Making hot-desking successful: A guide

Making hot-desking successful: A guide

How ‌to make hot-desking work

The highest private terrace in Manhattan belongs to an algorithmic-trading⁤ company called ⁢Hudson River Trading. Its offices, spread across several floors near the top of Three World Trade ⁤Centre, are more⁣ theme‌ park than‌ workplace:⁣ a⁣ games room, gym, dining ⁤areas, stupefying ​views,‍ happy hours​ and drawers unexpectedly stuffed full of sweets to⁤ give employees a‌ surprise. You come away wishing you had concentrated more in ‌maths at school.

You also come ‍away wondering about one of the silver​ linings of the post-pandemic office⁤ for bosses who dislike the idea of home-working. If‌ fewer people are coming⁣ in ⁢on any one day, at least they don’t need as ⁣much space: they can find unassigned ​desks and the firm ‍can ⁣save some money. The‍ trouble is‌ that hot-desking flies in the ‌face of two things, one​ deeply embedded in the human psyche and the other a direct ​consequence of the pandemic.

The first ‌is territoriality. This is a word ​with negative‍ connotations. It conjures up someone who sees information as something to be‌ hoarded and feedback as an⁣ intrusion—the⁢ kind of person who buys a padlock for the items they store in the communal fridge. ⁤But⁣ territoriality is ​also natural. Just as it is ⁣hard ⁣not to bridle a little ‍at the unsolicited ⁣observations of ​co-workers, so people like having a space to call their ‌own.

2023-10-05 07:47:55
Post from www.economist.com
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