Blog Post

Is a growl and a bark the same as Hello?

  • By Leni Rivera
  • 06 Jan, 2019

The importance of the Reception Area to a Workplace Experience.

   Across all cultures, when you first meet someone, there is a gesture of greeting – a smile, a handshake, a bow, or even just a hello. When you write an introductory letter (or email or message) to someone you have yet to meet, careful thought is put into the first line of greeting and salutation before diving into the heart of the message. When you go on a first date, so much emphasis is put on your appearance, hygiene and behavior. All of this is important when you first meet someone because as human beings, we all recognize the significance of a first impression.

   In business, regardless of the size of your company, the significance of a first impression is even more relevant. The right impression on all potential and existing business relationships with partners, investors, customers and employees is crucial to establishing a lasting relationship. This pertinent truth exists across all industries and cultures, with virtually no exception.

So then why is it that I have seen time and time again that the very gateway to this first impression of a company’s home base, is given so little attention?

   Traditionally, reception areas are manned by security personnel. Today, nearly all office reception areas are still set up this way because of course the safety and security of the company’s people and business are invaluable. But what message do you think this sends to visitors? It is comparable to allowing your body guard to greet all your friends and potential business partners for the first time before you do. Or setting up a guard dog right outside your front door. Although well intended for those on the inside, the subliminal message it sends to visitors is “You are not one of us. Keep out.” This is true even if the security personnel are friendly and personable. Even the friendliest of guard dogs will yield an air of caution as you approach them. There is no escaping the understanding of its primary purpose.

   Additionally, many reception areas are cold and uninviting. Guests are made to approach a large desk area, are asked for information and many times need to provide identification, and then are asked to wait. Returning contractors, business partners and employees on the other hand, whisk out a badge that is either displayed for security or tapped at the entrance door. Once again, the subliminal signal is clearly made to all visitors waiting to be let in: “You are not one of us. Keep out.” But this process is a routine most of us are so unaware of, it has simply become robotic.  

This is why nobody ever thinks to change the system. It’s so routine in every building, and keeping the front doors safe is such a logical decision. So why fix it?

Because like everything else in this incredibly fast-changing tech-generation, the development and enhancement of human experience is everything.

   First of all, there have been vast improvements in safety and security technologies and such innovations render having to station security personnel in spaces as no longer necessary. This isn’t to undermine their significance in any way, but they no longer need to be a visible element in reception spaces. If on the other hand, the positioning of physical security is a matter of strategy, then be deliberate and position them as exactly that: security. A separate element from the reception of visitors.  

   Just as all elements of the workplace experience stems from your corporate culture, such is the case with the reception areas. Remember that whether you like it or not, the reception gateway is both the first and the last thing that your visitor as well as employees will experience, and this is why it’s so important to give it focus. Workplace Experience is the only tangible aspect of a company’s culture, and therefore where it starts and where it ends is as crucial to the experience as all the elements within it.

   I have had extensive experience in the creation of reception areas that for both companies that I have run and companies for which I’ve designed a bespoke workplace experience. But for now, I will refrain from providing advice and examples from my experience because I want to emphasize the concept first. I continue to walk into multiple reception areas of many company offices in both Asia and the US, and have found time and time again that most companies miss this significant aspect. But as unique as your personal appearance, fashion, style and hygiene is to you as you get ready to give that first impression on your first date, so should the company’s reception area be as unique to its own culture and personality.

 

am happy to give advice on this topic, just reach out!

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 This time last year, virtually every company around the world shut the doors of their offices, and those that could, asked their employees to work from home. The definition of a workplace began its unforeseeable transformation from a physical office space to a virtual room from anywhere… or did it?

 The reality is that this transformation had already started occurring over a decade ago. The pandemic that struck the world simply caused our perception of the workplace to finally catch up with this reality.

 In 2019 (12 months before the pandemic struck), The International Workplace Group (IWG) released their annual Global Workplace Survey report, in which they examined responses from over 15,000 professionals from 80 countries. This report revealed that 70% of professionals globally work remotely at least one day a week, and more than half work remotely at least half of the week.

