Empathy May Help Reshape How We Work

I spoke with a close friend about her work today. She’s in corporate America and is rethinking where she works. She’s in an extremely expensive city with no family nearby. Three years ago, her boss asked her if she wanted to stay there or move back home. Her response was that technology would allow her to live and work from anywhere. She said moving home and working the same business hours as her colleagues would be ideal. Her boss looked at her like she was crazy. She was frustrated, but she understood. To stay in her role, she would have to remain in the expensive city far from family.

Fast forward to today. She may propose the same remote work arrangement to her boss again. She’s confident that this time it would get serious consideration. The pandemic has been tough on everyone, and we’re ready to move past it. For all the negatives, I think one positive thing will come from it: empathy. Large segments of the workforce experienced the same things at the same time: working from home and a lack of community. Suddenly many of us have reason to understand what others are going through and how they feel.

We’re at a pivotal point in how we work. Remote work is mainstream and company leaders have a high level of empathy for their employees. I’m not sure what’s going to happen, but I think this period will shape how we work for the foreseeable future. I’m hopeful that more people will be able to do their dream job from the location that’s best for them.