From Flexible to Formal: Resetting Expectations in a Hybrid Work World

Janine Stoffberg • March 31, 2026

Yep, this is your sign to change your expectations about landing a remote role. 

For a while, hybrid work in South Africa ran on a kind of unspoken understanding. Teams made it work as they went, office days were loosely agreed, and flexibility was often shaped by individual managers rather than formal policy. It worked, but only up to a point.


Now, that phase is giving way to something more defined. Hybrid work is still very much in place, but it’s becoming more structured, with organisations setting clearer expectations around when employees need to be in the office.
Recent Remchannel-linked reportingshows just how quickly this shift is happening. In 2023, around 40.7% of organisations prescribed specific in-office days. By 2025, 67.4% required at least three days in the office, and 41.3% had increased their minimum in-office requirements.


That shift brings a new balancing act. Employers want consistency and a reliable way to manage performance across teams, while employees are looking for clarity and fairness. Without that clarity, even flexible arrangements can start to feel uneven.

Why the reset is happening

As hybrid work has matured, some of its early advantages have become harder to maintain without structure. Managing teams across different schedules can slow down collaboration and make it more difficult to keep everyone aligned. What worked as a short-term solution starts to feel less sustainable over time.


At the same time, employees are paying closer attention to how these policies are applied. If expectations differ across teams without a clear reason, it can quickly lead to frustration. Clearer guidelines aren’t there to remove flexibility; they’re about making it more consistent.

Treat hybrid like a system, not a perk


The organisations handling this transition well are treating hybrid work as a defined way of operating. That starts with setting expectations early, so teams know how to plan their time.


In practice, this often means introducing “anchor days” - set days in the office focused on collaboration, with more flexibility around the rest of the week. It also means being clear about why office time matters. When people understand that those in-person days are meant for problem-solving or team connection, the requirement feels more purposeful.

The day-to-day details matter just as much. Simple guidelines around meetings and communication can prevent confusion, especially when teams are split between locations. Setting expectations around response times, for example, helps maintain momentum without creating pressure to always be online.

Performance is where many hybrid models succeed or struggle. Moving towards output-based measures, with clear deliverables and timelines, creates a more balanced system. It gives employees flexibility while ensuring accountability.

What it comes down to


Hybrid work is no longer an experiment. The focus now is on making it work in a way that is both consistent and sustainable.


When expectations are clearly defined, the tension between flexibility and structure starts to ease. Teams know where they stand, managers have a framework to work within, and the conversation shifts towards what is being delivered.


At Communicate Recruitment, we’re seeing more businesses refine their hybrid models in this way, creating environments that feel clearer, fairer, and easier to navigate for everyone involved.


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