Beyond balance: making workplace flexibility work for families
In this blog, Rita reflects on the four months she spent in Portugal with her family—time that wouldn’t have been possible without flexible, remote work. Her story highlights a growing shift: more people are prioritising family, in all its forms, when it comes to how and where they work.

By Rita Batalha
Independent Program Director
25th Apr 2025
• 5 minutes
I spent 4 months in Portugal doing something I loved the most: spend time with family.
Precious moments with my parents, cousins, niece, and others that simply wouldn't have been possible with a traditional work arrangement. This is precisely why I changed to remote and flexible work - to shape my professional life around what truly matters.
My experience isn't unique. A recent study by Forbes found that 54% of British workers would accept a lower-paid job in exchange for a better work-life balance. This statistic underscores a fundamental shift in workplace priorities.
Beyond improving employee satisfaction and retention, work-life support programs deliver an unexpected benefit: they significantly increase workplace diversity. Research by HBR across 800 U.S. companies over 30 years found that organisations with universal policies for family leave, flexible scheduling, and childcare support increased management representation for Black, Hispanic, and Asian American professionals between 4.9 - 10.8%.Work-life balance: a continuous cycle, not a destination
Recognising the growing demand for workplace flexibility, Flexa and I have recently compiled a curated selection of companies that prioritise flexible work arrangements and comprehensive family-friendly benefits. What parents seek extends beyond basic remote work - they desire genuine flexibility that accommodates the evolving demands of parenthood.
Notable companies such as TUI, Boomi, and Circle are pioneering innovative approaches with policies including condensed workweeks, enhanced parental leave provisions, and fully adaptable scheduling.
For working parents and caregivers, certain flexible arrangements can be transformative. Here are a few examples that make a meaningful difference:
- Flexible working schedules eliminate the rigidity of traditional 9-to-5 hours, allowing employees to structure their workday around family responsibilities.
- Compressed hours enable employees to condense full-time work into fewer days - creating extended periods for family time without sacrificing career commitment.
- Part-time roles provide essential space for those with significant caregiving responsibilities while maintaining professional development opportunities.
- Sabbaticals and extended leaves give employees meaningful breaks for family needs - whether welcoming a new child, caring for ageing parents or reconnecting with relatives.
- Working from anywhere policies are particularly crucial for those with family abroad (like me), allowing them to reconnect with family back home while fully meeting professional obligations.
- Fertility treatment support recognises that building a family can be tough for many people, giving them the time and support they need during what can be an emotional and physically draining process.
- Pregnancy loss leave acknowledges the profound grief that comes with miscarriage and stillbirth, offering employees the space to process their loss without professional penalties.
- Adoption leave ensures parents building families through adoption receive the same support as those with biological children, knowing the unique challenges of the adoption process.
- Enhanced maternity/paternity leave goes beyond statutory minimums to provide parents with adequate time to bond with new children and adjust to changing family dynamics without career setbacks.
Making flexibility work for families and everyone
For flexible arrangements to benefit both employees and organisations, several foundational principles must be in place:
- Trust forms the foundation. Companies must trust employees to deliver results regardless of when or where work happens. Without this trust, flexibility degenerates into remote micromanagement.
- Transparent policies establish clear expectations. Everyone should understand what flexible options exist and how to access them without fear of career penalties.
- Asynchronous communication becomes essential when teams work across different hours or locations. Well-documented processes and thoughtful updates ensure flexibility doesn't compromise collaboration.
- Clear expectations about deliverables keep the focus on outcomes rather than hours. Regular check-ins and shared objectives maintain alignment despite varied working patterns.
- Leadership modelling demonstrates organisational commitment. When senior leaders visibly embrace flexible arrangements, it normalises these practices and reduces stigma throughout the company.
What parents want in 2025
Flexa’s latest research has recently revealed that fully remote roles are now preferred by 63% of working parents - a sharp rise from early 2024. Meanwhile, hybrid roles continue to decline in popularity (10%), and office-based positions are desired by just 2% of parents.
When it comes to specific benefits, part-time arrangements (28.4%) and unlimited leave (24.4%) emerge as clear favourites, highlighting how strongly parents value having control over their time. Compressed hours and enhanced parental leave follow closely behind.
Interestingly, mothers in senior leadership positions show dramatically higher demand for parental leave (+119% above average) and fertility leave (+91% above average), suggesting that as women reach leadership roles, they seek companies that support them through critical life stages.
The future is flexible
Forward-thinking companies are now making flexible arrangements and permanent and transparent policies of their operational models. They recognise that supporting employees' full lives creates more engaged, loyal, and productive teams.
My Portuguese family reunion while maintaining full productivity isn't an anomaly - it's a glimpse of work's future. As more organisations embrace genuine flexibility, we'll see happier families, stronger communities, and, paradoxically, more committed employees.
In the end, making work work for families isn't just about being nice - it's smart business. By integrating work-life support into their core operations, companies gain committed team members who bring their best selves to every task. After all, the goal isn't work-life balance as a static achievement, but rather work-life integration and a continuous process of alignment between our professional goals and our most meaningful personal priorities.