Designing Workplaces That Actually Support Employees
What does it mean to support employees?
Supporting employees means designing workplaces that accommodate real human needs—not just providing policies or meeting minimum legal requirements. The most effective organizations build purpose-built infrastructure that enables employees to do their best work, care for their health, and navigate different stages of life with dignity.
Dedicated lactation accommodations, quiet spaces for focused work, and private environments for telehealth and confidential conversations all serve different purposes. But they share one thing in common: they provide employees with the space they need to succeed.
The hidden costs of the modern office
Organizations have spent years redesigning offices for hybrid work, collaboration, and employee well-being. Yet many employees still struggle to find something surprisingly basic: a private place to pump breast milk, do deep work, or have a confidential conversation. The problem reveals a mismatch between workplace design and human needs.
Purpose-built workplace infrastructure addresses three essential employee needs:
Physiological needs, such as lactation accommodations
Cognitive needs, such as uninterrupted focus
Personal health and privacy needs, such as telehealth appointments and confidential conversations
By intentionally designing for these moments, organizations create workplaces that support employees every day, not just when compliance requires it.
Lactation accommodations: Essential infrastructure for breastfeeding employees
The PUMP for Nursing Mothers Act establishes minimum requirements for workplace lactation accommodations. But compliance alone doesn't guarantee meaningful support.
Many organizations still rely on borrowed offices, storage closets, or multipurpose wellness rooms. While these spaces may satisfy legal requirements, they rarely support the predictable routines breastfeeding employees need to maintain their milk supply.
Purpose-built lactation spaces are different. They're consistently available, easy to sanitize, comfortable, secure, and designed specifically for pumping—not shared among competing uses. That investment benefits both employees and employers through higher retention, lower absenteeism, and reduced healthcare costs.
Private spaces are infrastructure for focus
Open offices are designed for collaboration, but collaboration isn't the only type of work employees perform. Knowledge workers spend much of their day analyzing information, solving problems, writing, planning, and making decisions—all activities that require sustained concentration.
Purpose-built quiet spaces recognize that focus is more than a personal preference; it's a workplace resource. Providing employees with access to acoustically private spaces supports cognitive diversity, reduces interruptions, and allows people to choose the environment that best matches the work they're doing.
Organizations that invest in both collaboration spaces and focus spaces create workplaces that better support every type of work—not just the most visible kind.
Privacy is infrastructure for well-being
Privacy has become an essential part of the employee experience. Whether someone is attending a telehealth appointment, speaking with Human Resources, meeting with a therapist, discussing benefits, or taking a confidential client call, they need an environment where sensitive conversations remain private.
Without dedicated spaces, employees often delay care, search for empty conference rooms, retreat to their cars, or risk being overheard. Purpose-built privacy spaces protect confidentiality while making it easier for employees to access healthcare, resolve workplace issues, and manage personal responsibilities during the workday.
As telehealth continues to reshape healthcare access, organizations must think beyond digital tools alone. Effective care also depends on having the physical infrastructure to support it.
Designing infrastructure that supports people
Every employee experiences moments when privacy is essential. A new parent needs to pump. An analyst needs uninterrupted focus. An employee needs to meet with a therapist over telehealth. A manager needs to have a confidential conversation.
These needs may look different, but they all require the same thing: purpose-built space. Organizations that invest in workplace infrastructure designed around human needs aren't simply creating better offices. They're building environments where employees can perform at their best, care for themselves, and feel supported throughout every stage of work and life.
Mamava designs privacy and wellness pods—including freestanding lactation pods—to support parents and people seeking focus, care, and calm in workplaces and public spaces.