A pandemic forced the experiment that decades of management theory could not.
The concept of splitting work between an office and a remote location existed before 2020. Jack Nilles coined the term "telecommuting" in 1973, and companies like IBM experimented with remote work policies in the 1980s and 1990s. None of these experiments achieved widespread adoption.1
The COVID-19 pandemic changed that. By April 2020, an estimated 35 percent of the American workforce was working entirely from home, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Companies that had resisted remote work for decades implemented it in weeks.2
When offices began reopening, most large employers did not return to five-day office weeks. Instead, they adopted hybrid arrangements, typically requiring two or three days per week on-site with the remainder remote. The term "hybrid workplace" became the standard label for this configuration.3
The shift was uneven. Knowledge workers in finance, technology, and professional services gained flexibility. Service workers, manufacturing employees, and healthcare staff, whose work required physical presence, saw no change.
Research by Nicholas Bloom at Stanford University found that hybrid arrangements improved employee satisfaction and reduced quit rates without significantly affecting productivity. His studies also showed that fully remote work produced mixed results, with collaboration and mentoring suffering in the absence of in-person contact.4
By 2024, return-to-office mandates from companies including Amazon, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan Chase reignited debate over whether hybrid arrangements would persist or were a temporary accommodation. Surveys by Gallup indicated that roughly half of remote-capable workers in the United States worked hybrid schedules.5