparative investigations of hybrid models across public and private sectors—specifically in non-unionized environments, and whether more or less differentiation occurs and the extent to which labour organizations are a factor in such contrasts.
For understanding employee engagement, the utility of qualitative studies should once again not be under-estimated. At a broad level, it remains important to track and establish the contours of government initiatives for employee engagement, and to seek to ascertain whether existing professional surveys reveal growing or lessening levels of employee engagement and trust. While peer-reviewed scholarly surveys can be useful here—particularly in providing an evolving baseline and measurable benchmarks over time, the equally essential role for qualitative investigation is to seek to identify and determine the strength of linkages between engagement processes, organizational trust, and performance.
On the relationship between hybrid and inclusion, we can postulate three ways in which the deployment of hybrid workspace models can potentially widen and deepen inclusion: first, by expanding the geographic scope of recruitment; second, by creating more flexible and diverse career progressions for traditionally and historically marginalized employees by lessening the behavioural vices and biases engrained in both formalized structures and informal expectations intertwined with in-person presenteeism; and third, by facilitating new forms of interactions and community-building at least partly through virtual means that can lessen barriers through broadened awareness and acceptance of diversity.
Yet whether any such expansion and deepening of inclusion happens depends upon many factors, including the underlying importance of physical proximity in historically marginalizing many from career advancement opportunities and leadership positions. Two important research questions arise: first, to what degree are workforce inequalities intertwined with physical proximity and the time and locational confines of office presenteeism; and second, is the gradual and uneven emergence of hybrid models one that widens or narrows inclusion?
To investigate and devise informed responses to such broad questions, data collection is crucial and more specified themes must be developed. Samuel and Robertson suggest five critical elements of data gathering for understanding and gauging the inter-relationships between hybrid work arrangements and inclusion: i) who's spending more time at the office and who's spending more time at home; ii) who gets to choose when to be at the office; iii) how does time in the office shape the path to promotion; iv) how are remote management tactics used; and v) how does time in or out of the office predict employee engagement and retention (Samuel & Robertson, 2021)?
Along with such quantitative data metrics, more qualitative case studies of departmental and agency experiences can enable a richer appreciation of individualized experiences and perceptions, and whether or not the managerial traditionalism of the public sector is being lessened or reinforced by hybrid arrangements. It also bears underlining just how much room for improvement remains in the public sector with respect to diversity and inclusion. Across the Government of Canada's senior managerial echelon (the Executive or “EX” cadre of roughly 6200 managers), roughly 11.5% of positions in 2020 were held by all visible minorities combined, without one ethnic minority alone reaching the 3% threshold of the 11.5% total (Treasury Board of Canada, 2020). Similarly, a 2021 CBC News investigation found that across Metro Vancouver, nearly 80% of all senior government managers and elected officials are Caucasian (McElroy, 2020).
Whether hybrid models lead to improvements or constraints in pursuing the sorts of diversity and inclusion aims that governments themselves have championed is thus a key dimension of human resource management and workforce development going forward. One important aspect of hybrid work arrangements in need of greater attention (for policy and governance reforms and scholarly research) is the growing inter-relatedness of human resource policy systems, training and development frameworks, and digital governance strategies, a dynamic already apparent prior to COVID-19 but also tremendously reinforced by the pandemic (Cukier, 2019; Roy, 2022; Roy et al., 2022). Comparative studies across the public, private, and non-profit sectors may also prove revealing in terms of understanding this dimension's evolution—and whether hybrid arrangements ultimately shape the inclusivity aspects of recruitment and retention for governments if and as hybrid offerings expand in other sectors.
With COVID-19 seemingly destined to become an endemic and enduring reality, governments seem to be balancing a desire to signal a return to normalcy (in suggesting and in some cases even encouraging a return to offices) with a cautious acceptance and exploration of hybrid workspace models within their own ranks. There is a significant risk of a lost opportunity if this tenuous balance is tilted by an underlying reflex of traditionalism and presenteeism that seeks to revive physical office settings as the nucleus of workplace governance. For scholars and practitioners alike, seeking a better understanding of the emerging scope of hybrid acceptance and experimentation is an essential task in shaping the future of public sector governance in a post-pandemic and increasingly digital environment.
期刊介绍:
Canadian Public Administration/Administration publique du Canada is the refereed scholarly publication of the Institute of Public Administration of Canada (IPAC). It covers executive, legislative, judicial and quasi-judicial functions at all three levels of Canadian government. Published quarterly, the journal focuses mainly on Canadian issues but also welcomes manuscripts which compare Canadian public sector institutions and practices with those in other countries or examine issues in other countries or international organizations which are of interest to the public administration community in Canada.