Workplace battle shifts from office to flexible hours: JLL study

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — A study reveals the central conflict between companies and their employees has fundamentally changed, moving from a battle over where people work to a struggle over when.
According to JLL’s 2025 Workforce Preference Barometer, while structured hybrid office policies are now the norm, the demand for control over working hours has become the new frontline for talent retention and well-being.
Work-life balance, flexible hours top worker demands
The data exposes a critical disconnect between employees’ desire for temporal flexibility and employers’ provision of it. While 57% of global office workers believe flexible working hours would improve their quality of life, only 49% currently have access to this benefit.
Fortune reports that this “flexibility gap” poses a direct threat to the psychological contract between workers and employers, with JLL warning that it risks disengagement.
Employees are no longer primarily motivated by salary alone. The report finds that work-life balance has overtaken salary as the top global priority, cited by 65% of respondents.
Retention now hinges on “agency over when and how they work,” with workers seeking compensation for rigid schedules through demands for increased commuting stipends and flexible hours, indicating a shift toward managing time over place.
Burnout and caregiving strain fuel attrition risk
The urgency of flexible time is underscored by a widespread exhaustion crisis that is directly driving attrition. Nearly 40% of global office workers report feeling overwhelmed, with burnout identified as a “serious threat to employers’ operations.”
The link to turnover is clear: among employees considering quitting within a year, 57% are suffering from burnout.
This issue is particularly acute for caregivers and mid-level employees, for whom standard hybrid policies are insufficient. 42% of caregivers require short-notice paid leave, yet feel their constraints are poorly understood.
Management expert Suzy Welch contextualizes this as an existential, generational issue. “We believed that if you worked hard you were rewarded for it. And so this is the disconnect,” Welch told Fortune.
She shared that younger employees, who have witnessed former employees work hard and still lose their jobs, do not believe they are rewarded for sacrificing their personal time; hence, the need to be given more control over their work hours.
This conflict, not of place but of time, can become the new generation of work, and it will be determined whether companies can break the clock of rigidity and embrace flexibility in the context of human-centered productive approaches, or whether they will continue to be caught in a vicious cycle of burnout and turnover.

Independent




