The Bosshole® Chronicles
The Bosshole® Chronicles
Jenny Moebius - Heroes of Hybrid Work (Part 1)
Unlock the secrets of successful hybrid work with us as we welcome Jenny Moebius, Senior Vice President and Head of Marketing at Skedda, and host of the Heroes of Hybrid Work podcast. Jenny offers an enriching perspective on why hybrid work is more than just a passing trend.
Click HERE for the Hybrid Work "grader"
Click HERE for the "Heroes of Hybrid Work" podcast
Click HERE for the report on the Hybrid Work Debate
Click HERE to learn about Loom
Click HERE for Skedda's website
Click HERE for Jenny's LinkedIn profile
Other related TBC episodes:
- Reinventing the Workplace
- Dr. Todd Dewitt - A License to Lead
- Sara and John - The "Return to Office" Dilemma
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Hey everybody, welcome back to the Bosshole Chronicles. John, my co-host, and buddy and partner, how are you today?
John Broer:I'm so good, I'm real good. Sara, good to see you.
Sara Best:Yeah, same. It's been a while since we've been recording together. Another great episode, a subject matter expert, a very timely topic. Today, John, what are we going to be talking about and who are we talking to?
John Broer:Well, we are talking to a good friend of ours that we met years ago and she is an incredibly gifted and talented person, Jenny Moebius. Jenny is currently the Senior Vice President and Head of Marketing at Skedda. All her information will be in the show notes which is a leading global workplace management platform and key player helping define the future of work. The reason we have Jenny here is because she's also the host of the Heroes of Hybrid Work podcast, and this episode is going to help our leaders understand how do we embrace the idea of the hybrid workplace and how do we do it well, how do we create some structure around it? We welcome Jenny so excited about it, Sara. I think our audience is absolutely going to love this.
Sara Best:I do too. We're going to cover some ground that, whether we were in a hybrid work zone and a new lens of work or not, these are important tips and instructions for all leaders. So let's dig in, John.
John Broer:The Bossh ole Chronicles are brought to you by Real Good Ventures, a talent optimization firm helping organizations diagnose their most critical people and execution issues with world-class analytics. Make sure to check out all the resources in the show notes and be sure to follow us and share your feedback. Enjoy today's episode. Well, Jenny, it is so good to have you on the Bossh ole Chronicles.
Jenny Moebius:Pleasure to be here, John and Sara, just excited to reconnect with you and share what I've been up to since I was at PI.
John Broer:Our audience knows from the intro that we go back a few years. Our introduction to you came based on your days with PI, but you have been, as it is no surprise to us, doing remarkable work out there relative to the world of work and what hybrid means. And, of course, in addition to all the wonderful things that Skedda does, your creation of the Heroes of Hybrid podcast, I think, is really relevant. When I started to see the episodes and listen to the episodes that were popping up on LinkedIn, I said, oh gosh, not only is it a good excuse to reconnect with Jenny because she's such an amazing individual, but our Bossh ole Transformation Nation listeners need to hear this. So let's just kick off with your inspiration behind the podcast Heroes of Hybrid and why it's so critical now.
Jenny Moebius:Absolutely so. Something I haven't mentioned to you before is, you know, after PI, I really wanted to continue my own passion of helping people in their own workplaces. Right, we spend more time at work than we do with our own families, and I knew at Skedda that I could continue that mission for myself how to make workplaces better. At Skedda, there was a unique position to really lean into hybrid work, obviously, because that's what we help, our software helps with, you know, helping hybrid workplaces have better technology. So that's first and foremost is I was able to continue that.
Jenny Moebius:Secondly, people are really struggling with hybrid work, and hybrid work does not have to be hard work. It simply means that managers and leaders need to see everything that they do through a new lens and that's the hybrid work lens and lead with intentionality. So what I mean by that is hybrid work. Just to take a step back, hybrid work means coming in a few days a week into the office in person. So you come in a few days a week. It could even be one day a week, it could be two days a week, but at some point you are in- person with your colleagues. The rest of the day is you work remotely. So that's what we mean by hybrid work. Secondly, we find that the hybrid work debate is over, so you know, the data is in and I can, I can share a few data points that really resonated with me. But 62% of US companies, and 75% Fortune 100, now allow some degree of remote work.
