Talk:The future of office work: Difference between revisions

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====Summary====
COVID has given us a vision of an adjacent possibility: a diffused, networked virtual working world where we no longer need to slog into a centralised “in person” office space. Is this the future of work, or an aberration?
COVID has given us a vision of an adjacent possibility: a diffused, networked virtual working world where we no longer need to slog into a centralised “in person” office space. Is this the future of work, or an aberration?


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===Working in your jim-jams===
===Working in your jim-jams===
I have, throughout this piece, mischievously referred to home workers on the kitchen table, in their jim-jams, eating ice-cream from the tub in a onesie on the sofa whilst dialed into the all hands stakeholders conference call and generally insinuating that remote workers might be, well, ''phoning it in''.  
throughout this piece I have, mischievously, referred to remote staff working “from the kitchen table”, “in their jim-jams”, or “eating ice-cream from the tub in a onesie, on the sofa while dialled into the stakeholder weekly check-in call” and generally insinuating that remote workers might be, well, ''phoning it in''.  


This provokes outrage among some,l. I freely admit it is intended to.  
This may provoke indignance. I freely admit it is meant to.  


“It is just wrong for you to imply that people who work from home necessarily take it easy. Some people have family commitments and personal circumstances being their control which mean they have to work from home. And look, dammit, this is not the nineteen fifties. We are not living in a some episode of ''Mad Men''. Smell the coffee, JC. Some people, frankly, just choose to work from home. They work better that way. We have the tools and capabilities, so why the hell ''shouldn’t'' they? They can be just as effective as the most grinding tube-jockey. It is grossly unfair of you to generalise.”
{{quote|
“It is just wrong for you to imply that remote workers all take it easy. Some have personal circumstances beyond their control. And look, dammit, this is not the nineteen-fifties. We are not living in a ''Mad Men'' episode. Some people ''choose'' to work from home. They work better that way. Wake up and smell the coffee, JC. We have the tools and capabilities to work away from the downtown office, so why the hell shouldn’t we use them? You are perpetuating grossly unfair stereotypes.”}}


Now every word of this is true. But not one grasps the point, which is that this can all be true while a significant portion of home workers do take the Mickey , but more to the point, many office jockeys, deep in their blackest heart, will harbour this conviction. Punters actually do think this. It might not be fair, but they do. People are human: they justify themselves, like any pattern-matching generaliser, they make generalisations. Such as all other things being equal the more committed people ''show up''.  
Now, every word of this is true.  


These metaphors tell us something deep about our common cultural values. We have a bunch of metaphors that equate presence with effort and energy, and distance with half-heartedness. That is, literally, the origin of the expression, “phoning it in”. It is what it means to say, “I don't know what happened there. The Aresenal just didn’t ''turn up'”. Or “JP ''put a shift in'' on this”. “She really came good.“Stay close ” “ Keep in touch ,"be on it ”. ”“They represented.“She went missing in action.” “he was awol”. “she seemed distant and uninvolved.” “She had real ''presence''.” “This is all a bit remote”. “sorry I was miles away".
But it is to miss the point, which is this: whether they are right to or not, many office workers, deep in their blackest heart, ''do'' think remote work is a soft option. They might not say this in public, but they do. It might not be rational or fair, but they do. This is because they are human: they generalise, they categorise, they look for ways to ''justify'' their own contribution against others’ — to ''elevate'' and ''aggrandise'' it. A really easy way to do this is by comparing ''visible effort''. There is, in western culture a deeply ingrained conviction in the virtue of commitment and, all other things being equal, ''committed people show up''.  
 
Yes, this is a heuristic; it is unsupported by data; it leads to gross mis-valuation of work contributions, but it exists, and it runs deep.
 
Our metaphors denoting commitment, o the lack of it, tell us about our common cultural values. By and large they, equate effort and energy with ''physical contact'' and ''presence'': “He really ''put a shift in'' on this”. “She has a real ''presence''”. “Stay ''close'' on this one”. “Keep ''on top of it''. “Stay engaged during the final stages of the project.
 
And we associate half-heartedness with ''distance''.  “He ''phoned it in''”. “The Arsenal just ''didn’t show up'' in the second half”. “It was an ''unengaging'' performance”. “She ''went missing in action''”. “He was ''AWOL'' when we really needed him”. “She seemed a bit distant in the meeting today”. “Sorry, I was ''miles away''".
 
