FM’s Technology (Re)Evolution
The magnetism of the modern office
BY CAITLIN KAMM
Editor’s note: This article is part three of a three-part series spotlighting workplace technology.
After COVID-19 turned workplaces upside down, companies have wrestled with a big question: how to get people back into the office? Some have taken a strict approach with mandatory return-to-office (RTO) policies. But what is becoming clear is that simply forcing people back does not work. Organizations must provide compelling reasons to make the commute worthwhile.
So, what is actually getting people through the door?
Collaboration & culture: The primary motivators
Recent survey data commissioned by Envoy, in partnership with Hanover Research, reveals that 57 percent of professionals identify company culture and team engagement as their main reasons for returning to the office. Despite the continued importance of workplace flexibility in recruiting and retention strategies, employees are increasingly drawn to in-person experiences that foster authentic collaboration, meaningful social interaction and spaces intentionally designed for both focused work and dynamic teamwork.
The benefits of hybrid and remote work arrangements remain undeniable: reduced commute times, better work-life integration and access to global talent pools; but certain aspects of professional life simply function better in person. Employees increasingly recognize the unique value of face-to-face collaboration, spontaneous brainstorming sessions that spark innovation, and real-time problem solving without technological barriers.
The data strongly supports this emerging trend:
What are the main factors that motivate your employees to come into the office when they aren't required to?
Company culture and team engagement
Collaborative work opportunities
Social interaction with colleagues
Access to resources or equipment not available at home
Comfort and design of the office space
Free in-office lunch & snacks
Top motivational factors for RTO
For organizations seeking to increase office attendance and engagement, these findings suggest a critical need to reconsider how their physical spaces actively promote organic social interactions, seamless collaboration across teams and a genuine sense of belonging among team members. Companies that fail to address these fundamental human needs risk creating empty offices despite mandates.
Workplace design: A critical factor in employee decision making
Beyond collaboration opportunities, the physical workspace significantly influences employees’ willingness to commute. The days of boring cubicle farms under harsh fluorescent lighting are truly over. Today’s workforce expects thoughtfully designed spaces that energize rather than drain. This is reinforced in the survey, which provided interesting insights:
Which workplace design features do you believe will have the greatest impact on employee productivity and engagement in 2025?
Immersive, tech-enabled collaboration spaces
Well-being zones and quiet spaces for decompressing
Customizable access controls to ensure facility and building access security
Eco-friendly and sustainable design elements
Flexible layouts with unassigned seating
Workplace design’ impact on employee productivity and engagement
These statistics highlight a fundamental shift: Traditional office configurations designed primarily for standardization and supervision no longer meet the evolving needs of today's workers. Forward-thinking companies must strategically invest in flexible workspaces that thoughtfully support both focused individual work and dynamic team collaboration. The research makes clear that one-size-fits-all approaches fall short. For example, open-plan offices do not work for everyone, while assigned desks make little practical sense for employees who only come in occasionally.
Companies leading in this space are implementing activity-based working models, wherein employees choose different settings based on the type of work they are doing throughout the day. This might include quiet focus pods, collaborative project rooms, social community spaces and technology-enhanced meeting areas that seamlessly connect in-person and remote participants.
What about those office perks?
Remember the pre-pandemic days of lavish office perks? While the on-site massages and elaborate game rooms might be fading, simpler amenities still make a substantial difference. Interestingly, 33 percent of professionals say free lunch and quality snacks directly motivate them to come in — a relatively small investment with a measurable impact. While businesses do not necessarily want employees joining organizations for the massages, it is true that certain conveniences significantly reduce barriers to entry in the workplace and the ability to work and produce more broadly to create real ROI for the business.
Beyond food, successful companies are offering perks that directly address commuting pain points: subsidized transportation, flexible arrival times, childcare assistance and wellness programs. These thoughtful touches both acknowledge and reduce the extra effort required to come into the office, yielding a more seamless working experience optimized for productivity and collaboration.
Finding the sweet spot in hybrid work
For most organizations, the future is not fully remote or fully in-office. It is finding that sweet spot with a well-designed hybrid approach. Companies that insist on full-time office attendance risk losing talent, while those that stay fully remote might miss out on the innovation that comes from in-person collaboration.
The winners in this new landscape are creating intentional in-office experiences: scheduling collaborative workshops, team-building activities and important meetings on specific days. This gives employees concrete reasons to be present on certain days and acknowledges that daily decision making about where to work involves weighing the commute against the value of being present.
Put simply, the days of sterile, uninspiring office layouts are over. Employees expect dynamic, people-centered workspaces that make on-site work more engaging and productive. The new world of work demands a Goldilocks approach: find the right balance to support a dynamic and resilient ecosystem of productivity and collaboration in the workplace.
Making the office worth the trip
Ultimately, the return to office is not about forcing people back through mandates — it is about making the workplace worth the investment of time and energy required to get there. Leaders who approach this challenge with empathy and vision are creating spaces where people want to be.
As the evolution of work continues, successful companies understand that the office is not just another place to do tasks that could be done anywhere. Instead, it should be a dynamic hub for innovation, teamwork and culture-building in which people genuinely want to participate.
In this new reality, offices need to earn the commute every single day by offering experiences that simply cannot be replicated through a screen. Companies that rise to this challenge are not just seeing higher attendance — they are experiencing improved collaboration, innovation and employee satisfaction that drives bona fide business results.