When creating a hot desking program for your workplace, it’s best practice to write up a policy and guidelines for the workforce and workplace to follow. We designed a checklist that can help you get started.
Hot desking is a flexible workplace practice that keeps offices, conference rooms, etc., open for employees to use when it suits them best. This practice makes it easy for employees to find a desk in the spur of a moment or grab a workspace near their teammates so they can collaborate quicker and easier.
This means employees don’t have assigned seats and workspaces and rooms are a free-for-all. So, to run a successful hot desking program , organizations need to efficiently manage this flexible practice and communicate the expectations to the workforce.
They can do that by creating a Hot Desking Policy with Guidelines to follow.
A hot desking policy is a document that states what hot desking is, who will be affected by the program and how, its benefits, and guidelines to follow.
People enjoy having their own personal workspace so a program like this might be hard to get on board with at first. This document should encourage employees to see the benefits of a flexible program like hot desking and how it can positively affect their work environment. A few of those benefits include,
Now that you’ve answered the initial questions like what it is, who it impacts, and how it will benefit everyone, it’s time to create guidelines for the workforce to follow. It’s also important to consider some guidelines to follow prior to rolling this out internally.
We’ve come up with a checklist for you to follow starting with what to do prior to implementation, what the company needs to do, and finally what employees should do. Read on below and then download this interactive checklist to take with you!
Prior to Implementation…
Company should…
Employees should
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