News

Is Pizza Friday enough? New research explores how to build workplace community in the digital era

How can workplace communities thrive in the digital age? Are Slack channels and online check-ins enough – or do we need something more? The Laterna project, which will be launched in September, was born out of a need to better understand what community really means in remote and hybrid working life.
Laterna group photo by Erika Johansson, Haaga-Helia
Laterna group photo by Erika Johansson, Haaga-Helia.

Business Finland has granted the Laterna project significant Co-Research funding. The two-and-a-half-year research project of nearly million euros is coordinated by Haaga-Helia University of Applied Sciences, and it brings together Aalto University, Häme University of Applied Sciences, and corporate partners ABB Marine & Ports, Glaston Finland, Meltlake, Selma Finance, and Wärtsilä Energy.

Laterna will study how digitalisation and increased technology use are reshaping workplace communities, ways of working, and organisational culture. The aim is to identify opportunities and find ways and tools for organisations to maintain a sense of community in multi-location work.

'Community is under pressure in the digital era. This is a global phenomenon that threatens both well-being and collaboration. Workplaces everywhere are searching for best practices. Laterna is about finding research-based solutions,' says Associate Professor Frank Martela from Aalto University, one of the project’s researchers.

Participating companies, including Meltlake, are already familiar with the challenge.

'We’ve seen workdays become more condensed and spontaneous encounters fade away. We hope Laterna will help us find tools to bring the same human interaction and energy of the office into remote and hybrid work,' says Lassi Valkama, Chief People Officer at Meltlake.

The project will gather extensive qualitative interview data and apply the findings in year-long development cycles with the partner companies. The first year includes three webinars sharing the latest insights. An online course will launch in late 2026, followed by a practical handbook in 2028. There will also be researcher exchanges to Université Côte d’Azur in Nice, and Vienna University of Economics and Business, plus collaboration with Lund University in Sweden.

We don’t believe forcing people back to the office will restore a sense of community. But we also don’t believe Pizza Fridays will solve the problem. Our goal is to combine digital efficiency with genuine human connection,' says Principal Lecturer Johanna Vuori from Haaga-Helia.

Original news article was published by

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

A woman in white stands in a theatrical dressing room with violet walls, a lit vanity mirror, and hanging clothes.
Cooperation, Research & Art Published:

Hämeenlinna Art Museum’s exhibition brings artworks to life through film

Hämeenlinna Art Museum will open a new exhibition Kehyskertomuksia: 24 fps / Reframing Cinema, produced in collaboration with the Aalto University Department of Film ELO.
Labratoriossa tutkija mittasi henkilön verenpainetta.
Cooperation, Studies Published:

New funding introduces health technology themes into FITech Network University's course offering

FITech Network University, a network of Finnish universities of technology coordinated by Aalto University, has been granted new funding that expands the network's course offering with themes related to health technology.
Group of people standing in a line holding certificates. A projector screen is visible behind them.
Awards and Recognition, Cooperation Published:

Aalto Doctoral Education Services Receives Unite! Award

Aalto's Unite! Doctoral Education Team, led by Dr Minna Söderqvist, received an award for their long-term efforts to enhance doctoral mobility and collaboration across the Unite! Alliance. The award ceremony took place during the XII Unite! DIalogue.
Alumni Weekend 2025. Photo: Kristian Presnal
Cooperation Published: