Members of The Conference Board get exclusive access to the full range of products and services that deliver Trusted Insights for What's Ahead ® including webcasts, publications, data and analysis, plus discounts to conferences and events.
31 August 2021 | Press Release
As the Delta variant continues to proliferate and workers head into the Labor Day weekend, 42 percent of workers are worried about returning to the workplace for fear of contracting COVID-19. This marks a substantial jump from June 2021 when only 24 percent had that concern.
“With headlines about the rise of the Delta variant, breakthrough cases among the vaccinated, and an overburdened healthcare system in much of the country, COVID-19 concerns that were subsiding just two months ago have risen,” said Rebecca Ray, PhD, Executive Vice President of Human Capital at The Conference Board.
Conducted in August by The Conference Board, the new survey captured the thoughts of more than 2,400 US workers on topics including return-to-work anxiety, factors driving them to pursue new job opportunities, opinions about remote work, and more.
The survey findings also reveal that more than one-third of workers may leave their jobs within the next six months. The driving factor: a desire for flexible work arrangements. Indeed, 80 percent cite work arrangements as very important or important in their decision to leave their current job. Survey respondents rank a flexible work location as the most desired aspect of a new job, prioritizing it slightly over better pay and career advancement, the two traditional drivers of job changes.
Key findings from the nationwide survey include:
As Delta surges, 4 in 10 workers fear COVID-19 exposure.
Workers, especially women and Millennials, continue to question the wisdom of returning to the workplace given the belief that productivity remained high while working remotely.
Making moves: More than one-third may leave their organizations within the next six months.
The top reason workers are looking for new jobs: inflexible work arrangements.
What are workers looking for the most? A flexible work location.
“The long-term effect of extended remote working arrangements has left its mark. Employees are much less willing to embrace the rigid, conventional work policies of the past about how and where work gets done,” said Ray. “Especially for women, to whom the bulk of caretaking and household responsibilities still unfortunately fall, the flexibility to choose what works best for them is critically important. We are starting to see companies with flexible work arrangements successfully attracting the top talent of their competitors who have adopted a more rigid stance. The challenge of attracting and retaining talent in a tightening labor market is only going to become more difficult.”
Is going to the office full-time a thing of the past? Most workers want hybrid work arrangements.
The push for remote work may come at a cost: less connectedness, blurred boundaries, career stagnation.
“A desire to work remotely doesn’t mitigate legitimate concerns about the downsides of remote work,” said Robin Erickson, PhD, Principal Researcher, Human Capital at The Conference Board. “For example, while women are more likely than men to want to work remotely, they are also more concerned about a lack of boundaries around work/life and working more hours when doing so. As organizations make long-term decisions about a future with remote work, they will need to bear this in mind and continuously monitor employee experience and well-being.”
Engagement levels are losing ground.
Media Contacts
About The Conference Board
The Conference Board is the member-driven think tank that delivers Trusted Insights for What’s Ahead®. Founded in 1916, we are a non-partisan, not-for-profit entity holding 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt status in the United States. www.conference-board.org
Media Contact:
Joseph DiBlasi
jdiblasi@tcb.org
HC Insights: To secure talent, employ a pay for performance approach
September 12, 2025
HC Insights: To strengthen retention, use pay strategies over broad raises
September 05, 2025
US Salary Increase Budgets 2025-2026: Rising Pay Endures Despite Uncertainty
September 02, 2025
HC Insights: To secure talent, employ a pay for performance approach
September 12, 2025