How to Set Boundaries

 

Drawing boundaries to prevent constructing walls and achieving a new work-life balance among remote, in-person and hybrid teams…

As our workforce adjusts to the “new normal,” teams need to establish new rules of engagement to avoid the push-back caused by unrealistic expectations. Almost half of the labor force worked remotely in 2020, and up to 74 percent of workers would like to have more remote hours in the future. (Deloitte).  In fact, a recent LinkedIn survey said that two-thirds of employees are willing to take a pay cut to continue to work remotely. It’s not a secret many workers have become used to and prefer some level of working from home. So how can we make the in-person or hybrid format for workers more appealing, more productive, and engaging?


Tara Powers, CEO of Powers Resource Center, has been leading remote teams and championing leader success for decades. She offers insight into how to best establish healthy connections and realistic boundaries as employees come back to the workplace, even in a part-time format. In her work with virtual teams as well as a Brene Brown “Dare to Lead” facilitator, Tara has seen the pitfalls of not establishing appropriate boundaries. Daring leaders set, hold and respect boundaries, even when it’s hard. Today’s insight offers some solutions:


FIVE TIPS FOR CONSTRUCTING HEALTHY BOUNDARIES:

Email Expectations

The average office worker receives 121 emails per day, and the average professional spends 28 percent of the workday reading and answering emails according to a McKinsey analysis. This can be overwhelming and exhausting. Even though we have access to email 24/7, don’t expect teams to respond at all hours. In fact, leaders can model parameters for answering and responding to messages during a defined set of hours each day no matter where you are.
Discussion Question: What expectations has your team discussed regarding availability when working from home?



In the Dare to Lead model, the Brene Brown-inspired workshops explore the context and applications for building Brave Leaders. The BRAVING Inventory can be used as a rumble tool—a conversation guide to use with colleagues that walks us through the conversation from a place of curiosity, learning, and ultimately trust-building. Powers Resource Center can facilitate a customizable program that will:

  • Build Brave Leaders and Courageous Cultures

  • Build Emotional Intelligence

  • Strengthen Virtual Leader Effectiveness

For more information on our leadership programs, connect with PRC today.


 
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