These cultural values sit in a layer below the infrastructure. They are not arbitrary: they reflect a common historical perception. It may shift, but only slowly, and ''only if that perception is no longer true''.

Revision as of 10:22, 4 November 2023

Summary

COVID has given us a vision of an adjacent possibility: a diffused, networked virtual working world where we no longer need to slog into a centralised “in person” office space. Is this the future of work, or an aberration?

Commentators fall into two camps: yes, this time it's different, and we should embrace our online world, and no, things ought to revert to their precovid mean, and if they don't, we should make them.

The former view, often advanced by millennials, linkedin thought leaders, and run of the mill futurologists, gets more play.

It found its articulation recently in a forlorn post from TikTok girl, a tearful generation Zer struggling with the strictures of a commute. Defenders leapt to her cause, not really paying it a great deal of attention, but reading into it a wider charge of complacency among corporate leaders in not recognising legitimate complaints: the daily grind is not for for purpose. In fact TikTok girl was only really complaining about her commute — but still.

We can, and should, embrace the new paradigm.

In our view having overstated TikTok girl’s argument, her defenders tend to overstate their case. Actually, modern line in an office isn't too bad. Comparatively, Generation X have it pretty good.

And nor is it embittered gen Xers who want to compel everyone back into the office. Far from it. Most of them loved lockdown, and are among the strongest refuseniks.

Was lockdown a dry run for an alternative future, or a weird, sui generis aberration where usual rules were briefly interrupted, before the system began to reorganise around them? The benefits of lockdown to the organisation began to fade, even while employees hung onto their personal upsides of home working.

We should not be surprised that established staff prefer working from home. That is not the question that businesses have to answer. That is, is preferring the on-world to the off-world in the firm’s best interest?

We have written elsewhere about the “great delamination” between our nuanced, open-ended, ambiguous, opportunity-laden infinite analogue world, and the finite, historical, polarising online world. They are not equivalents and to assume they are is to make a dangerous category error.

Working in your jim-jams

throughout this piece I have, mischievously, referred to remote staff working “from the kitchen table”, “in their jim-jams”, or “eating ice-cream from the tub in a onesie, on the sofa while dialled into the stakeholder weekly check-in call” and generally insinuating that remote workers might be, well, phoning it in.

This may provoke indignance. I freely admit it is meant to.

“It is just wrong for you to imply that remote workers all take it easy. Some have personal circumstances beyond their control. And look, dammit, this is not the nineteen-fifties. We are not living in a Mad Men episode. Some people choose to work from home. They work better that way. Wake up and smell the coffee, JC. We have the tools and capabilities to work away from the downtown office, so why the hell shouldn’t we use them? You are perpetuating grossly unfair stereotypes.”

Now, every word of this is true.

But it is to miss the point, which is this: whether they are right to or not, many office workers, deep in their blackest heart, do think remote work is a soft option. They might not say this in public, but they do. It might not be rational or fair, but they do. This is because they are human: they generalise, they categorise, they look for ways to justify their own contribution against others’ — to elevate and aggrandise it. A really easy way to do this is by comparing visible effort. There is, in western culture a deeply ingrained conviction in the virtue of commitment and, all other things being equal, committed people show up.

Yes, this is a heuristic; it is unsupported by data; it leads to gross mis-valuation of work contributions, but it exists, and it runs deep.

Our metaphors denoting commitment, o the lack of it, tell us about our common cultural values. By and large they, equate effort and energy with physical contact and presence: “He really put a shift in on this”. “She has a real presence”. “Stay close on this one”. “Keep on top of it”. “Stay engaged during the final stages of the project.”

And we associate half-heartedness with distance. “He phoned it in”. “The Arsenal just didn’t show up in the second half”. “It was an unengaging performance”. “She went missing in action”. “He was AWOL when we really needed him”. “She seemed a bit distant in the meeting today”. “Sorry, I was miles away".

These cultural values sit in a layer below the infrastructure. They are not arbitrary: they reflect a common historical perception. It may shift, but only slowly, and only if that perception is no longer true.