Asked for the dream millennial workplace, most people would probably envision a brightly colored open environment with pool tables, bean bag chairs and maybe a small basketball court. But it turns out that young people in the workplace have the same psychological requirements as the old crowd, and may even be more sensitive to distractions. A recent study by Oxford Economics suggests that distractions in the workplace are seriously hindering people’s ability to concentrate and perform, with little recognition from above. The transition to open offices since the end of the 20th century and the environmental factors they bring into play may be affecting people’s mental health, reducing employee happiness and thereby the bottom line of business performance.
Americans Work 25% More Than Europeans, Study Finds
Americans are addicted to their jobs. U.S. workers not only put in more hours than workers do almost anywhere else. They’re also increasingly retiring later and taking fewer vacation days.
A new study tries to measure precisely how much more Americans work than Europeans do overall. The answer: The average person in Europe works 19 percent less than the average person in the U.S. That’s about 258 fewer hours per year, or about an hour less each weekday. Another way to look at it: U.S. workers put in almost 25 percent more hours than Europeans.
Gartner report identifies the Top 10 strategic technology trends for 2017
A new report from tech analysts Gartner highlights the top technology trends the firm believes will be ‘strategic for most organizations in 2017’. Gartner defines a strategic technology trend as one with substantial disruptive potential that is just beginning to break out of an emerging state into broader impact and use or which are rapidly growing trends with a high degree of volatility reaching tipping points over the next five years. They include artificial intelligence, blockchain, intelligent devices, digital technology platforms and advanced machine learning.
American workers prefer the 9 to 5 but would take a pay cut in exchange for home working
According to a new study by researchers at Princeton University and Harvard University, the average American worker is indifferent to flexible working hours and instead prefers a set 40-hour workweek. According to the study, most workers aren’t willing to take even a small pay cut to determine their own working hours. However, if given the option to work from home, many workers — especially women — would take an 8 percent wage cut to do so. The findings, published by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), also show that workers consistently dislike irregular work schedules set by employers on short notice. They would even give up one-fifth of their salary to avoid working evenings or weekends. Nearly half of jobseekers would not take an irregular-schedule job even if it paid a quarter more than a 9 to 5 job. This is true even of workers who currently have irregular work schedules.
Majority of workers believe their workplace is making them ill
A huge number of employees (87 percent) blame their workplace for making them ill, with only 25 percent saying they feel healthy at work on a regular basis, claims a new survey from Healthcare provider Benenden. In addition, half of those surveyed (50 percent) said they felt depressed at work, with just 40 percent admitting they are happy in their place of work. The survey of 2,000 employed people reveals that nearly half of workers still go into work, despite being ill. And whether ill or not, once in work, those surveyed confessed to having regular health issues, with backache (84 percent) eye strain (42 percent) and regular migraines (27 percent) all being part of working life. In addition, just under half of respondents (at 44 percent), reported being regularly stressed at work, with a further 91 percent feeling tired several times a week at their desk. Nearly two thirds of workers (58 percent) said that work worries keep them awake at night.
Weird science; how workplace professionals are in danger of obsessing about data
There’s been a series of reports recently and a lot of PR to back them up, plus we’re headed at pace into the workplace event season. Pretty soon we will be neck deep in data. And misleading headlines. Some of it is good. Some of it is bad. We need to be wary of the data, the science behind some of it and the wild claims made as a result. There’s a great piece about how big data isn’t the answer to our problems in Wired. One argument it puts forward is this: “today’s data sets, though bigger than ever, still afford us an impoverished view of living things.” It feels like there is a poor view of the workplace right now. One problem here is the commercial imperative to get results. That means the PR teams pick over the bones of what might be quite thin research and then bold arguments are extrapolated. It means detailed insights are blurred by headline grabbing claims, or simply not there in the first place.
