Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.
Will you be my (work) friend? The new reality of making and keeping a work friend in the hybrid world
Fortune · Getty Images

This year, I made a work friend. It might not seem like a big deal, but in this new world of remote work, it’s not as easy as it used to be. And it’s relatively new territory for me, as a 24-year-old who’s held an assortment of office and remote jobs since graduating in 2020.

Colin and I have yet to get after-work drinks (though we’ve discussed the idea, which is basically the same as getting drinks), we have a few well-trod jokes, and he’s the person I Slack when I have some good gossip (which is also harder to come by in a remote-first workplace).

To me, there’s something a little awkward about making friends at work. I feel a little like an eager eight-year-old, ready to give a BFF matching heart necklace to the first colleague who I have more than a passing cordial relationship with. (Jane, you’re the next target.) But what are the pros of playing it too cool? Probably whatever the work equivalent is to playing alone at recess.

I’m not the only one floundering to expand my social network with rusty social skills. COVID has shrunken many people’s circles, and relationships at work are now mostly impersonal Zoom calls where half your colleagues probably have their cameras turned off. As a result of increased social isolation, loneliness has spiked in the U.S., as a 2020 Harvard study found that 36% of Americans reported feeling lonely.

Is making a few new friends at work a solution to this loneliness problem? And could it also do something to help slow The Great Resignation? I spoke with experts and people who have successfully forged friendships at work to get their best advice on how to make a work friend.

It's all about proximity

The general sociology of friendship still applies to the alien world that is the office. Theorists have inferred that friendships can be forged due to literal closeness.

Friendships are created by a series of interactions, says Jack Schafer Ph.D., who boils it down to the following formula:
Friendship = Proximity x (Frequency + Duration) x Intensity.

In the adult world, work provides a natural structure for friendships to form the way school worked for kids. "Friendships, especially new friendships, where you don't have a ton of history and shared experience to fall back on, really bloom in a container,” explains Julie Beck, columnist for The Atlantic’s The Friendship Files.”

Work takes up a big chunk of our day and repeated interactions are built into the structure of our jobs, making it easier to find friends in the workplace.

“People spend a huge part of the day—and ultimately their lives—with their colleagues, so it's no surprise that friendships can form in a professional environment,” say Aminatou Sow and Ann Friedman, former hosts of the Call Your Girlfriend podcast and authors of Big Friendship.