ServiceNow shares its blueprint for consolidating office space

Can you have your cake and eat it too? ServiceNow says, yes. The enterprise software company, a sponsor of CHRO Daily, announced today that it will consolidate some of its offices, but will not release or terminate any of its office leases. Sixteen of its 79 locations will have integrated office floors that allow employees to work in closer physical proximity and reduce the company’s office footprint within its buildings. It plans to lease some of the newly vacant floors to other companies and use the rest for corporate events.

The move speaks to an issue big companies are working to solve today: How can employers adjust their workspace to reflect the significant decrease in employee need for the office? While some companies are selling their headquarters or pulling out of commercial real estate leases, Jacqui Canney, ServiceNow’s chief people officer, is hesitant to let go of all its space, warning against tendency to “reduce and react.”

Companies, especially those looking for scale, shouldn’t take real estate decisions lightly, he said. “We are a growing company [and] we are bullish we will not back down. We are expanding.”

SerciveNow is not shy about its aggressive growth goals. Earlier this year, the company said it plans to double the number from more than 19,000 to 35,000 employees in the next few years.

Setting an action plan

ServiceNow employees had flexible work options even before the pandemic, but the company recently studied how employees use its offices. Conversations about the allocation and use of space are led by chief equity and inclusion officer Karen Pavlin, with input from fellow executives.

Canney said this structure differentiates ServiceNow’s approach to using office space from other companies and helps ensure that redesign plans align with its DEI goals.

The integration process

The company used feedback tools to determine what employees wanted outside of the office. It found that on most days, less than 10% of its staff use the office unless there is an event or a specific reason for employees to be physically present.

Another finding is that employees don’t feel inspired or satisfied working in an office where they are spread out. The company will reduce the number of floors used in its large offices, cramming employees into a smaller environment.

“We’re just trying to bring people together in a denser way to have more connections, more reasons for collaboration, more opportunities to have those spontaneous meetings,” Canney said. However, keeping the unused floors would be beneficial in the event of hosting large meetings, or in case they hire additional employees in the changed locations.

ServiceNow plans to sublet some of the new vacant floors and conference rooms to employers and turn others into collaboration spaces where employees can meet for purposeful corporate gatherings.

The expected ROI

Canney expects to see the greatest return on investment when it comes to talent engagement.

“We need to do more, know more, and care more about our people. So this kind of decision-making shows how we think about it,” he said.

Amber Burton
[email protected]
@amberburton

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“How companies treat existing employees during transformation also affects recruitment efforts and employer reputation,” he wrote. “Applicants examine layoffs, or even hints of future layoffs, as well as reductions in bonuses and equity amounts, and any suggestion of employee wrongdoing. That’s especially true within the tech industry, which for years has grappled with a talent shortage.

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– The value of office buildings in New York City has fallen by 45% since the start of the pandemic. That’s a loss of about $50 billion. Bloomberg

– A timely reminder with the midterm elections just around the corner: Sometimes, bringing politics into the office can be detrimental to employee productivity and retention. Washington post

– Professional aspirations are no longer about climbing the corporate ladder; they’re about finding a rewarding career, and that turns out to be hard, too. Time

– Elon Musk’s announcement last year that Tesla would build a robot was just a recruiting pitch to get robotics engineers to join the company and work on its self-driving cars. Wired

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