UK Workplace Survey 2016: Bridging the Gap
With a dramatic gulf between the haves and the have-nots in the UK workplace, it is imperative that businesses bridge this gap if they are to unlock innovation in the workplace. At the same time, it is equally important that businesses enrich the human experience and help people optimise their performance at work.
As a research-based design firm, we use data, evidence, analysis and insights to fuel creative solutions to the core questions facing today’s hyper-connected workforce. Our most recent insight study, the 2016 UK Workplace Survey, officially launched on Sept. 6 at a client event in London. Joined by a panel of industry experts and workplace specialists, we asked the question, “How can the workplace be a catalyst for innovation in today’s organisation?” The ensuing debate brought to the fore some interesting observations.
This post is part of a series of blog posts on Gensler’s 2016 Workplace Surveys.
Millennials: Things are bad now, and they'll get worse
Millennials are not happy about the nation's direction, and they don't think the country's economic fortunes will improve any time soon.
That’s the conclusion of a survey released last week (PDF) by the Economic Innovation Group and EY (Ernst & Young). About 63 percent of the respondents said they believe the country is on the wrong track, compared to 25 percent who said it’s going in the right direction. That majority held among older millennials, younger ones and the people in between. The same is true of opinions about whether the national economy will improve in the next year, with 65 percent saying they think it will be the same or worse, and only 25 percent saying it will be better.
NYBC: Delivery! New Office Stock Headed This Way
Giving occupiers more shiny-and-new options in years to come, over 20 million square feet of office space—spread across 23 new office buildings—is slated for completion in Manhattan from this year through 2021, according to a New York Building Congress analysis of multiple data sources.
Much of the new office stock will be concentrated in the Hudson Yards district, with additional towers opening at the World Trade Center and in East Midtown. This count doesn’t include three office towers in the Hudson Yards district, and one at the World Trade Center, that have been fully designed and have all the approvals necessary to move forward once an anchor tenant and financing have been secured.
What do connected and autonomous vehicles mean for the future of buildings?
My teenage son can’t imagine a world without WIFI and is confused when I mention cassette tapes were commonly used to hold music. I suspect his children will be confused 20 years from now when he mentions that “cars used to have steering wheels.”
The automotive industry is changing fast. Until recently, CAVs (connected and autonomous vehicles) seemed like high-tech prototypes of the distant future. But they’ve actually been in development for many years. And to my pleasant surprise, that research and development has been ramping up this year.
Davinci Meeting Rooms Releases Flexible Workspace Study Results and Trends
The survey shows a new trend whereas Fortune 1000 corporations are rapidly adopting flexible workplace strategies while allowing their employees to take advantage of on-demand work & meeting space offerings. In addition to the already common user base of small to mid-size businesses, Davinci noticed fast growing adoption of its workspace and meeting room reservation platform Davincimeetingrooms.com by enterprise companies. Davinci's website and mobile app allow users to search over 4,500 fully equipped work spaces, book conference rooms and day offices, and select a variety of available business services.
Occupier activity cautious on political concerns
‘Caution’ appears to be the key word among corporate occupiers at the moment in leading global markets including New York, London, Singapore and Beijing. While corporate performance is healthy in most industries, all firms remain under pressure to maximise the efficiency of their real estate portfolios. The financial services sector continues to be focused on consolidation and rationalisation of its footprint, while the energy sector is still experiencing pressure from low oil prices, resulting in portfolio reviews and cost-reduction initiatives.
What Gensler's Workplace Survey Tells Us About the Future of the Office
From the cube farm to the open plan, the conversation around office design has long focused on extremes. But there's an advantage to finding middle ground, according to Gensler's U.S. Workplace Survey 2016, which polled more than 4,000 workers across 11 industries from companies that the firm has deemed to be leaders in their respective fields. The results relate the “quality and functional make-up of the workplace and the level of innovation employees ascribe to their organization,” according to the firm.
