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10 January 2023 TGC Editor News & Articles

Hybrid and the Office Debate

UK Employers and New Remote Workers in 2023

January 2023
Categories: Business & Trends
Tags: hybrid work, office return, remote beginners, workplace culture

Entering 2023, UK workplaces are navigating a delicate balance. Some employers are attempting to bring staff back into offices, while others continue to embrace hybrid flexibility. At the same time, a growing number of people are starting their careers or businesses entirely from home, experiencing remote work for the first time.

This dual perspective — seasoned hybrid workers versus newcomers — is shaping both policy and culture.


Employers Pushing Office Returns

Several organisations have introduced policies requiring more frequent office attendance. Motivations include:

  • Strengthening team cohesion and collaboration
  • Reinforcing corporate culture
  • Monitoring performance and engagement

However, these initiatives are meeting varied responses. Many employees value the autonomy hybrid working provides and are negotiating flexible arrangements or resisting full-time office mandates.

The return-to-office debate is as much cultural as operational.

Employers are learning that a rigid approach can backfire, leading to dissatisfaction, turnover, or talent migration.


Supporting New Remote Professionals

Alongside this tension, the UK is seeing an influx of people starting remote work:

  • Graduates entering fully remote roles
  • Freelancers and contractors building home-based careers
  • Small business founders operating from home or garden offices

These newcomers face challenges in workspace setup, digital tools, and self-discipline, often without the experience of prior office routines.

Guidance focuses on:

  • Establishing a dedicated workspace
  • Investing in reliable technology and connectivity
  • Building habits to separate work and personal life
  • Understanding professional expectations and standards

For first-time remote workers, the learning curve can be steep but highly rewarding.


Hybrid as a Negotiation

For both existing and new remote workers, hybrid arrangements are increasingly negotiated:

  • Core days in office versus home-based flexibility
  • Adaptation to team needs without sacrificing personal balance
  • Use of garden offices and home setups to maintain professional performance

Employers that treat hybrid working as a negotiable framework rather than a mandate are more likely to retain talent and maintain engagement.


Technology, Support, and Infrastructure

Technology remains the backbone of hybrid success:

  • Cloud collaboration and project management tools
  • Scheduling and booking systems for shared office spaces
  • Secure devices, VPNs, and standardised IT for all employees

For new remote workers, learning to navigate these systems efficiently is critical to building confidence and credibility.

Last updated: 23 February 2026

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