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Hybrid working is the new normal. Jan Joos, Director Group Internal Services, uses five arguments to explain how this is taking shape in the Proximus Towers and regional offices. These will be transformed into an open campus.

NEXT NORMAL

becomes open campus

Proximus office

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“We don't believe in 100% teleworking for the long term. We favor a hybrid approach, whereby you choose where you work depending on the type of work in your schedule. Those who need peace and quiet to focus on their work are often a lot more productive at home. A brainstorming session or a meeting with an agile team is more effective when it takes place face to face.” 

“We may be evolving towards a balance where our employees work from home on average three days a week and come to the office for two days. A survey we organized among employees shows that most people feel this is the ideal balance.”

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Find the right balance

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“We come to the office because we want to meet people and work together. That’s why we're focusing less on workplaces and more on meeting places in our buildings: conference rooms, rooms for hybrid meetings via video, for sessions in small or large groups, but also for more informal conversations. We are turning the offices into a place where employees from different teams and departments meet.” 

“Because we need less work space, we can limit the office space in the towers in the Brussels Noordwijk to approximately 40,000 m2. Today we occupy approx. 92,000 m2. Employees will reserve their workplace or meeting room in advance. Smart software will allocate the place that best suits the work they're coming to do in the office.”

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Turn the office into a meeting place

“We are going for a thorough renovation of the towers, but we may also decide to move to a new location. The decision will be taken this year. Whatever the outcome, we will be turning our office into an open campus, where we collaborate with other companies and where we share our facilities with our partner employees.” 

“If we stay in the towers, the more than 50,000 m2 excess space will be made available for other companies, shops and apartments. Local residents are also welcome, for example in the restaurant. In this way, the towers will be repurposed, which is in line with the overall plan for the Brussels North District. The monotonous office district is making way for a multifunctional environment. Not only for work, but also for living and leisure.”

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Make the office an open campus

“The repurposing of our offices must, in the first instance, support a new way of working together. The idea of departments that think completely independently of each other is outdated. We are therefore providing zones for teams with members from all the different departments. They work together in 'tribes', as we call them, in which they take on various roles. This ensures more creativity and new insights, across the boundaries of the departments. We support that with technology to access buildings, digital tools to reserve meeting rooms or parking spaces, and so on.”

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Break through the traditional silos

“It is essential that all departments support the change management policy. HR needs to play a pioneering role in this area. Managers and their teams will be coming up with a great many new agreements. Which meetings do you conduct via video? Which conversations are better conducted at the office? If we want to spread the occupancy in the offices in the most efficient way, not everyone will be able to work from home on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays every week. And what about the company car? Now that they will be driving much less, employees may want to reconsider their mobility choices.”

“The impetus behind this entire process is not the financial aspect but rather the quest for a new way of working that conduces to the well-being of our employees, and is also good for the company and the environment. The project reflects the corporate strategy #inspire2022, which also includes our CSR policy and the collaboration with our partners.” 

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Focus on change management

“We are transforming the Proximus towers into an open campus, where employees of partners and other companies, as well as local residents, are welcome.”

THE 5 ARGUMENTS

Turn the office into a meeting place

Make the office an open campus

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Jan Joos studied IT at the VUB. He has 25 years of experience at Proximus and has been Director Group Internal Services since 2009.

Jan Joos

Flemish government employees will continue to work part-time from home. Frank Geets, Administrator-General of Het Facilitair Bedrijf: “Around six thousand Flemish government employees will be given a new workstation (a ‘station’) in the renovated WTC building at Brussels North. We’re equipping the site with a single workstation for every two employees. So, there will be fewer permanent stations, but more shared spaces to handle peak periods.”

A single workstation for every two civil servants

01-img5.png

“Employees can enjoy their benefits `on the go’ via a smartphone. They  can manage their mobility budget with full autonomy and my department can finally focus on its core activities again.”

