Xtendo Analyzes “The Future of Work” After the Pandemic

Share this article:

Xtendo Podcast

#17 - Juan Luis Pascual: the future of cryptocurrencies and generative AI in the B2B sector

July 7, 2025

#16 - Petar Popov: Beyond the chatbot: how Aplázame combines automation and the human touch

June 23, 2025

Ready to optimize your processes?

June 30, 2021

By Fernando Rodríguez Cabanelas, HR Operations Director at Xtendo Global

The Coronavirus pandemic accelerated processes in labor markets worldwide. Various areas of work had to change the ways of managing and communicating within a department. Empathy plays an important role in the success of the objectives that organizations implement.

Consulting firm McKinsey released a report analyzing the workforce (more than 2,000 activities across 800 professions) in countries such as China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Mexico, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States. They based their study on the Occupational Information Network model from MGI (McKinsey Global Institute) to gain a precise view of labor activities after the pandemic.

The study, titled The Future of Work, showed that remote work presents a series of challenges for both companies and employees. Evaluating processes for teams and identifying the best tools for carrying out daily tasks are part of the assessments that must be considered to ensure productive work.

Successful Working Method
It is important to identify which tasks can be completed remotely and which cannot. Managing remote work is not simply sending employees home with a computer to do what they could do in the office.

It is necessary to find functionality so that, with this model, each talent’s daily tasks do not lose productivity. Once identified, the tasks that can be managed from home need to be redefined. In the analysis process, the possibility of outsourcing some tasks may arise. The goal is to manage with the same drive, but in a different way.

When structures are in place, effective work environments can be achieved. It is important to consider the maturity of all stakeholders, ensuring they take on responsibilities with greater commitment and independence.

Remote work after COVID-19 will continue to be implemented in many organizations. McKinsey confirms this in the mentioned report, while companies like Xtendo Global demonstrate its effectiveness, having applied this model and achieved successful results since 2008, twelve years before the pandemic occurred. Ultimately, this indicates that the 100% digital economy is gaining ground and taking over the work patterns of businesses.

The mix of activities will be the new order for organizations. According to McKinsey, after evaluating workers’ capacity to perform physical tasks, it was observed that some physical, manual activities, or those requiring fixed machinery cannot be done remotely.

Jobs that require close proximity and high concentration have been the most affected by the pandemic. Jobs that require physical performance, low automation, and outdoor work, such as those in agriculture, will not face issues after the pandemic. Therefore, understanding the structure of the company is crucial to define new approaches.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Automation
Jobs requiring high physical proximity have accelerated the development of AI and automation. According to a survey conducted by McKinsey, of the 800 senior executives interviewed in July 2020, two-thirds reported increasing investment in these areas. Many companies are turning to AI and automation to meet the current high demand in digital media.

The study also revealed that jobs in sectors like warehousing, transportation, and logistics may increase due to the growth of e-commerce.

The executives interviewed for McKinsey’s analysis stated that a large part of future investments will focus on integrating AI and automation into work processes, especially in tasks that demand physical effort. A combination of bots and remote tasks for Customer Service (CX) areas is being considered to assess overall customer satisfaction and determine process efficiency.

Although these changes are irreversible and rapidly growing, it is necessary to invest in professionalizing talents. McKinsey’s positive outlook highlights the role of governments and businesses because, if they facilitate the workforce’s ability to learn new skills, they will have better and better-paying jobs in the years to come.

Companies must invest in ensuring that their workforce doesn’t falter in the face of the great challenges ahead and remain aligned with the new business performance behaviors. This involves focusing on the future to develop new technological skills.

How to Achieve a Productive Workforce
To achieve this goal, leaders must be more empathetic and, therefore, connected to the emotional aspect of their team. This is a vital component in pandemic times, where it is essential to prioritize human values in the company so that each team member feels connected and supported in their daily work, understanding their home realities.

To lead these teams effectively, all leadership skills need to be reinforced, where empathy and motivation are key to achieving set goals. The greater the distance and the less physical proximity, the more conversation will be needed.

The emotional component will be decisive in achieving concrete goals within an organization after the global COVID-19 pandemic. Emphasizing soft skills is important for team leadership management. To build a strong chain, it is essential for work to be approached with greater self-control, commitment, and responsibility.

Companies are seeking workers with skills that align with new paradigms. Connectivity and a shared virtual space are not enough; the values instilled by the leader in the team are also crucial for successful management.

Last blogs

Are your customer service KPIs measuring activity… or are they protecting your profitability?

Measuring for the sake of measuring is useless. If your customer service KPIs only feed dashboards that no one reviews, you are investing time without a return. In 2026, it is no longer enough to know how many calls were

Is your brand truly protected? Content moderation as a strategic pillar in 2026

In an environment where every review, comment, or image can influence the purchasing decision of thousands of people, content moderation has moved from being a secondary task to a critical operational function. We are no longer just talking about removing

Is artificial intelligence in retail really the competitive advantage that will define 2026?

For years, artificial intelligence in retail was synonymous with basic chatbots and generic recommendations. That has changed. In 2025-2026, the conversation is no longer about whether to adopt AI, but how to operate it to solve concrete problems: seasonal peaks

Automate business processes or fall behind? The strategic guide to scaling without losing efficiency

Can your operation continue to grow at the pace the market demands without automating business processes? In sectors like retail and eCommerce, where volume grows faster than team capacity, the answer is increasingly clear: no. Automating business processes is no

Why does call center staff turnover reduce company revenue?

Employee turnover in call centers is no longer an issue exclusive to the human resources department. Today, it represents a challenge that directly impacts customer experience, operating costs, and the ability to scale the business. According to recent data, contact

Customer loyalty can no longer be bought with coupons.

In a context where 85% of Spanish consumers say they are less loyal to brands than they were two years ago, companies face a clear challenge: retaining customers requires much more than offering the lowest price. The best examples of

Winning strategies for outsourcing CX and customer service

In an environment where agility defines who leads and who falls behind, business process outsourcing has ceased to be an emergency tactic and has become a strategic lever for growth. For retail operations executives, eCommerce managers, and after-sales service leaders,

Why isn’t your e-commerce scaling? Order management is the bottleneck that no one wants to admit.

Your ecommerce business is growing, sales are increasing, but something isn’t working. Customers are complaining, returns are skyrocketing, and your team is overwhelmed. The problem isn’t your products or your marketing. It’s your ecommerce order management—the invisible process that determines

Are your returns eating into your profitability?

Returns management has become one of the biggest operational challenges in modern retail.In the United States alone, returns reached$890 billion in 2024,while in Spain they are expected to exceed€13.3 billion annually by 2025.These figures are not just numbers on a