In traditional offices, engagement often happened naturally through “office energy”: You overheard conversations, recognized colleagues in the hallway, and gained context just by being present.
Remote and hybrid work remove those ambient clues. Employees can feel disconnected or unseen if organizations try to rely on the same in-office strategies. This is where a remote- or hybrid-first mindset comes in, one that prioritizes clarity, communication, and equitable access to information.
Remote teams depend on clarity to function well. Yet research indicates that 20% of remote workers identify communication and collaboration as their biggest challenges. One way to address this is by creating a predictable communication framework. When expectations around communication are clear and consistent, employees feel more confident navigating their roles and responsibilities. (See Communication Strategies for Change Management.)
Best practices:

Trying to copy-and-paste office culture into Zoom land never works. Instead, build rituals and collaboration habits that make sense for distributed teams. (See How Documentation Anchors Distributed Teams (And Keeps Us from Drifting into Chaos).)
Examples that work:
When the home and office share the same walls, boundaries disappear fast. Burnout becomes invisible until it’s severe, especially for high performers or caregivers. Remote work wellbeing matters: Globally, 57% of fully remote workers are actively looking or passively watching for new job opportunities, but that drops to 38% for fully engaged and thriving remote workers.(See Leading Through Uncertainty: The New Core Competency.)
Ways to support well-being:

One of the biggest risks in hybrid environments is the creation of an “office advantage.” If recognition and opportunities skew toward the people who happen to be physically visible, remote employees disengage quickly. (See Reskilling & Upskilling for 2026: what Professionals Should be Ready For.)
To create equity:
Hybrid work isn’t just “sometimes at home, sometimes at the office.” High-performing organizations intentionally design what office time is for. Think of in-office days as collaboration accelerators.
Examples include:
If employees are coming in only to sit on Zoom calls, the office becomes a friction point instead of an engagement tool. (See Redesigning the Purpose of the Office: Why Hybrid Work Requires Intentional In-Person Time.)

Engagement rises when employees know where to find answers.
Distributed workforces need:
Knowledge should be available without asking a coworker, reducing frustration and preventing bottlenecks. (See The Science of Employee Motivation: Why Documentation Matters More than You Think.)
Remote and hybrid engagement depend heavily on having the right digital ecosystem.
Tools that support engagement:
Don’t focus on more tools. Instead, ensure your tools work together so employees easily stay connected and supported. (See The Digital Ecosystem that Makes Remote and Hybrid Engagement Work.)
A quick comparison helps highlight why the approach must evolve.

If improving engagement feels overwhelming, begin with these steps:
Remote and hybrid work aren’t temporary states. They represent a long-term shift in how humans work, communicate, and create. Engagement in this environment needs strategy, consistency, and strong knowledge practices. When done well, organizations can build teams that feel connected, supported, and aligned no matter where they sit.
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Hancock, Brian, Bill Schaninger, and Brooke Weddle. “Culture in the hybrid workplace.” McKinsey & Company. 6/11/21. Accessed 3/2/26. https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/people-and-organizational-performance/our-insights/culture-in-the-hybrid-workplace
“Proximity Bias in the Workplace? 96% of Executives Notice.” YAROOMS. 1/14/25. Accessed 3/2/26. https://www.yarooms.com/blog/proximity-bias-in-the-workplace
Voicu, Ana. “All about distributed teams — and how to make them work.” WeWork. 1/19/26. Accessed 3/2/26. https://www.wework.com/ideas/research-insights/all-about-distributed-teams-and-how-to-make-them-work