As the United States begins the complex process of staging a return to business under the shadow of COVID-19, the process by which building re-occupancy takes place will prove to be extraordinarily pivotal to the ultimate success of the nation’s economic recovery.
Workers returning to offices will be a concrete and highly visible indicator of our ability to manage forward though the crisis effectively, and as a result, this will be a high-stakes endeavor, with extremely significant risks being borne by property owners and managers.
One essential component in the re-occupancy process must be strategic communication between building owners and managers; facilities management teams; tenants; sub-tenants; and individual employees and visitors.
The challenge is that property management communications has historically operated on a very limited basis, typically between building management and one or two tenant representatives per office. Any communications with employee-level impacts would then trickle down through a cascade of forwarded emails, PDF attachments and “for your reference” updates in an informal and often haphazard manner.
In the post-COVID environment, this lack of structure and process cannot stand, as it leaves enormous risks on the table. An errant employee of a tenant company who smokes too close to the building is a frustration. An errant employee of a tenant company who props open a secured loading dock door is a security risk. But an errant employee of a tenant company who fails to follow post-COVID procedures is a health and life safety risk to the entire building.
As a result, building owners and managers need to interweave a strategic communications program deeply into the foundation of their re-occupancy program. Key points should include the following:
In summary, this kind of coordination requires systems, processes, a contact management and communications platform, and tools such as portals, apps and other real-time notification methods, as well as staff training and support with posters, handouts, updates and information. Communication is truly a critical cornerstone to these efforts as we prepare to bring America back to work, one building at a time.
Image credit: Rawpixel Ltd @Flickr (Creative Commons).