It’s 9:47 AM. You have a meeting in 13 minutes and you need the competitive analysis deck someone shared “a few weeks ago.” You check Slack. You search Google Drive. You post in the #general channel. You text a coworker who’s already in the office. Twenty-two minutes later — after the meeting has already started — you find it buried in an email thread from last month.
Welcome to information silos in hybrid work.
This scenario plays out hundreds of times a day across hybrid teams, and it’s not a minor nuisance. According to McKinsey, knowledge workers spend roughly 20% of their workweek just searching for information. That’s one full day, every week, per employee.
Hybrid work has made this problem significantly worse. Remote and in-office employees increasingly operate from different information pools: one group absorbs context through proximity and hallway conversations, the other only knows what gets explicitly shared. The result is a widening asymmetry that compounds over time.
Information silos in hybrid work environments aren’t just an inconvenience — they’re a structural drain with a measurable dollar cost, and hybrid work has introduced entirely new vectors for them to form. This post breaks down what silos actually cost, why they escalate, and what a silo-free hybrid team looks like in practice.
What Is an Information Silo?
The term gets used loosely — here’s what it actually means.
An information silo is a condition in which knowledge is isolated within a single system, team, or individual and cannot flow freely to others who need it. Information silos are also called knowledge silos.
This is distinct from a data silo, which is a technical problem — two systems that don’t integrate, so data can’t move between them. Engineers solve data silos. Information silos are organizational and behavioral; they persist even when all your tools are theoretically connected.
Data Silo vs. Information Silo
| Data Silo | Information Silo | |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Technical | Organizational / behavioral |
| Cause | Systems that don’t integrate | Knowledge trapped in people or teams |
| Persists after fixing tools? | No | Yes |
| Solved by | Engineers, integrations | Process, culture, and tooling habits |
| Example | CRM and ERP that can’t share records | Institutional knowledge that lives in one person’s head — until they leave |
Hybrid work creates new silo vectors that didn’t exist in fully in-office or fully remote environments:
- Slack channels that only in-office teammates monitor during the day
- Decisions reached in person that never get documented
- Institutional knowledge concentrated on-site and never written down
- Remote workers who must rely entirely on what’s explicitly shared, while their in-office peers absorb context passively
This asymmetry is at the core of why hybrid information silos are particularly damaging: the cost isn’t distributed evenly. Remote workers bear a disproportionate share.
5 Signs Your Hybrid Team Has an Information Silo Problem
These information silo examples are common across hybrid teams of all sizes — and if more than one looks familiar, you likely have a problem worth addressing:
- Employees regularly ask colleagues for links to docs that “should be findable.” If “just ask Sarah” has become a workaround, something is broken.
- Remote workers are consistently the last to know about in-office decisions. If your distributed team is always catching up, information isn’t flowing symmetrically.
- Multiple teams have independently built the same asset. Duplicated decks, docs, and processes are a tell-tale sign that no one knows what already exists.
- New hires take weeks to become self-sufficient because there’s no single source of truth. When onboarding depends on a “buddy” who already knows everything, you’ve outsourced your knowledge base to a person.
- Meeting notes, decisions, and project context live in individuals’ inboxes or local drives. If information dies when someone’s laptop closes, it was never really shared.
The Real Cost of Information Silos
The frustration is real. So is the dollar cost.
| Cost Category | Estimated Impact |
|---|---|
| Time lost searching for information | ~20% of the workweek (McKinsey) |
| Poor data quality costs | $15M/year average (HBR / Gartner) |
| Global economic impact of data silos | $3.1 trillion annually (IBM via HBR) |
| Duplicated work | 20–30% effort redundancy across teams |
Here’s what each costs in practice.
Time lost to search at 20% of the workweek means a $100K knowledge worker costs you $20K per year in search overhead alone. Multiply that across a 50-person team and you’re looking at $1M in annual waste before accounting for opportunity cost.
Duplicated work compounds that figure. When two teams independently build the same competitive analysis, customer onboarding deck, or technical runbook, you’re not just wasting the hours — you’re fragmenting institutional knowledge into two incompatible versions that will cause confusion for months.
Onboarding drag is another hidden cost. When new hires can’t self-serve, they don’t just lose time themselves — they pull senior team members away from higher-leverage work to answer questions that a well-maintained knowledge base would handle automatically. The impact on digital employee onboarding is significant: without accessible knowledge, ramp time stretches and productivity stalls.
Decision-making lag is subtler but strategically significant. Leaders and individual contributors making calls without full context produce decisions that have to be revisited, reversed, or defended after the fact. The downstream cost of a poorly-informed decision can dwarf the time cost of finding the document that would have prevented it.
Attrition risk rounds out the picture. Frustrated employees — especially remote ones who feel perpetually out of the loop — disengage. Disengagement precedes departure. The cost of replacing a knowledge worker ranges from 50% to 200% of their annual salary. Silos don’t cause attrition on their own, but they contribute meaningfully to the conditions that do.
The Compounding Effect: How Information Silos Get Worse Over Time
Information silos don’t stay static — they grow.
The harder it is to find information, the more people hoard it locally — keeping docs on personal drives, saving links only in their own bookmarks, explaining things verbally instead of writing them down. Each of these micro-decisions makes the silo problem worse for the next person who needs that information.
