- Reliable technology now rivals compensation as a fundamental workplace expectation
- Meeting failures continue to disrupt workflows in hybrid and office environments
- Lost time due to technical issues regularly erodes productivity during routine meetings
The modern British workplace has arrived at an uncomfortable crossroads where employees now value reliable technology almost as high as their monthly salary, according to a new study.
A report from Owl Labs reveals that good access to technology is important to 89% of UK workers, putting it just behind pay at 92% and a supportive manager at 91%.
This near equality reveals a striking reality: transparent digital tools have become non-negotiable for workers.
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Meeting Technology Failures Dominate Daily Workflows
Technical outages are increasingly becoming the main source of frustration for workers participating in hybrid meetings in different environments.
Three in four UK employees say they have encountered difficulties during these interactions, with 79% admitting they lose time due to technical difficulties.
Audio echo or distortion affects 78% of workers, while 74% find themselves missing crucial visual cues.
“When meeting technology fails, it doesn’t just cause mild discomfort: it compromises well-being and derails collaboration,” notes Frank Weishaupt, CEO of Owl Labs.
The report found that the average worker wastes six and a half minutes per meeting just keeping equipment running smoothly.
Younger employees, despite their reputation as digital natives, are not immune to these challenges: 82% of Gen Z and 79% of Millennials report time lost due to technology issues, compared to 73% of Gen X and 72% of Baby Boomers.
Even more surprising, full-time office workers face the greatest challenges, with 83% experiencing technical delays compared to 77% of hybrid workers.
The physical office, supposedly designed for productivity, has become a source of unexpected friction, and to solve these problems, employers are investing heavily in new hardware and AI tools.
More than four in five workers say their organization has made changes to its offices in 2025, including introducing AI tools (42%), increasing IT support (38%) and upgrading meeting room equipment (35%).
Three-quarters of employees say their company encourages the use of AI. However, this spending spree has not yet solved the underlying problem.
“The UK is at a turning point,” adds Weishaupt. “The real value comes when these tools are intuitive, inclusive and reliable. »
The report notes that instead of investing in smarter meeting technology that alleviates configuration issues, employers are banking on systems that add even more complexity.
This suggests that employers may misinterpret workers’ real priorities in their daily workflows.
For a workforce already stuck in a cycle of frustration, progress depends on removing friction rather than adding additional software layers.
A support manager can’t fix a broken audio connection, but a properly working camera and microphone could.
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