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Working in an office, at least full-time, might be a thing of the past in a post-coronavirus world. Bloomberg’s Doug Alexander reports on how many firms are adopting work-from-home or blended workplace options for their employees. The implications for commercial real estate could be significant. He writes:

Bank of Montreal anticipates that as much as 80% of its staff — or about 36,000 employees — may adopt new flexible arrangements that blend working from home with going into the office even after the Covid-19 pandemic subsides.

The virus prompted the bank to make a sweeping reappraisal of workplace policies, according to Mona Malone, chief human resources officer. She said the lender expects that 30% to 80% of employees may continue to work from home at least some of the time. The Toronto-based bank employed about 45,000 people as of Jan. 31.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been able to maintain continuity of banking services with far more people working outside the office than we ever thought possible,โ€ Malone said Monday in an interview. โ€œWe thought it was critical that we were in the office to make something happen, and what weโ€™ve proven through this is thatโ€™s actually not the case.โ€

Chief Executive Officer Darryl White has said โ€œa 2.0 versionโ€ of the workplace may include the blended home-and-office arrangements, as big employers worldwide reconfigure offices and routines. Malone said Canadian and U.S. branch employees have โ€œby and largeโ€ been going into work during the crisis along with a โ€œsmall amountโ€ of technology and operations employees, while 95% of those in office towers have been working from home.

About two-thirds of the firmโ€™s employees are in Canada, while 13,408 are in the U.S. and 1,578 overseas. The post-Covid plan involves more workers at home including โ€œa tonโ€ of employees with hybrid office-and-home roles, and fewer people working solely at company locations, Malone said.

โ€œItโ€™s a blended approach of thinking about productivity and flexibility and for us not a return to the way it used to be,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s about an evolution in the way that we work.โ€

As with many companies worldwide, Covid-19 has already upended much of the workforce of Canadaโ€™s fourth-largest bank. For example, call-center agents initially went into offices at the start of the outbreak. Then in the past month, the bank shifted half of its Canadian call-center staff and 80% of its U.S. agents to home offices.

โ€œThatโ€™s not a temporary thing,โ€ Malone said. โ€œWe donโ€™t have to think about contact centers as just these geographical hubs, and we can use this remote way of working.โ€

The work-from-anywhere trend helps keep employees safe, Malone said. Crowding workers into office towers while dealing with mass transit, elevators and social distancing is โ€œproblematic.โ€ She added that the new approach can also present recruitment possibilities.