Tool sprawl accelerates this cycle. Every new SaaS product introduced to solve a workflow problem is also, structurally, a new potential silo. When knowledge lives in Notion and Confluence and Google Drive and Slack and Loom and Figma, the problem isn’t that the tools don’t work — it’s that nobody knows which one to check first.
The most acute version of this risk is what might be called knowledge concentration: when one person becomes the organizational encyclopedia for a given domain. This works fine until that person goes on vacation, changes teams, or leaves the company. When they walk out the door, institutional memory walks out with them.
Finally, unequal information access erodes trust between remote and in-office workers over time. When remote teammates discover — again — that a decision was made without their input because the conversation happened in the office, it creates resentment that compounds. Information equity isn’t just an operational concern; it’s a culture concern.
What a Hybrid Environment Without Information Silos Looks Like
Effective knowledge management in hybrid work starts with a simple question: can anyone on your team — regardless of where they’re sitting — get what they need without asking another person? A team that has solved its information silo problem doesn’t look dramatically different from the outside. What changes is how quickly and confidently people can get what they need.
A few markers of a silo-free environment:
Centralized, searchable knowledge that works identically whether you’re in the office or working from home. The channel someone used to share a resource doesn’t matter — the resource itself is findable through a single search interface.
Go links as a lightweight but powerful habit. Tools like GoLinks let any resource acquire a short, memorable alias (e.g., go/q3-review, go/onboarding-checklist) that can be shared verbally, typed from memory, or pasted anywhere. This removes the “do you have that link?” friction almost entirely. The best knowledge management systems don’t require perfect behavior — they make the right behavior (sharing, linking, documenting) easier than the wrong behavior (hoarding, hiding, forgetting).
AI-powered search that surfaces the right resource even when you don’t know what it’s called or where it lives. This shifts the burden from the employee to the system — which is where it belongs.
Documentation as a first-class habit, not an afterthought. Async-first norms — capturing meeting decisions in writing, maintaining decision logs, keeping project wikis current — reduce dependency on proximity. The best documentation cultures make a simple promise: if something happened, it got written down.
The simplest benchmark for a silo-free environment: can a new hire find what they need without pinging anyone? If the answer is mostly yes, you’ve solved the problem. If the answer is mostly no, you have work to do.
How to Break Down Information Silos in Hybrid Teams
The good news: information silos are a systems problem, not a people problem. And systems can be changed.
How to Audit Your Knowledge Gaps
Before you can fix the problem, you need to understand it. Map where knowledge currently lives, who holds it, and what’s undocumented. Talk to your most recent new hires — they have fresh eyes on where the gaps are.
How to Standardize Links Across Your Stack
One of the simplest and highest-leverage changes you can make is giving every important resource a permanent, shareable address. GoLinks makes this easy with short, human-readable aliases that work across your stack. When go/brand-guidelines always points to the right version of the right doc, the link-sharing problem goes away.
How to Make Search Your Default
Invest in enterprise search tools that search across your entire stack — not just one app. When people can find what they need without knowing where it lives, the incentive to hoard locally disappears.
How to Build Documentation Habits
Async-first norms require some intentional culture-building: meeting notes get recorded, decisions get logged, projects get tracked. This doesn’t happen automatically, but it doesn’t require a massive initiative either. It starts with leaders modeling the behavior.
How to Measure Knowledge Health
Track how often employees can self-serve versus needing to ask someone. Use that ratio as a KPI for knowledge health and set a goal to move it over time. What gets measured tends to improve.
Your Most Expensive Problem Has a Solvable Solution
Information silos are frustrating, but the frustration can obscure the real stakes. The lost time, duplicated work, onboarding drag, and attrition risk they cause add up to a significant and compounding cost — one that hybrid work has quietly made worse.
The solution isn’t a single tool or a single policy. It’s the combination of the right systems and the intentional habits that make those systems work: standardized links, cross-stack search, async documentation, and a genuine commitment to information equity across your team.
A good place to start is simply asking the question: could someone new find what they need right now, without asking anyone? If the answer is no, GoLinks is built to help you change it — starting with something as simple as a memorable, shareable link to every resource that matters.
Try GoLinks free and see how quickly your team’s knowledge becomes findable.
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Information Silos in Hybrid Work: Frequently Asked Questions
The core problems are collaboration breakdown, poor decisions from incomplete context, duplicated effort, slower onboarding, and institutional knowledge loss when people leave. Together, these create a compounding drag on productivity that worsens over time as teams grow and tool sprawl increases.
Data silos are a technical problem: systems that don’t integrate, so data can’t flow between them. Information silos are organizational: knowledge trapped in people or teams regardless of whether the underlying tools are connected. You can have perfect system integration and still have severe information silos.
Hybrid work creates asymmetric information access — in-office employees absorb context passively through proximity and hallway conversations, while remote workers only receive what teammates share with them. This asymmetry means remote teammates are structurally disadvantaged, and trust erodes when they repeatedly discover decisions were made without their input.
Standardize how knowledge is stored and linked, invest in cross-stack search, build async documentation habits, and measure self-serve success rate as a KPI. The goal is to make finding information easier than asking for it — which requires both the right tooling and intentional cultural norms around documentation.