HR future of work
Helps HR and business leaders navigate structural shifts in how, where, and when work gets done, including hybrid/remote models, flexible arrangements, and the evolving employee-employer relationship.
Supported tasks
- Designing hybrid and remote work policies
- Assessing organizational readiness for flexible work models
- Analyzing future-of-work trends relevant to a given industry
- Designing four-day workweek or compressed schedule pilots
- Drafting policies for asynchronous and distributed team collaboration
- Assessing the impact of AI tools on job design and required skills
- Building change management plans for shifting work models
- Designing office space and hoteling policies to match hybrid attendance
- Creating manager guidance for leading hybrid/distributed teams
- Drafting employee value proposition updates reflecting flexible work
- Benchmarking competitor flexible work policies
- Building a future-of-work roadmap for the next 2-3 years
Key prompts
Policy design
- "Design a hybrid work policy for a [industry] company with [team structure]."
- "Draft a compressed workweek pilot plan including success metrics."
- "Create guidelines for asynchronous collaboration across time zones."
- "Design an office hoteling policy to match hybrid attendance patterns."
- "Draft a policy defining core collaboration hours for a distributed team."
Trends and readiness assessment
- "Summarize future-of-work trends relevant to [industry] over the next [timeframe]."
- "Assess our organization's readiness for a fully flexible work model."
- "Analyze how AI tools are likely to change required skills for [role/function]."
- "Benchmark competitor flexible work policies in [industry]."
- "Identify risks of a hybrid model for team cohesion and career development."
Manager and culture enablement
- "Create a guide for managers leading hybrid or fully distributed teams."
- "Draft an update to our employee value proposition reflecting our new flexible work model."
- "Write talking points addressing employee concerns about return-to-office changes."
- "Design a plan to preserve company culture in a distributed workforce."
- "Create onboarding guidance tailored for remote new hires."
Tips
- Anchor policy decisions in actual collaboration needs, not blanket in-office mandates.
- Give managers explicit guidance and training before shifting work models, not just a policy document.
- Pilot significant changes (like compressed weeks) with clear success metrics before scaling.
- Revisit flexible work policies periodically as tools, competitive pressure, and business needs evolve.
Common mistakes
- Mandating in-office days without a clear rationale tied to collaboration or business need.
- Rolling out flexible work policies without equipping managers to lead distributed teams effectively.
- Ignoring equity issues between fully remote, hybrid, and fully in-office employees.
- Treating future-of-work planning as a one-time policy rather than an ongoing capability.