Remote and hybrid work. It’s not a new conversation we’re having, but it’s still something to discuss and it’s reshaped how candidates evaluate jobs and how businesses approach hiring.
Flexibility, autonomy, and location independence are now baseline expectations in many industries. Yet large segments of the economy still depend on in-person work, from logistics and skilled trades to healthcare and clinical services – and beyond.
Rather than framing this as a hiring disadvantage, many employers are adapting by redefining what makes in-person roles attractive, sustainable, and competitive in today’s labor market.
Across sectors, leaders are learning that hiring successfully for on-site work now requires clearer communication, stronger culture signals, and a sharper understanding of what candidates actually value.
The logistics perspective: presence with purpose
Andy Martin, Director of Quickline Logistics, oversees teams operating from a Liverpool headquarters alongside regional hubs. For him, the shift hasn’t been about resisting remote work, it’s been about explaining why physical presence still matters in certain roles.
“In logistics, collaboration, speed, and accountability are very real, very physical things,” Martin explains. “That doesn’t mean we ignore flexibility, but it does mean we’re clear about where in-person work adds value, especially for operations, planning, and problem-solving.”
He notes that candidates respond better when expectations are explicit early in the hiring process. Rather than competing with fully remote roles on flexibility alone, Quickline emphasizes career progression, operational exposure, and the opportunity to be close to decision-making.
“People want to understand what they’re gaining, not just what they’re giving up,” Martin says. “When you’re honest about the role and the environment, you tend to attract candidates who actually want to be there.”
Skilled trades: redefining stability and growth
For Tom Curtis, owner of Western Fence Company, remote work was never part of the equation. Fence installation, site assessments, and project management all require hands-on execution. Still, Curtis has noticed that candidate expectations have changed, even in trades.
“People in the trades aren’t asking to work from home,” Curtis says. “They’re asking about predictability, respect for their time, and whether there’s a future beyond just hourly labor.”
In response, Western Fence Company has leaned into clearer scheduling, investment in training, and transparent advancement paths. Curtis sees this as an opportunity rather than a constraint. “The conversation has shifted from ‘this is the job’ to ‘this is the career,’” he adds. “When candidates see long-term stability, skills development, and fair treatment, the lack of remote work stops being an issue.”
Healthcare and clinical teams: presence as a differentiator
In healthcare, in-person work is non-negotiable. Dr. Avi Israeli, Co-Founder and Dental Implantologist at Sage Dental NJ, says the challenge is creating an environment worth committing to.
“Clinical staff understand that patient care happens face to face,” Dr. Israeli says. “What they’re evaluating now is how supported they’ll feel while doing that work.”
He notes that staffing challenges in healthcare have made culture, workflow design, and leadership visibility more important than ever.
“We’ve learned that flexibility doesn’t always mean location,” he explains. “It can mean predictable hours, better staffing ratios, modern equipment, or simply being heard. Those things matter just as much.”
Across industries, one pattern is consistent: candidates are no longer comparing jobs solely on whether they’re remote or in-person. They’re comparing clarity, quality of life, growth potential, and trust.
For employers hiring on-site teams, the opportunity lies in articulating what physical presence enables: stronger collaboration, faster learning, tangible impact, while modernizing everything around it.
As Martin puts it, “The world of work didn’t move away from offices. It moved toward intention. Companies that understand that are still hiring very successfully.”
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