The Hybrid Divide Is Real
As hybrid work becomes the norm in the UAE, a new type of workplace tension has emerged – conflict between remote and
in-office employees. Research from Stanford University shows that proximity bias – the tendency to favour employees who are
physically present – can create resentment, exclusion, and performance disparities.
Left unmanaged, this divide damages collaboration, morale, and retention.
Sources of Conflict
Proximity Bias
Managers often unconsciously give more visibility, feedback, and opportunities to employees they see daily. Remote workers
feel overlooked, while in-office employees feel burdened with more face-time expectations.
Communication Gaps
In-office teams often have spontaneous conversations, quick decisions, and informal updates that remote employees miss.
This creates information asymmetry – remote workers feel out of the loop.
Perceived Unfairness
In-office employees may feel that remote colleagues have it easier – no commute, more flexibility, fewer interruptions. Remote
employees may feel they work harder to prove themselves with less support.
Different Working Norms
When half the team is in the office and half is remote, norms around response times, meeting formats, and collaboration tools
can become points of friction.
How to Bridge the Gap
Establish Equal Access to Information
- Default to digital communication channels for all important updates
- Record meetings and share notes so remote employees have the same access
- Avoid making critical decisions in hallway conversations
Restructure Meetings for Inclusion
- Use video conferencing for every meeting, even if some attendees are in the room
- Ensure remote participants have equal time to speak
- Rotate meeting times to accommodate different schedules fairly
Address Proximity Bias Directly
- Train managers to evaluate performance based on output, not presence
- Use structured processes for assignments, promotions, and recognition
- Audit opportunity distribution regularly to check for patterns of bias
Create Shared Rituals
- Establish team rituals that include both remote and in-office members
- Use collaborative tools that work equally well for everyone
- Celebrate achievements across both groups without privileging one
Set Clear Expectations
- Define communication norms – response times, preferred channels, availability hours
- Make expectations the same for remote and in-office employees
- Hold everyone accountable equally
The Manager’s Role
Managers are the critical variable. They set the tone for whether a hybrid team functions as one unit or fractures into two
groups.
What effective managers do:
- Check in with remote employees as frequently as in-office ones
- Create equal opportunities for visibility and career development
- Mediate conflicts early before they become entrenched
- Model inclusive behaviour in every interaction
FAQ
How do we prevent remote employees from being overlooked for promotions?
Use objective criteria for evaluations. Document contributions from all team members, not just those who are visible in the
office. Consider blind review processes for promotion decisions.
What if in-office employees resent remote colleagues?
Address the resentment directly. Understand the root cause – often it is workload distribution or perceived effort. Adjust
workloads fairly and communicate the reasoning behind flexible arrangements.
Should we require everyone to come to the office?
Mandating full-time office presence eliminates the symptom but ignores the value of flexibility. A better approach is to design a
hybrid model that is intentional – with clear expectations for in-office days and remote days.
Conclusion
Managing hybrid teams requires intentional design, not just goodwill. Companies that proactively address proximity bias,
communication gaps, and perceived unfairness build stronger, more cohesive teams – regardless of where people sit. The goal
is not to make remote and in-office identical experiences, but to make them equally valued.



