New ways of working require new workspaces
Tomorrow’s workspaces
The office of the future can be a living room, a hotel or maybe even a café. Younger workers are more comfortable working from public spaces than their older counterparts, as seen in the figure below.
Young workers also are moving toward what are called coworking spaces — spaces shared by people who work for different enterprises. Renters can choose their cohabitants or leave it up to fate, sort of like apartment hunting and cohousing. An interesting note about coworking space: the biggest benefit people cite is not convenience or independence; it’s a sense of community, collaboration and innovation. They’re not abstaining from office life altogether; they’re choosing a new kind of office life.
Along with a sense of community, however, coworking spaces entail certain risks. Public Wi-Fi isn’t protected like enterprise networks, so it’s important to keep anti-virus software up to date and establish rules and protocols among fellow tenants about Internet usage and security. Keeping information secure also means making sure discussions of anything critical or sensitive happen somewhere private. Even if tenants aren’t out to steal information, they can easily overhear — and act on — things they shouldn’t.
New workspaces under the enterprise roof
Enterprises are also experimenting with different ways of dedicating and sharing spaces in the main office. Driven in part by the cost of corporate real estate, strategies such as “hoteling” and “hot desking” have gained currency. Hoteling is a process by which employees reserve desk space for temporary usage, and hot desking leaves that process unstructured — first come, first served. Some law offices have now embraced hoteling because of digitization — where most lawyers needed to be in a space along with their physical information, now, most of this exists online or in the cloud.
Strategies like these can keep workspaces from being underused, but as businesses introduce sharing and migration into their workspaces they should make sure their employees still have consistent ways to be reached — via mobile phones — and still have access to private spaces, for calls and conversations that need to be confidential. And while these new workplaces and styles of work are changing the game, it’s important to remember that most workers still work from physical offices, and that these offices can bring great value to your organization.
Implementing new workspaces
These workspace strategies may not be for everyone; simply managing the change can be a challenge. Some keys to success are:
- A deep understanding of how the different segments, functions and geographies of your workforce prefer to work.
- A clear and communicated policy of how home-based, coworking and shared workspaces will be supported and should be used.
- A visible and hands-on role in leading these innovations, with leaders welcoming input and adapting the plan when necessary.
- And perhaps most importantly, a level of trust that employees will be responsible and get their jobs done.
Workspace and productivity
Organizations that can adapt their workspaces to better accommodate changing workstyles have advantages not only in controlling costs, but also in agility and productivity. Employees can more readily (and economically) be in the right place at the right time to deal with changing market and economic forces.
Allowing employees greater control over how and where they work can increase employee engagement and create a culture that attracts and retains top talent. And that in turn — even though it is born of autonomy — can actually help drive collaboration. It may be counterintuitive, but that’s one aspect of the new world of work: independence fuels involvement.
Organizations must find the right balance between dedicated, traditional desk space and shared spaces. But striking that balance will pay off, as it keeps your workforce returning each day, more energized and more productive.
Source : RICOH USA.
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