An organisational initiative to bring employees back to physical office spaces after a period of remote work, often involving new hybrid policies.
Return to office (RTO) refers to the policies and programmes organisations use to bring employees back to in-person work. Following the shift to remote work, many companies have adopted mandates requiring a minimum number of office days per week. RTO strategies range from full-time office return to hybrid models with two or three required days.
The workspace implications are significant. Offices designed for 100% occupancy may now need to support variable attendance. This creates demand for desk booking systems, parking management, and meeting room scheduling tools that can handle fluctuating daily headcounts.
Successful RTO programmes give employees a reason to come in -- not just a mandate. Ensuring people can book a desk near their team, reserve parking, and find a meeting room without hassle removes friction from the office experience and increases voluntary attendance.
A work arrangement where employees split their time between remote work and in-office work on a regular, planned basis.
The practice of not assigning permanent desks to employees, allowing anyone to use any available desk on a first-come, first-served basis.
A digital tool that allows employees to reserve workspaces in advance, see real-time availability, and manage flexible seating arrangements.
The process of determining how much office space, how many desks, rooms, and parking spots an organisation needs based on actual usage data and growth forecasts.