Company leaders should Reset, Restart, Recalibrate and Reinvent when preparing to reopen. Photo by Thirdman from Pexels
Company leaders should Reset, Restart, Recalibrate and Reinvent when preparing to reopen. Photo by Thirdman from Pexels

A University of Louisville researcher has developed a roadmap he hopes will set companies up for success in bringing employees who have been working from home back to the office as coronavirus restrictions ease.

, an organizational development researcher, and associate professor, calls his four-step plan the 鈥淩ISE Reintegration Model,鈥 a strategic planning framework he says leaders in a range of industries can use to begin thinking through the questions and plans for bringing teams back into the physical workplace.

鈥淓mployee reintegration is coming as it becomes safer to do so,鈥 Shuck said. 鈥淏ut from an organizational standpoint, that鈥檚 easier said than done. That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 important for companies to think through these factors and develop a proactive, intentional plan.鈥澛

Shuck’s RISE model centers on four 鈥淩s,鈥 the first being 鈥淩eset.鈥 This step, he said, should begin two to three months ahead of bringing employees back, and asks companies to consider how their offices will be different than they were before pandemic shutdown. For example, there may be COVID-19 safety protocols, increased use of technology and employees who need time to adjust back from working out of their living rooms.

鈥淐ompanies went through one major reset in 2020, when many employees began working remotely, and this is another major reset,鈥 Shuck said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not going to go right back to business as usual. Things will likely look different than they did before. Companies need to prepare 鈥 and help their employees prepare 鈥 for that.鈥

The second R, 鈥淩estart,鈥 happens in the first one to two months after companies restart in-person work. In this phase, Shuck said, companies should allow employees time to reacclimate to the old-but-new environment and put a heavy focus on short-term goals, which can build a sense of momentum, value and direction.

The third R, 鈥淩ecalibrate,鈥 should begin two to four months after companies reopen. In this phase, Shuck said, companies should focus on adjusting business strategy for new information, emerging market norms and a dynamic operating landscape dramatically changed by the global pandemic.

鈥淎s we look into the emerging economies of work, there is no country, no industry, no company, no team and no individual that the COVID-19 crisis did not touch in some way,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n some market spaces, entire industries changed. Some industries no longer exist. In other spaces, new industries and ideas have emerged.鈥

The last R, 鈥淩einvent,鈥 is all about taking lessons learned during the pandemic and integrating them into the company鈥檚 operations. For example, seeing that employees can work from home effectively may lead to giving them more flexibility in office hours. This phase, Shuck said, should happen four to eight months after companies bring employees back and then every six months for the next three years.

鈥淲ith adapting to change, everything comes down to having a plan,鈥 Shuck said. 鈥淏y thinking things through and following a clear roadmap, companies give themselves the best chance of coming back better and stronger.鈥