Virtual reality reaches out to save relationships


Losing in-person personal touch
Rosenberg noted that the focus away from the initial incivility and learning opportunities has historically happened more frequently to people of color. “Working during the pandemic—and working from home—provide unique challenges to a civil workplace,” she said. “It’s hard to maintain the same sense of belonging, camaraderie and engagement in the team and company. “Working together, if I behave in ways that convey disrespect to you, I may have a chance later in the day to notice that you’re less warm or even cool to me,” Rosenberg said. “I’ll have opportunities to repair the breach, even if we don’t explicitly talk about what happened.” There are signs of change in the air. “I may offer to get you coffee, or stop by your work area to chat, or in some other way show you that I saw that something negative happened between us, and I’m trying to address it,” Rosenberg said. “With work from home, these small opportunities to notice a coworker’s reaction—and to respond to it—are not part of the new WFH normal,” she said. “Little—and big—experiences of feeling disrespected can fester.” These feelings can emerge from a variety of sources. “Workplace culture starts at the top, but teams and working groups can have their own subcultures,” Rosenberg said. “The responsibility lies with leaders and managers to model, nudge and encourage civil behavior and, if need be, sanction uncivil behavior. “Doing so requires significant mental effort,” she said. “Another problem is that unless all employees are trained and deputized to help create a culture of civility—including bystander intervention—it’s a heavy burden for leaders and managers to carry alone.”On track with respect
In her view, when every employee has the opportunity to learn deeply what a respectful workplace looks like, the whole company is pointed in the same direction. “The opportunities for miscommunication can multiply as people work from home,” Rosenberg said. “Most of us are not as clear writers as we think we are. Text-based communication such as email, Slack, chat and so on are ripe for miscommunication. “We may misread emotion into the words or see snark where there isn’t any, for example,” she said. “In turn, this creates or adds layers to tension and wariness into working relationships.” The latest innovations have turned into the latest drawbacks. “Videoconferencing has been helpful to have, but can recreate incivilities of in-person meetings,” Rosenberg said. “This includes interrupting, discounting ideas, someone taking—or getting—credit for another’s ideas, unintentionally not inviting employees with diverse perspectives to meetings. “Videoconferencing also creates challenges to discern nuance,” she said. “It’s fatiguing to ‘read’ people when their faces are tiny boxes on the screen that have microsecond delays from their audio.” Taken together, senses are overwhelmed. “Paying attention to all the faces on a call while simultaneously trying to read what’s in the chat box or other text-based communication is also fatiguing and makes us lose information,” Rosenberg said. “With videoconferencing, we lose the body language cues that provide feedback about how the other person is doing and whether we’ve been uncivil.” Biro suggests taking a step back to reassess. “Look at the bigger picture right now to see how lack of tolerance and understanding robs us of civility—which in a work culture means we can’t function as teams, as collaborators,” she said. “If we’re not committed to true diversity and a culture that embraces diversity, we won’t have a foundation for true civility. “When was the last time we stopped business as usual to have a big-picture conversation about civility—to understand the microaggressions that pollute our interactions?” Biro said. “Keep a problem abstract, and you can’t make tangible improvements.”Equality of technology
Never let remote working become out of sight, out of mind—or take monitoring to extremes. Those working remotely might have added pressures to produce away from the rest of the office, especially if contending with unblinking systems monitoring their activities. “Ensure equal access to remote technology and hardware before you expect everyone to be up and running,” Biro said. “We don’t all have the same privileges. Equality is a matter of technology, too. “One old-fashioned but surprisingly effective means to communicate remotely? By phone,” she said. “We can hear the nuances in each other’s voices with no delay.” Avoid taking advantage of captive, remote workers. “Limit endless daily video meetings,” Biro said. “Give your people a break. Zoom is an amazing platform, but Zoom fatigue is a real thing. Endless screen time can create tiny moments of stress that make us less receptive to each other.” Entrepreneurs should have definitive ways to manage remote workers. "There are several strategies organizations can implement to improve employees’ abilities to work from home," Rosenberg said. "One is realistic—and clear—expectations. Two surveys during the pandemic have highlighted that employees are, understandably, significantly distracted. "It’s external distractions—such as managing children—and internal distractions: worries and anxieties," she said. "So during the pandemic, many employees will not be able to work at the same level they did before." This makes communication even more important. "Expectations about the amount and type of work each employee can do should be an ongoing discussion," Rosenberg said. "It’s also important for managers and teams to provide clear communication about priorities and realistic deadlines. "Another strategy is for leaders, managers and coworkers to understand employees’ availability and bandwidth," she said. "Managers and teammates should have some sense of what each employee’s homelife is like—what challenges each is facing when working from home."Messages in color
One strategy Rosenberg suggested is to ask each employee, at the start of meetings, for a quick color-coded check-in about their bandwidth:- Green, which means good to go, ready to focus
- Red, distressed, having trouble focusing
- Yellow, in between the two
Experience another viewpoint
From any distance, connections can grow and strengthen. “Virtual reality is an amazing medium to shift perspective and create empathy,” Rosenberg said. “It can—literally—put you in another person’s shoes. “Let’s say a leader is white,” she said. “He or she might have read about situations that were disrespectful for black employees. Leaders might even have had some type of sensitivity training. But the virtual reality experience of being a black employee in such situations, first hand, is an entirely different experience. It’s developing insight, on steroids.” That knowledge can improve the atmosphere of the entire business. “Leaders play a crucial role in setting—and changing—culture,” Rosenberg said. “Virtual reality experiences can help provide leaders with the emotional learning of what best practices look like—and feel like. “Soft skills are a vital component of good leadership,” she said. “One soft skill is empathy.” Rosenberg noted that empathy has different components:- Cognitive: thinking
- Emotional: feeling
- Compassionate: acting

Jim Katzaman is a manager at Largo Financial Services. A writer by trade, he graduated from Lebanon Valley College, Pennsylvania, with a Bachelor of Arts in English. He enlisted in the Air Force and served for 25 years in public affairs – better known in the civilian world as public relations. He also earned an Associate’s Degree in Applied Science in Public Affairs. Since retiring, he has been a consultant and in the federal General Service as a public affairs specialist. He also acquired life and health insurance licenses, which resulted in his present affiliation with Largo Financial Services. In addition to expertise in financial affairs, he gathers the majority of his story content from Twitter chats. This has led him to publish about a wide range of topics such as social media, marketing, sexual harassment, workplace trends, productivity and financial management. Medium has named him a top writer in social media.