The Modern Workplace

Written by
Tori McBride

Insights by
Jerome Mckay-Jones

20 May, 2022

Two years ago, the pandemic caused mass disruption to the labour market. Millions of people lost jobs or were furloughed, whilst others had to rapidly adjust to working from home as offices closed. This abrupt and forceful upset to the ‘9-5’ lifestyle came with the realisation that remote work doesn’t necessarily lead to a decline in productivity.

Today, as the world begins its post-pandemic recovery, it seems that remote work is here to stay. According to one study by Owl Labs, 90% of workers surveyed said they were as productive or more productive working remotely, and 84% reported that working remotely after the pandemic would make them happier.

But does this recent shift towards more flexible working models mean the death of the traditional workplace environment? Or, will we see the office era make a return?

Methodology

To answer these questions, Fifty set out to define and analyse four key areas of the modern workplace. Our Insights Team used social listening data to build bespoke audiences engaging with the conversation around:

1. 'Work from home (WFH)'

2. ‘The four-day work week'

3. ‘Work-life balance’

4. and ‘Workplace values’.

These core audiences were uploaded and segmented using our independent clustering algorithm, enabling Fifty to take a deep dive into each audience. We then compared the interests, professions, demographics and passions surrounding each conversation within the Fifty platform. Here’s what we found.

Key takeaways:

  • There is a wide variety of audiences included in the modern workplace conversations. A mixture of senior professionals and younger demographics were involved in the conversations.

  • ‘Business Leaders’, ‘Senior Professionals’ and ‘Managers’ were found in abundance across the tribes, confirming the importance of these topics to the modern employee and the companies they work for.

  • Progressive interests indexed highly throughout the study. The algorithm found liberal politics, tech innovation and culture as some of the most common passion points indicating the current conversation is popular among the forward-thinking.

Comparative analysis

Work From Home (WFH)

Figure 1: A breakdown of the different tribes engaging with ‘Work From Home’.
Figure 1: A breakdown of the different tribes engaging with ‘Work From Home’.

This topic is by far the most common modern workplace arrangement spoken about online. Informed progressives were the highest-ranking tribe engaging with this topic, with the tribe skewing heavily towards ‘Senior London Professionals’ with interests in liberal politics and social issues. The community are likely to be engaging in the conversation surrounding both the benefits and challenges associated with WFH as there is a continuing debate on the trade-off of innovation for productivity as well as the potential social issues of a secluded workforce.

Figure 2: Top influencers amongst ‘Informed Progressives’ include BBC Breaking News, The Guardian and Jeremy Corbyn.
Figure 2: Top influencers amongst ‘Informed Progressives’ include BBC Breaking News, The Guardian and Jeremy Corbyn.

The Four-Day Work Week

Figure 3: A breakdown of the different tribes engaging with the ‘Four Day Work Week’.
Figure 3: A breakdown of the different tribes engaging with the ‘Four Day Work Week’.

As a relatively new arrangement associated with the modern workplace, the four-day work week seems to be particularly popular amongst Britain's youngest professionals. The tribe with the highest levels of engagement with this topic was ‘Gen Z: Contemporary Culture’, suggesting that the new scheme captures this forward-thinking community’s interest.

Interests such as Music and The Arts imply that this audience may have secondary creative interests which they would like to pursue in their extra time off.

Figure 4: Top categories for ‘Gen Z: Contemporary Culture’ include Music and Arts & Entertainment.
Figure 4: Top categories for ‘Gen Z: Contemporary Culture’ include Music and Arts & Entertainment.

Work-Life Balance

Figure 5: A breakdown of the different tribes engaging with ‘Work Life Balance’.
Figure 5: A breakdown of the different tribes engaging with ‘Work Life Balance’.

Whilst the concept of work-life balance is nothing new, COVID has catapulted the topic to the forefront of conversation on the future of modern working. In what has become known as ‘the great resignation’, workers around the world used the pandemic as an opportunity to reassess their working situation and seek out a better quality of life.

The tribes engaging with this issue consisted of a mixture of ‘Business Decision-Makers’ and Informed Progressives’, indicating the importance of this topic to the established professional. Trending categories, such as ‘Business News’ and ‘Finance & Investing’, suggest that although these tribes may be seeking a less stressful career, they remain committed to the business world.

Figure 6: Trending categories amongst ‘Business Decision-Makers’ include ‘Business News’, ‘Politics’ and ‘Currencies & Foreign Exchange’.
Figure 6: Trending categories amongst ‘Business Decision-Makers’ include ‘Business News’, ‘Politics’ and ‘Currencies & Foreign Exchange’.

Workplace Values

Figure 7: A breakdown of the different tribes engaging with ‘Work Life Balance’.
Figure 7: A breakdown of the different tribes engaging with ‘Work Life Balance’.

As the number of disengaged employees skyrocketed over the course of the pandemic, company values quickly have quickly become the new currency when it comes to employee retention. Gen Z in particular are placing increasing pressure on companies to adopt more progressive values, with younger employees now evaluating companies based on their moral and ethical commitments and relying on these commitments to make career choices.

This trend was evident throughout our analysis, which found tribes of ‘Gen Z’ and Millennial tribes both heavily engaged with the topic of ‘Workplace Values’. Also present were more established ‘Business Leaders’, indicating that there is a demand for value reform at both ends of the career ladder.

Want to know which topics your target audience is interested in? Get in touch with the Fifty team at [email protected] or book a free demo with our team.

Using YouTube Ads for Connected TV or Mobile Device Viewing

In this post, we discuss the evolving media offering from YouTube. Highlighting their reintroduction of non-skippable ads during sit-back viewing on Connected TV. As well as how very short form ads provide a more TikTok like scroll-through viewing ad engagement opportunity when viewers use a mobile device.

Related Articles

Dissecting the Voter Landscape: US Election 2024

Our Technology is uniquely placed to understand audiences and critically what matters to them. For a month, we have focused these capabilities on the US Election, making sense of this ever increasingly complex landscape.

Using YouTube Ads for Connected TV or Mobile Device Viewing

In this post, we discuss the evolving media offering from YouTube. Highlighting their reintroduction of non-skippable ads during sit-back viewing on Connected TV. As well as how very short form ads provide a more TikTok like scroll-through viewing ad engagement opportunity when viewers use a mobile device.

Fifty Delighted That 4 New Award Entries Have Been Shortlisted

Fifty Delighted That Our 4 Award Entries Have Been Shortlisted 

Running the Distance: How Runna and Russ Cook are Changing the Game

On April 7th, Russ Cook finished running the entire length of Africa.

Decathlon UK Selects Fifty as Media Agency Partner to Fuel Growth with AI-Driven Strategies

Leading sports retailer Decathlon UK, has announced Fifty as its new technology-led media agency partner.

A powerful team: Fifty & Juice announce new partnership

Fifty and Juice have teamed up to provide startups and challenger brands with a comprehensive growth solution like no other.

Fifty Journeys: Grig

Meet our Senior Software Engineer, Grig!