Jenny Moebius:Some days in the office, some days working from home. Just six out of 158 US CEOs this reports from the conference board said they would prioritize bringing workers back full-time. Just six out of the 158. And some of my favorites here also include 97 of the Fortune 100's best places to work offer hybrid work. That just shows you know how engagement is tied to economic return, and 63% of high revenue growth companies embrace hybrid work. So all of that to say, let's just put the debate to rest. Hybrid work is here to stay. It not only increases employee engagement, but it also delivers high economic return. So setting the stage there. The second piece to this is what I said at the beginning is there are really five categories now where leaders can focus their attention to make hybrid work work. And it's funny because the more I talk to people, the more I realize it really is just going back to the basics, but seeing it through the hybrid work lens.
John Broer:Before we get into the five categories, because I- and we've had episodes where we have talked about sort of the unusual nature that some few, thankfully executives or business leaders are taking when they are mandating a return to the office. I agree with you, we are in total agreement. This is no longer an anomaly, it is a reality. Covid, if it did anything, it sort of codified it and said we've been doing this, we haven't been doing it more formally, and now it's here. But I have a quick question why are some leaders so insistent on coming back? What's your philosophy on that? I'm amazed by the determination by some, and they're very vocal, but some have been very vocal about it. What's your assessment of that?
Jenny Moebius:I think, again it's going back to the basics. It's a trust issue. A lot of leaders really prefer having people right next to them, seeing them work, in order to trust that they're doing their work, and I'll dive into this a little later. But you know, it's best to have outcome-based performance and not location-based performance, because there's so many benefits to allowing people to have flexibility in their lives that you know you could pretty easily see if they're not doing their jobs, no matter where they're working from if they're not meeting their goals.
John Broer:Well, I'm sorry so. So we talk about an old framework and a new framework. That seems like a very old framework and we had Dr Todd do it on a couple of years ago and he talked about we have to start managing by outcome and not observation, just like you said. Okay, thank you for that.
Jenny Moebius:Correct. Yeah, yeah, it's. It is interesting. It's almost like COVID just kind of put us all in a panic and we forgot the basics of managing people. It's not that that has changed, it's just that we're not working in the same place. It really is that simple.
Sara Best:Yeah, okay, can I ask you a question, John. You talked about what about the leaders who seem stuck in this mindset of we got to be in person. What do you think has helped shift, Jenny, for those leaders who've been able to open up their minds and go, "You know, this is a better way to do it. What worked to help them understand this?
Jenny Moebius:Employee engagement is one of them. The leaders that measure, you know, employee NPS or employee Net Promoter Score. It's the leaders that listen to their teams and their employees. And then it's the productivity levels, it's the economic return. That's what's you, what's catching people's eyes. We can offer flexibility and we can still be a high-performing business. Right Got it.
John Broer:Thank you for that little detour oh.
Jenny Moebius:I love it.
John Broer:Let's talk now about those five categories.
Jenny Moebius:Sure, sure. So I'm all about right now that the debate is over how do we do it right and what do we really need to focus on? So the first one is policy, and maybe I should stop at each one so that we can have a little conversation about it, versus just like listing them out, yep. So the very important first one is policy so we talked about this already is how do we engage our employees to build the policy together? And then how do we empower teams to actually decide on the policy? So Gallup found that 46% of employees say they're more engaged when their work team decides on the hybrid work policy together.
Jenny Moebius:And that is what is actually causing more joy in organizations. It's causing people to leave less because they're more joyful at work, and really it just takes one work from home day to reduce attrition. So one team level agreements super important and two days a week. I can manage that. I can manage my family schedule around one or two days a week. So again like increased joy, increased retention, less attrition and something I haven't mentioned yet is actually more diversity. So Allstate adopted this model, had everything on the team level and they saw job applications soar 23% and 33% increase among women and people of color.
Jenny Moebius:So, offering that flexibility also brings in more diverse candidates, so very important.
John Broer:Well, the other word that came to my mind was inclusion, meaning we are including you, you are helping to shape the policy. Being asked that question or given that opportunity to be able to say I'm going to influence and speak into this policy, that's huge. That is addressing what the emerging workforce, which is evolving, wants, that's great. Okay, so policy All right, makes total sense.
