The Nowhere Office
Reinventing Work and the Workplace of the Future
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4.0 • 1 Rating
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- £2.99
Publisher Description
As remote working becomes the norm rather than the exception for many office workers around the globe, The Nowhere Office proposes a radical new way of thinking about work both now and in the future. Offering a strategic and practical guide to negotiating this pivotal moment in the history of work, The Nowhere Office addresses the problems which beset work - the endemic stagnant productivity and crisis of stress which predate the pandemic - and the new challenges of remote working, repurposing offices for more creative interaction, managing WFH teams and satisfying the demand for more purposeful work with greater work/life balance. Drawing on history, cutting-edge research and extensive interviews Julia Hobsbawm argues persuasively that now is the time to develop something better, more meaningful, and, crucially, more workable.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Business consultant Hobsbawm (The Simplicity Principle) delivers a rose-colored look at how the rise of remote work during the Covid-19 pandemic has provided the opportunity for a "wholesale realignment of priorities." Contending that the "relentless rise of automation and new technologies" had led to "stagnant productivity and endemic stress" among office workers, Hobsbawm envisions a world in which a hybrid home/office model is the new normal. She contends that corporate offices will need to become more geared to networking and "learning, training, and development," rather than impressing clients and encouraging "presenteeism," and imagines that cities, in order to stem the tide of workers fleeing to the suburbs, will redesign their central business districts to be "much more mixed-use, residential, artisanal, and flexible in use of space." Elsewhere, she calls on businesses to accept the idea "that it's OK to work less, and to be more productive" and encourages HR departments to more clearly distinguish between their recruitment, training, conflict resolution, and firing functions. Though Hobsbawm's prescriptions are high on optimism and short on specifics, her message that "work can and should be not only a source of raw income but also a purposeful life itself" is inspiring. CEOs, managers, and employees will take heart in this encouraging thought experiment.