0% found this document useful (0 votes)
305 views3 pages

Hot Desking Policy

This hot desking policy outlines rules for assigning shared workspaces on a rotating basis to save costs. Employees without dedicated jobs can use any unoccupied desk. Benefits include saving space, fostering networking, and respecting shared areas. Employees must keep desks clean, remove items when away, and avoid monopolizing desks. The company provides necessary equipment, lockers, and meeting rooms to facilitate hot desking.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
305 views3 pages

Hot Desking Policy

This hot desking policy outlines rules for assigning shared workspaces on a rotating basis to save costs. Employees without dedicated jobs can use any unoccupied desk. Benefits include saving space, fostering networking, and respecting shared areas. Employees must keep desks clean, remove items when away, and avoid monopolizing desks. The company provides necessary equipment, lockers, and meeting rooms to facilitate hot desking.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Hot Desking Policy

This Hot Desking Policy template is ready to be tailored for your company’s needs and should be
considered a starting point for setting up your employment policies.

Policy brief & purpose


Our Hot Desking Policy outlines rules for assigning working spaces among employees on a rotating
system. We’re able to save space and costs when employees use the same set of desks at
different times, depending on their working hours. Desk assignments are subject to change
[daily/weekly/monthly].

We have established guidelines to ensure that hot desking, or desk sharing, works efficiently.

Scope
This hot desking policy refers to our employees who are able to occasionally work from outside the
office, work flexible hours or don’t need a specific desk by nature of their jobs (for example,
receptionists and office managers are excluded.)

Policy elements
What is hot desking?

We have a set number of desks in our office. These desks aren’t assigned to any particular
employee, but may be shared. Employees who come to work may sit at an unoccupied desk of
their choice. After they’re finished with their work, they need to remove personal items from the
desk so their colleagues may use it.

Why we established a hot desking policy

Employees may feel a sense of ownership over their working spaces and be reluctant to share
them. We understand the sentiment, but we believe that our hot desking system has various
benefits that include:

Saving space and costs incurred by unoccupied desks when employees work away from
our office or on flexible schedules.
Networking with a larger number of colleagues.
Creating ways to work and communicate with other teams more easily.

Try Workable for free, for 15 days: www.workable.com, no downloads or credit card required
Fostering a culture of respecting shared office space.

Our employees’ responsibilities

Employees should:

Keep all desks clean and tidy and follow basic hygiene rules.
Remove all personal items from their working space if they plan to be out of the office for
more than [X hours.]
Avoid monopolizing a specific desk. If we observe employees leaving personal items on a
desk to hold it for themselves, we’ll ask them to move to another location.
Keep their personal items in their briefcases or lockers, instead of on desks.
Eat lunch in the kitchen/cafeteria and not on desks.
Avoid leaving confidential documents on desks.
Use meeting rooms for important or confidential calls. Employees may have to make desks
available to colleagues, if calls are expected to last long.

We also advise employees wipe desks down with antibacterial wipes, and adjust screens and
chairs to their needs.

Employees should try to resolve conflicts over desk spaces amicably amongst themselves. For
serious issues, they should turn to their managers or HR for further assistance.

Our company’s responsibilities

We want to ensure that employees can be comfortable and productive at any given desk. Our
company is also committed to making it easier for employees to follow this policy’s rules.
Specifically, we’ll:

Establish an open-plan office with uniform desks.


Have enough desks to accommodate all employees working at specific times.
Provide all employees with laptops to carry all necessary software and files with them.
Equip all desks with phones, computer screens, keyboards and mouses that connect to
laptops.
Place lockers in convenient areas so employees can easily store personal items.
Ensure all desks have adequate lighting and adjustable chairs.
Implement work from home and flexible hours policies.
Create “zones” for team members who need to sit close together when working on certain
projects or for a specific time.
Make meeting rooms and common areas easily accessible.
Scrap paper files whenever possible and use electronic storage systems instead.
Have fast and effective technical support available at all times.

Try Workable for free, for 15 days: www.workable.com, no downloads or credit card required
To streamline hot desking, we’ll number desks and have a [spreadsheet/ Slack channel/ calendar]
where employees can note which desk they’re using.

Disclaimer: This policy template is meant to provide general guidelines and should be used as a
reference. It may not take into account all relevant local, state or federal laws and is not a legal
document. Neither the author nor Workable will assume any legal liability that may arise from the
use of this policy.

Further reading:

Hot-desking and office hire: Mind if I take this space?


Morale plummets when we go cold on hot desks

Try Workable for free, for 15 days: www.workable.com, no downloads or credit card required
Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)

You might also like