Could the Covid-induced virtual world have been good for your career?
Samantha Freestone
If you were lucky enough to hold on to your job during lockdown, research suggests the virtual world may have been good for your career. And the virtual corporation, once a theory, is here to stay.
On a Zoom call, the work landscape changed dramatically. Children wandered by as executives sat stoically attempting to remain focused on the task at hand; we were invited into the personal worlds of our colleagues and many a laugh was had as we all navigated this strange new world.
What changed more than anything was the physicality of the leadership hierarchy and research suggests this may have been good for your career.
Case studies conducted by Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) lab-bred humanyze suggest that from a human psychology perspective, the flat hierarchy unintentionally created by the zoom landscape gave lower-ranking employees more courage to speak up and share their opinions, insights and views.
With all members of a particular meeting occupying the same virtual space, the dynamic changed considerably.
?Many of the traditional trappings of leadership, such as the seat at the head of the table, disappear; screen real estate is the same for everyone,? an article on the research read.
?This shift in perspective encouraged junior people to speak up more often and made meetings more participatory.?
Humanyze data shows that vertical collaboration rose by 27 per cent during the pandemic.
Boston Consulting Group (BSG), another consulting firm specialising in transformational leadership and research, found that not only were there more opportunities for career growth during the pandemic in a corporate context, but that productivity rose.