Do you know which office environment factors have the biggest influence when recruiting young talent?

by Brianna Crandall — November 15, 2017 — Is your organization looking to attract more Millennial employees? Free snacks and fitness memberships are great, but you may also want to look closely at your office layout. According to a new study by global research firm IPSOS on behalf of office furniture provider National Business Furniture, office design and aesthetics are playing a greater role in recruiting young talent.

The study, which surveyed adults over the age of 18, including a subsample of adults who work in an office environment, looked at which office layout factors have the biggest influence on employees when it comes to first and lasting impressions.

Changing of the guard

There seems to be a generational shift as younger adults care more about the look and feel of a workplace than older generations.

  • Design: 76% of Millennials, ages 18-34, feel somewhat or very strongly that office design and aesthetic influences their impression of a company, while only 39% of employees ages 55+ care about what their office looks like.
  • Upgrades: 70% of respondents who work in an office environment say that they wished their workplace would consider a design upgrade.
  • Office location: 70% of Millennials care about where an office is located, compared to 41% of those aged 55+.

Traditional branding still a strong factor

A Millennial employee will likely judge a company on its Web sites and branded materials, but the impact wanes as the age of the employee increases.

  • Logos: 63% of Millennials say a company logo impacts their view of a brand, compared with 28% of workers ages 55+.
  • Web sites: 82% of Millennials say that a company Web site somewhat or strongly influences them, compared to 53% of employees 55+.

“Clearly first impressions matter, especially with Millennials, and an interview experience can be impacted by how good a prospective employee feels about a company’s physical space,” said Dean Stier, vice president of multi-channel marketing for National Business Furniture.

Stier offers these tips on how businesses can create a more inviting office space for prospects and current employees.

  • Customize spaces to fit departments and jobs. While employees in finance will want personal offices to manage sensitive information, more collaborative groups like marketing may work better in the open with desks clustered closer together for creative brainstorming.
  • Add portable wall panels to open cubicle spaces. Noise is one negative side effect of today’s contemporary open office floor plan. Today, there are a wide range of creative portable screens and walls that can be quickly added for privacy and to act as a sound barrier.
  • Go green. Researchers in the Netherlands conducted a study that measured a 15% increase in productivity when “lean” workplaces with a bare-bones aesthetic were spruced up with green plant life. Introducing plants to an office environment has been reported to reduce absenteeism by up to 50%, and reduce minor illness by 30%.
  • Create an active workplace. Recent studies have found that prolonged sitting can increase health risks such as cancer, heart disease and type 2 diabetes. Employers can create more active workplaces today by incorporating standing-height or adjustable-height tables that allow workers to rotate between sitting and standing during the day.

The Ipsos office layout poll was conducted July 14 – 16, 2017, on behalf of National Business Furniture. To learn more about National Business Furniture, speak to one of its furniture specialists, or browse the company’s furniture catalog, visit the NBF Web site.