WeWork Takes on Design Research and the Internet of Things
By the numbers, WeWork’s dominance as a collaborative-workspace provider is hard to dispute. With a $16 billion valuation as of March, and more than 900 employees as of June, the company currently leases coworking spaces to 60,000 members at 110 sites in 30 cities across 12 countries. (It also has two WeLive locations, a residential take on the sharing experience.) This includes the 13 sites in seven cities that WeWork opened since the beginning of this month alone, which translate to 9,500 additional desks, each of which can be rented per month.
Aside from bringing in revenue, these hundreds of sites and thousands of desks also serve as one enormous test bed for WeWork’s 13-person product-research team to conduct massive studies in architectural planning, programming, and design. Kicking off this endeavor was the debut of the company’s flagship “beta floor,” the sixth floor of WeWork’s Times Square office, in New York, which hosted the company’s inaugural product roundtable last week.
The Rise of Co-working Space in Asia Pacific: Boon or bane?
Co-working space has enjoyed tremendous growth in recent years supported by the start-up boom; demand for greater flexibility among both employees and corporates; and advances in technology allowing people to work anywhere at any time.
To date, Asia Pacific has lagged behind major cities in Europe and North America. However, the past year has seen the proliferation of co-working space, with several large overseas and domestic operators expanding to major cities including Hong Kong, Singapore, Shanghai, Tokyo, Sydney and Melbourne.
Canadian Workers Face Office Reality: Most Productive Place to Work Also Contributing to Stress, Burnout
Almost seventy per cent of Canadian office workers and managers report working more than 40 hours a week, and the majority consider the office the most productive place to get work done. But employers need to take action to ensure it remains an inspiring, motivating environment. This, according to the second annual Workplace Index conducted by Staples Business Advantage.
How Where You Sit In Your Office Impacts Your Productivity
Your office seating chart may hold the key to how happy and productive you are at work. New research from Cornerstone OnDemand and Harvard Business School suggests that rearranging desks or sitting next to someone with a complementary work style can be a cost-effective way to inject energy and efficiency into the workday.
Six Key Drivers Transforming Healthcare Business
Healthcare expenditures in the U.S. are ballooning, with projections indicating an increase of $3.5 trillion between 2010 and 2040. There are numerous factors spurring such robust growth, yet the two prime factors are a graying population and millions more Americans insured under the Affordable Care Act. At first blush, the future for the health services industry would seem rosy. Yet a closer look reveals that upward sloping expenditures don’t necessarily correlate to increasing revenues. Profitability is still a concern, particularly for hospitals, which are dealing with upticks in labor expenses and the cost of supplies. (In fact, many hospitals are still figuring out how to precisely measure their costs.)
The State of the Open Office Research Study
Open office designs have been catching on in recent years as organizations realize that implementing such a design can save on real estate overhead and help foster collaboration.
The resistance to these new office layouts has been well-documented, both by pundits in the media and within the client organizations Stegmeier Consulting Group advises each day. We believe that with an effective change management plan, even the most fiercely-resistant employees can thrive in a new work environment, regardless of how open or traditional it is. Nevertheless, the pervasiveness of this topic begs for more data on why (or why not) employees are reluctant to work in an open plan.
Outmoded desk phone will disappear within next couple of years
A new survey has confirmed the imminent death of the ‘nearly useless’ desk phone, which while still in evidence within many organizations, is believed by one third of workers will disappear in two to three years. With both corporate and remote workers increasingly away from their desks, 65 percent already have a ‘desk phone optional’ work environment and over half (59 percent) believe the desk phone is outdated. The 2016 Report on Business Communications in the Era of the Anywhere Worker, by Dialpad, among end users to executives, on cloud communications adoption rates and expectations, also found that businesses of all sizes are adapting to the “anywhere worker” movement and as employees increasingly rely exclusively on mobile technologies, the organizations they work for are quickly evolving to meet their mobility demands and prepare for more anywhere workers in the future. In fact, 84 percent of responding companies already have remote workers.