As more big companies call their workers back to the office this fall, more of us will be spending more time with colleagues-in meetings, at lunches, and afterwork gatherings. Are we ready? In the time we’ve been working from home, have our social skills held up?
Companies like Apple, Google, Disney and IBM, among others, are requiring employees return to the office this fall. For instance, JPMorgan Chase, is abandoning a hybrid attendance policy it adopted during the pandemic, requiring executives return to the office.
Some leaders at these companies believe productivity increases when workers are in the office together. Others hope to increase in-person collaboration.
Did we miss anything while we were working from home?
Gen Z was hit especially hard by the social isolation brought about by the pandemic. Nearly half of Gen Z employees responding to a Gartner survey say the pandemic made pursuing their educational or career goals more difficult. Another 50% say their education has not prepared them to enter the workforce. (Many graduated during the pandemic.) Experts say Gen Z has missed out on developing soft skills, such as negotiating, networking, speaking confidently in front of crowds, and developing the social stamina and attentiveness required to work long hours, in an in-person environment.
This lack of experience and preparedness may negatively impact organizations. But it’s not just Gen Z — everyone’s skills have changed since 2020. Many people are feeling awkward. And, with people behaving awkwardly, misunderstandings happen.
“Our social skills are like any other muscle, they can atrophy if we don’t use them, but they also will recover and get stronger if we practice,” said Daniel Post Senning, author and spokesperson for the Emily Post Institute.
So, to help you get ready for your return to the office we pulled together a list of general guidelines for enhancing your social skills. They’re not just for Gen Z. Nor are they just for employees only now going back to the office. Everyone can use a refresh now and then, and there’s no time like the present.
Enhancing your social skills can help you feel more at home with your colleagues. It can also improve your confidence, sense of belonging, and ability to collaborate at work — all important skills that will affect your mental health, motivation, and ability to succeed and will help with that transition back to the office this fall.