 Working remotely is not a new concept, it was just perceived differently. Companies considered those who worked from home and those who worked in the office, as separate entities. They invested their resources on the workplace experience of the physical workplace, while disregarding the home workplace environment. But the pandemic has altered that perception. Everyone from the top executives down were forced to work from home, and thus experienced together the importance of a consistent conveyance of the company’s culture for all employees, regardless of where they work.

 Taking this new perception into consideration, the corporate world is now facing an evolution in how they will redefine their “workplace” moving forward, post-pandemic. Some companies have evolved to a fully remote workforce, shifting the workplace to the home environment. Some have a hybrid approach. And others are adhering to a fully office-based work environment. Regardless of how this is defined, what is undoubtedly clear is that resources need to be invested in both environments in order to ensure that the corporate culture is consistently felt by all employees, anywhere.

 To demonstrate how this is possible, here is a model of a potential hybrid scenario with employees working in both locations.

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I have been a Workplace Experience specialist for 8 years now, and moved to the Bay Area because this is where the industry is prevalent. When I began developing and running a workplace experience for a company all those years ago, I didn’t even realize it had a name, much less understood the impact it would have on the productivity and happiness of people at work.

What most people seem to get wrong is that Workplace Experience is not – should not be – a mere collection of facility perks and benefits. I learned from that mistake early on, and still witness that mistake being made frequently, even here in the Bay Area. Just because you have a corporate gym on premises, or offer food in a company cafeteria, or designate a space in the office for a pool table, doesn’t mean that (1) your employees will even use it, (2) it will be appreciated, or (3) it will have any significant impact on employee engagement. I have seen free shuttle services for employees being underutilized, food in corporate cafes wasted, free gym classes underpopulated, and facility events fall flat. This is because the biggest misconception about a Workplace Experience is that it will generate a fun, unique, engaging environment all on its own. The mistake is a dependence on a Workplace Experience to create a corporate culture, and not the other way around.

The establishment of a corporate culture that is true to its values, principles and overall mission, is where it all begins, always. This forms the foundation of the relationship between the company and its employees. A solid corporate culture attracts the right employees because people want to invest in relationships that are based on mutual respect, trust, personal growth and a shared vision. But people are also wise to recognize when the company is sincere about its culture, or whether it’s just lip service.

Workplace Experience is the measure by which employees are able to quickly and easily gauge the culture’s authenticity. This is because it is the only element of a culture that can be experienced physically through all the human senses – touch, taste, sound, smell and sight, and so it bears witness to the sincerity of its purpose. That’s why placing a pool table in the office or sleep pods in the corner without having a reason behind their existence will cause more doubt than anything else.

Only if a company’s culture anchors itself on being truly invested in its employees’ health and wellbeing, for example, will facility features such as fitness classes, various healthy food offerings, placement of living plants in offices, allocating special parking spaces designed to optimize step counts, and facility programs aimed at helping people achieve their health goals, succeed. In the same respect, if the office areas of the company executives have vastly higher-end finishes, lighting, comfort and appearance than the work areas of the rest of the company, do you think that employees will believe the company culture supports equality and inclusivity?

And let’s not forget, the purpose of a Workplace Experience is far more than just offering attractive features in a workplace. Its primary function as a tool of the corporate culture is to enable and empower employees to be fully engaged and happy with their work. The scope of Workplace Experience includes the entire journey of an employee throughout their workday – from their transportation to work, their entrance into the facility, the ease with which they are able to access their needs (a meeting room, an appropriate work space, work tools and equipment, locating people and departments, etc.) and collaborate with each other (in engaging spaces, over coffee, with meals, through facility events and programs, etc.), and even providing relief by accomplishing chores before ending the day such as dry cleaning, car wash, or bringing home ready-cooked meals. That’s why Workplace Experience is such a powerful tool. It has within its very purpose, the capacity to directly impact employees’ productivity as well as directly influence their happiness at work.

If a company just throws in facility “perks and benefits” without anchoring them in their corporate culture, this investment will not only be a waste of money, it will be the large elephant in the room that constantly reminds employees of how inauthentic the company is. And conversely, as the only physical manifestation of a corporate culture, Workplace Experience can be the company’s most important tool in expressing to employees their sincerity.

 

 

Watch out for my first book on Workplace Experience, coming out this year!
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