Workplace Adequacy™ is the idea of strategic fit between the organisation, the work and the workplace. It asks whether the workplace actually supports the tasks, collaboration patterns, support spaces and operating conditions it is meant to support. That is different from simply asking whether people like the office or whether the design looks modern. A workplace can look attractive and still be inadequate for focus work, confidentiality, teamwork, usability or operational support.
It is a fit concept, not a style concept
Workplace Adequacy™ is not a label for open plan, hybrid or activity-based working. It is a way to test whether the workplace fits the organisation it serves.
That makes it more useful than debating office categories in the abstract. A traditional office can be inadequate. A hybrid set-up can be inadequate. An activity-based office can be inadequate. The issue is not the label. It is the fit.
It separates preference from evidence
Workplace decisions are often distorted by strong opinions. Employees may prefer one setting, managers may prefer another and designers may optimise for a third.
Workplace Adequacy™ helps separate preference from evidence about work patterns, collaboration needs, usability barriers, operational constraints and future requirements. Preference still matters, but it is not enough on its own.
It is broader than satisfaction
Satisfaction measures whether people are pleased. Adequacy asks whether the workplace is doing the job it needs to do.
That can include questions such as whether the workplace has enough focus rooms, whether team zones are working, whether people can find and use shared spaces without friction, whether confidential tasks have proper settings and whether the physical environment matches hybrid routines and support needs.
How the concept becomes practical
If readers want to move from the concept itself to the method and the tools behind it, the next step is the Workplace Adequacy™ Framework or the wider framework and tools overview. For survey formats and examples, see the existing Workplace Adequacy™ Survey page.
If you want the measurement layer, read what a Workplace Adequacy™ Survey is. If you want the upstream decision logic it is meant to support, continue to what workplace strategy is.
Next step
Apply this in your workplace strategy practice
If you want to move from the concept itself to the principles, tools and examples behind it, continue to the Workplace Adequacy™ Framework or the broader framework and tools overview. You can also explore the wider learning path or contact Workplace Strategist.
FAQ
What does Workplace Adequacy™ actually measure or describe?
It describes whether the workplace is a good fit for the organisation’s work patterns, support needs, collaboration logic and operating conditions.
Is Workplace Adequacy™ the same as employee satisfaction?
No. Satisfaction is one signal, but adequacy is about whether the workplace truly supports the work and the organisation.
Can an attractive office still be inadequate?
Yes. A workplace can be visually strong and still fail to support focus, confidentiality, teamwork, usability or operational needs.
What comes after the concept of Workplace Adequacy™?
The next step is usually the framework and the methods that make the concept practical in strategy, change and follow-up.