Presence Is Not Connection: Reconsidering the Return-to-Office Premise
The return-to-office debate has largely been framed as a binary: in-person work fosters connection; remote work erodes it. This assumption has driven significant organizational policy. By 2025, 37% of companies had mandated office attendance, up from 17% the previous year, with major corporations including Amazon, JPMorgan, and AT&T among those issuing such directives. The underlying logic is straightforward — physical proximity, it is assumed, produces engagement.
The empirical record, however, does not support this premise.
What the Data Shows
Research from MIT Sloan Management Review found that return-to-office mandates are associated with reduced employee engagement, increased attrition, and no measurable improvement in financial performance. Eight in ten organizations reported losing talent as a direct consequence of such policies — disproportionately among high performers.
Data from the Ally Mindset™ Profile study, conducted across more than 200 professionals, further complicates the conventional narrative. When participants were asked whether they had felt disconnected from their work in the past month, office-based workers reported the highest rate of disconnection at 35%. Predominantly remote workers followed at 31%. Fully remote workers — the cohort most commonly assumed to be at risk of isolation — reported the lowest rate at just 21%.
Those physically present in the office were, paradoxically, the most likely to feel disconnected.
The Broken Promise of Physical Presence
This paradox becomes intelligible when examined through the lens of expectation. Commuting to an office carries an implicit social contract: the effort invested implies that meaningful interaction awaits. When that expectation goes unmet — when colleagues are on video calls, wearing headphones, or otherwise unavailable for substantive exchange — the experience of disconnection is compounded by the violation of that expectation. Research in social psychology consistently demonstrates that unmet expectations produce greater dissatisfaction than the absence of expectation altogether.
Remote workers, by contrast, operate without this implicit promise. Connection, for them, is understood to require deliberate effort — scheduled calls, intentional outreach, purposeful check-ins. Those who feel connected in remote environments have cultivated those relationships actively, rather than waiting for proximity to produce them passively.
Structural Solutions to a Relational Problem
Many organizations have responded to disconnection by implementing what might be termed connection theater: structural interventions — designated collaboration spaces, mandatory in-office days, informal social events — that simulate the conditions of connection without producing its substance. These measures place individuals in shared physical space but do not generate the relational depth that meaningful connection requires.
Drawing on a taxonomy of workplace relationships comprising Allies, Supporters, Rivals, and Adversaries, it is notable that most return-to-office environments produce, at best, Supporters: colleagues who are cordial and professional but whose interactions remain surface-level. The deeper exchanges that build trust and psychological safety — regarding goals, challenges, and mutual accountability — rarely occur as a spontaneous byproduct of shared space. They require intention.
Toward a More Meaningful Metric
The WHO Commission on Social Connection defines connection not in terms of physical proximity, but in terms of relational quality — the nature of how individuals engage, not simply how often they occupy the same room. Yet most organizations continue to use office attendance as a proxy for connection and engagement. This conflation is analytically weak and practically counterproductive.
Organizations seeking to assess genuine connection should ask substantively different questions. Rather than tracking attendance, they might ask: Who do you rely on for your success, and who relies on you? Rather than recording meeting participation, they might ask: When did someone last inquire about your wellbeing and genuinely listen to the answer? These questions yield information that attendance data cannot.
The evidence suggests that the relationship between physical presence and workplace connection is neither direct nor reliable. Presence is a condition, not a mechanism. Connection — the kind that sustains engagement, builds trust, and retains talent — is the product of intentional relational effort, regardless of where that effort takes place.
Leaders who recognize this distinction will be better positioned to build teams defined not by where people work, but by how meaningfully they work together.
