,

Action Step – Stewarding Flexibility Forward

DFA’s Action Steps are designed to assist organizations with implementing practical strategies to humanize the workplace, empower people, and foster innovation. Members can access full versions the Action Steps in the Member Resource Center.

One year ago, The Flexibility Paradigm was released into a world eager to regain its footing.

After years of disruption, organizations were ready to move forward, reclaim a sense of certainty, and return to what felt familiar. The urgency that once pushed us to experiment and rethink everything began to soften, and with it came a quiet risk. The lessons we learned during that intense period of change could start to fade.

This book was never meant to capture a moment and move on. It exists to help us carry forward what mattered most, especially the insights that emerged when change forced us to pay attention. When the pressure lifts, we get to choose what we keep. We get to decide which lessons become part of how we operate, not just how we respond in a crisis. What once felt necessary can become foundational.

This Action Step invites us to view flexibility with a wider lens and deeper intention. Flexibility opened the door to learning, experimentation, and more human-centered choices, and those lessons are still available to us now.

When organizations were forced to change, they learned something important about work, about people, and about what becomes possible when old defaults are questioned. Flexibility showed us that culture is something you design, practice, and renew over time. This Action Step is about stepping into that next phase, moving from implementation to stewardship, and carrying forward what we learned with intention.

Stewardship means recognizing that flexibility lives inside a broader human-centered culture. One shaped by boundaries that protect wellbeing, by systems that prevent burnout, and by a sense of belonging that allows people to do their best work. It also means understanding that this work is shared, and that culture only holds when organizations, leaders, and individuals all participate in sustaining it.

  1. Organizations Build and Protect Boundaries: For flexibility to work, boundaries have to be real, not just written down. When boundaries are unclear or unenforced, flexibility turns into overwork, constant interruption, and quiet exhaustion. Organizations play a critical role here by setting norms that protect time, reducing unnecessary urgency, and creating environments where people can speak openly about work life conflict without fear…

Members: Read the full version of this Action Step in the Member Resource Center.

To read this entire Action Step become a DFA member.