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Tuesday, August 31, 2004

VIRTUAL OFFICES WILL REVERSE YEARS OF ISOLATION

By Tom Yager

Posted August 27, 2004 3:00 PM Pacific Time

IT is undergoing the kind of cultural evolution that companies endured
when they first pushed computing technology out to the bulk of their
workforces.

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As computers entered the workplace, they ripped corporate cultures
apart, raising individual productivity but disconnecting workers from
one another through compartmentalization and anonymity. The office lost
its status as a social hub.

Even those who don't subscribe to touchy-feely workplace concepts
understand that employees who don't communicate may be productive, but
only individually. The workers who shine always find ways to work around
a culture of disconnectedness to link up with others.

Thankfully, we're recovering from the shock to the system and moving
away from the idea that human communication is a distraction, an
impediment to the head-down, isolated work style that typifies modern
life. Companies and organizations now want to use technology to build
inclusive and interconnected communities of employees and outsiders. IT
will be tasked to build each employee a virtual office. Its door leads
to the building's interior, where co-workers and management can converse
and make connections. The window opens onto a courtyard where outsiders
can congregate and chat with employees or just watch them work. And an
employee can teleport herself into her office from anywhere, any time
that suits her, and observers wouldn't know her location.

IT can't make people work well together. What it can do is foster its
own informal, yet accountable, pilot culture. It should create a
workflow that's open to the spit-balling and experimentation that
naturally grows out of personal connections among workers. Set up
servers that workers can use to put up public- or internal-use blogs,
forums, Web casts, Web conferences, and other modes of communication;
whatever grabs people as long as it's legal (groups will police
themselves). Get an IM server going and a WAP gateway to the company
intranet. You needn't make a project of it. Just pull together some
standards-based services and open them to the staff.

The genesis of this concept lies less in blogs and IM than it does in
mobile devices. Cell phones gave workers the freedom to mix their
personal and work lives in ways that they controlled. No matter how
buttoned-down a company's policy was about personal calls, Internet
access, chat, or pictures of one's dog in one's cubicle, the cell phone
provided employees with joyful circumvention. I know there are plenty of
office workers whose phone use creates a nuisance. Certainly there are
people who would also make poor use of open collaborative services.
That's life. You deal with individual cases, but you never subject
professionals to "one bad apple" policies.

Why host the services locally? Because when workers collaborate among
staffers and communicate with the outside world, they'll be proud that
it's done on their home domain. It helps restore the lost concept of the
workplace as a social hub.

If you make it just as easy for your staff to reach in as to reach out,
using a mix of the resources they have with the resources you provide,
they'll link up in some remarkable ways. It'll take time, but soon
you'll have a productive, vibrant culture as a result.

Tom Yager is technical director of the InfoWorld Test Center.


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