Jenny Moebius:So policy is the first one.
Sara Best:Um any other questions, Sara no, I was just going to comment that Aaron Dignan spoke directly to this idea of, you know, inclusive um debate and discussion internally and then adoption of policies only when, uh, people agree and that they can challenge, and they've actually developed a whole system and software. He's the author, by the way, for our listeners, of Brave New Work. We talk about him often. We met him at Optima 2. 0, I don't know, 2021.
John Broer:Yeah, he was on the program. I'll put that in the show notes. I mean, he was on there too Good, okay, yeah.
Jenny Moebius:Yeah, no, definitely, and we do that at Skedda as well. The marketing team comes in Wednesday and Thursday, and that was an agreement among the team members. The sales team comes in Tuesday and Thursday. And maybe something I haven't mentioned is that importance of overlap, importance of having teams in at the same time so that you're not just showing up to work and nobody's there, right, and then you have, you know, incredible commute regret and you just become more unhappy in your work. And so this is a this is an opportunity to share a little bit more about Skedda, where you can see all your and all your co-workers who are coming in, where they're sitting, so that you know, oh, I'm not going to waste this day by coming into the office. I'm going to have these collaborative moments with my peers because I know that they're coming in. So that's actually a good segue into the second category, which is office design.
Jenny Moebius:So something really important to think about is how much collaborative spaces are on the rise. 58% go into the office for connection, 15% just for focus work, and that's a study by CBRE. So just kind of leaning into the fact that it's not just about having a bunch of desks anymore, individual desks or private desks. It's about creating spaces where people can get their best work done. So I love Gensler. I don't know if you know Janet Pogue McLaurin. She was on my podcast, definitely one of my favorites. Gensler ran a survey with 14,000 workers and found that four categories of spaces were essential: individual work, creative group work, reflecting and restoring, and connecting and recharging.
Jenny Moebius:And we're used to individual work sure, we're used to creative group work we have meeting rooms but this reflecting and restoring and the connecting and recharging really resonated with me. Something that I really recommend doing is forming neighborhoods for these exact reasons. So, for instance, you could have a neighborhood in your office that's just for quiet work, and you can have a neighborhood in your office that's just for louder work. Sales folks, BDRs, SDRs that's something that's missing from remote work is having people listen to the conversations. Like how are you marketing this, how are you selling this? I would say probably heavy on sales and marketing for the louder areas and the quiet areas, though I think sales and marketers also need that too. We need to dig into data, we need to have places for focus work, and so the way that we design our offices is changing and again, the first place to start is listening to your employees. What do you need, right?
John Broer:Yeah.
Jenny Moebius:And what's going to make this workplace experience, this new way of working, most productive for you?
John Broer:You know, Jenny, what strikes me also is obviously all of our backgrounds in behavioral analytics. We all know that there are some of us that have a desire the three of us as a matter of fact for community connecting. But we also do need that quiet, reflective time. There is a huge company here in Columbus, well-known, and they built this amazing this was pre-COVID this expansive, amazing campus, but there were no spaces to go and work alone. I mean, there were a few and far between, but it was all this open concept when that was like super popular and you just knew that that was going to be a mistake.
John Broer:You can't have just you can't go from all isolated individual desks to no holds barred, no walls, no, nothing whatsoever. You have to have that, and I love that combination that that makes so much sense. Thanks, thanks, thanks for that. I mean to me. I'm envisioning workplaces where I've worked and how one in particular actually was in Toledo, Sara. They had all that and I'm not sure that they did it intentionally, but you had those different neighborhoods. I love that, I love that metaphor.
Sara Best:I'm thinking of a previous employer of mine that, well before COVID, designed several floors within a multiple story building, just that way that you described. I think the four areas of focus were represented and people were like I don't really know what to do with this. It was bumpy at first and now I think all their floors are that way. But what I thought about is for the people that you know they're more private and introspective, they like to have their space. Or the ones who like that, you know they're more private and introspective, they like to have their space. Or the ones who like to, you know, mark their territory with their pictures and what not. To take us off track, Jenny. But what about those people who like- how do we shift the mindset? Like I don't have, I don't claim this one space and have all my stuff, like my drawer of snacks and my pictures, and you know it's mobile. How did you, how do people deal with that?