01-header.jpg

NEXT NORMAL

Hybrid working is the new normal. Jan Joos, Director Group Internal Services, uses five arguments to explain how this is taking shape in the Proximus Towers and regional offices. These will be transformed into an open campus.

Proximus office

becomes open campus

01-bg.jpg

“We don't believe in 100% teleworking for the long term. We favor a hybrid approach, whereby you choose where you work depending on the type of work in your schedule. Those who need peace and quiet to focus on their work are often a lot more productive at home. A brainstorming session or a meeting with an agile team is more effective when it takes place face to face.” 

“We may be evolving towards a balance where our employees work from home on average three days a week and come to the office for two days. A survey we organized among employees shows that most people feel this is the ideal balance.”

01-1.png

Find the right balance

“We come to the office because we want to meet people and work together. That’s why we're focusing less on workplaces and more on meeting places in our buildings: conference rooms, rooms for hybrid meetings via video, for sessions in small or large groups, but also for more informal conversations. We are turning the offices into a place where employees from different teams and departments meet.” 

“Because we need less work space, we can limit the office space in the towers in the Brussels Noordwijk to approximately 40,000 m2. Today we occupy approx. 92,000 m2. Employees will reserve their workplace or meeting room in advance. Smart software will allocate the place that best suits the work they're coming to do in the office.”

01-1.png (copy)

Turn the office into a meeting place

“We are going for a thorough renovation of the towers, but we may also decide to move to a new location. The decision will be taken this year. Whatever the outcome, we will be turning our office into an open campus, where we collaborate with other companies and where we share our facilities with our partner employees.” 

“If we stay in the towers, the more than 50,000 m2 excess space will be made available for other companies, shops and apartments. Local residents are also welcome, for example in the restaurant. In this way, the towers will be repurposed, which is in line with the overall plan for the Brussels North District. The monotonous office district is making way for a multifunctional environment. Not only for work, but also for living and leisure.”

01-1.png (copy1)

Make the office an open campus

01-img4b.jpg

Jan Joos studied IT at the VUB. He has 25 years of experience at Proximus and has been Director Group Internal Services since 2009.

Jan Joos

“We are transforming the Proximus towers into an open campus, where employees of partners and other companies, as well as local residents, are welcome.”

“The repurposing of our offices must, in the first instance, support a new way of working together. The idea of departments that think completely independently of each other is outdated. We are therefore providing zones for teams with members from all the different departments. They work together in 'tribes', as we call them, in which they take on various roles. This ensures more creativity and new insights, across the boundaries of the departments. We support that with technology to access buildings, digital tools to reserve meeting rooms or parking spaces, and so on.”

01-1.png (copy2)

Break through the traditional silos

“It is essential that all departments support the change management policy. HR needs to play a pioneering role in this area. Managers and their teams will be coming up with a great many new agreements. Which meetings do you conduct via video? Which conversations are better conducted at the office? If we want to spread the occupancy in the offices in the most efficient way, not everyone will be able to work from home on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays every week. And what about the company car? Now that they will be driving much less, employees may want to reconsider their mobility choices.”

“The impetus behind this entire process is not the financial aspect but rather the quest for a new way of working that conduces to the well-being of our employees, and is also good for the company and the environment. The project reflects the corporate strategy #inspire2022, which also includes our CSR policy and the collaboration with our partners.” 

01-1.png (copy3)

Focus on change management

A single workstation for every two civil servants

Flemish government employees will continue to work part-time from home. Frank Geets, Administrator-General of Het Facilitair Bedrijf: “Around six thousand Flemish government employees will be given a new workstation (a ‘station’) in the renovated WTC building at Brussels North. We’re equipping the site with a single workstation for every two employees. So, there will be fewer permanent stations, but more shared spaces to handle peak periods.”

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Government office of the future

“Employees can enjoy their benefits `on the go’ via a smartphone. They  can manage their mobility budget with full autonomy and my department can finally focus on its core activities again.”

One magazine

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