Jenny Moebius:Sure. So the first thing is to have a workplace management platform where you can book your desk right. Because, once you have that. So we obviously use Skedda at Skedda and I get on the train on Wednesday and I go onto my app and I say, oh, this desk is open and it's next to other marketers.
Jenny Moebius:Right, we have more of a marketing neighborhood than a loud versus quiet, and so I can book my desk and that way, when I come into the office, I feel very comfortable knowing that that's my space for the day. I don't have to share it. I can bring a picture of my family. I could put it on the desk for the day. Obviously, it's still important to have shared snacks in an office.
John Broer:Don't forget about your snacks.
Jenny Moebius:So you know, we have a snack. We still have like snack drawers and lots of things for people to feel most comfortable. But it really is about being able to book something in advance to have that level of comfort when you come into the office, especially if you're used to more permanent seating.
Sara Best:So great. That is a great solution.
Jenny Moebius:The third category and you know, near and dear to all of our hearts is having the right tech stack to bridge the physical and remote worlds. I really- this one is really important. I know people, you know, say they lose their productivity because of tech that doesn't work right and people are miscommunicating and not communicating because hybrid work is so much harder from a communication perspective. So what I recommend is having well, first is talking to your employees, seeing what they need, but, especially if you're globally dispersed, like most companies are today, to bring in the right talent is having a system of expectations. So what's expected of you when you come to the office, whether you're in the office or remotely? For instance, are you expected to be on chat, slack Teams or Google Chat? Are you expected to be on there all day? Right, what are the expectations for response times and how do you best use that with your global teams? And I think it's super important and also going back to the basics and simplicity. So I'll give you an example.
Jenny Moebius:I had an employee start and I'll talk about this a little later too, but in the Gen Z, a Gen Z employee and poor Gen Z right, they were in college during COVID. They didn't have a ton of mentors, they didn't have a ton of in-person interaction. They didn't have internships, right they. They were just- A lot was taken from Gen Z and I just assumed that people knew right that they had to be online when they worked from home between certain hours and I just assumed that they knew that response time should be about an hour. You know give or take for remote communication.
Jenny Moebius:This person was kind of all over the place and I was just- I started, so here's a tip right, I felt like I was becoming a little bit of a Boss hole because I was assuming that this person wasn't working hard and I was falling victim to what we talked about at the beginning, which is, I'm used to a Monday through Friday, nine to five. That's how I grew up in the work world.
Jenny Moebius:And so I started having really false assumptions about this person. When I took a step back, I checked myself and I realized I have to set expectations for these people. I have to teach them how to work in this new world of work so that those assumptions don't exist and so we can kind of nip them in the bud. So that was a lesson learned for me as a manager of Gen Z in the hybrid world is, from day one, have those expectations set. I actually have them at the end of every weekly meeting. I just have them living there. It's hybrid work expectations, so that nobody has any questions about what's expected of them. Pure gold, well, thank you. But it really is like what we've always been doing, just not through the hybrid work lens.
Sara Best:Right.
Jenny Moebius:And that's why I kind of emphasize intentionality so much, because, yes, you do have to change the way you manage because of this lens. One other thing so Loom is really important. So I'm not sure if you're familiar with Loom, but it's basically a mechanism to record your face with the work that you've been doing and in order to share it out with people who you may not be overlapping hours with in your workday. So one of my favorite things that we do at Skedda is you finish a day of work. You can't communicate with your EMEA APAC people at the moment. So what do you do?
Jenny Moebius:You sit down, you record a Loom of all that's been done, five minute Loom. You share your screen with. You know your face and then when they wake up in there on their day, they can get started on where you finished off. And um again, same with remote work and you know not seeing people every day. If they can wake up and feel prepared for their day by just simply recording something for them, that's another way that you can bridge the virtual and the physical gap and really takes five minutes.
John Broer:So there's part one of our discussion with Jenny Moebius. Please make sure you check in next week for part two, where she will take us through the remainder of the categories and share with us some very specific takeaways about optimizing a hybrid work opportunity. Great having you here. Thanks for listening. We'll talk to you next week.