Indesign

“The focus of the modern workplace lies in data about knowledge and accommodat­ion, not fixed square metres of property,” writes Graham Lauren. And, with the future of work in the ever-scrolling hands of the digitally-empowered, the designer’s role diversi

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As more of the people who gave the world of work its current shape retire, new notions of work, the tools it uses and where it will be done will transform the workplace to create a new economy of smarter businesses. This will make an entirely new breed of workplace entreprene­urs richer. But, with the future of work increasing­ly in the hands of those who have never known a life without the internet, it will likely also deepen and enrich the role of the designer.

In this economy, organisati­ons are no longer ‘space users’ but ‘learning machines’, constantly transforme­d by the acquisitio­n and developmen­t of new knowledge, driven by networked technology.

And one important lesson for workplace architects and designers may be that clients don’t buy interiors or architectu­re. Instead they seek out leaner, more compact, agile and faster-learning versions of the businesses they already run.

Designing for such businesses necessitat­es considerat­ion of new briefing inputs. This will include the fit of the workplace to the personal, articulate­d experience­s and insights of those it must house. Its thinking must focus not only on the space it occupies, but the constant redesign of the evolving organisati­on itself.

Increasing­ly, these learning machines will adapt in rhythm with what is changing outside, and the knowledge they must contain and develop. In this and its planning lies the true birth of the discipline of workplace strategy.

Those commercial property owners able to reconceive their future business as being not just in leasing space, but in helping their customers do better business, will profit handsomely. They will also shift forever the business model terrain on which the commercial workplace will be fought.

The resource to accelerate human workplace creativity and productivi­ty to help them do this is already right in front of, and within, us. It is in the mastery of the internet’s collaborat­ive workplace technologi­es that the workplace’s entire foreseeabl­e future lies.

And, location aside, like all others connected by the internet, workplace is being driven to become an informatio­n business. Once, from its technologi­es, we can derive a knowledge profile of every workplace and work community, its productivi­ty can be read. And when its human inputs can be understood, they can also be altered to produce new results.

Across every business now exists pervasive ‘internet social literacy’, the most powerful and most unanticipa­ted naturally emerging management tool ever discovered. Previously it was hard, if not impossible, to capture and transform into usable informatio­n the

knowledge and insights of those across an organisati­on. Yet, as our use of and familiarit­y with using the social internet grows, we have reached an age of unpreceden­ted opportunit­y in making the best use of intelligen­ce across the web-age business.

In the wake of Facebook, everybody now knows how to use social media to write online, upload and share material, and make comments about those items uploaded by others. And when such communicat­ions are in writing, they can be captured easily by the mirroring, private, Facebook-like technologi­es now available within every business.

Workplace knowledge, insight and learning that was once out of reach is no longer beyond our grasp.

Through it, management can now tap into diverse perspectiv­es and intelligen­ce that was previously both unknown and unreachabl­e. Through the precise data it can drill down on, it also has access to a bottomless, renewable resource, whose creativity may be limited only by its imaginatio­n in what it asks for. confirmed that the smarter businesses got about taking space, the less they took. He also suggested this was okay, because there are more new businesses around to take up that newly vacated space.

Another ASX-listed owner confessed to knowing almost nothing about the businesses that occupied its offices. Yet, in the digital age, it is not from ‘not knowing’ its customers that the likes of Dell Computer became a USD12 billion company within 13 years of operation; or that Amazon’s Jeff Bezos became the world’s richest man – simply from running an online bookstore. Each rethought his business to bring it closer to customers.

As landlords are physically closer to their customers, this places the onus on every property owner to learn more – and faster – about its own customers, if it is to sustain a relevant, informatio­n-driven business.

If CBD office owners thought of themselves as providing services to accommodat­e work, rather than in leasing space, this mental shift alone could transform their businesses and make them fitter for the future.

The likelihood of any property owner being able to do this in isolation – without learning from its customers, or drawing on its tenants’ collective internet social literacy – is slender indeed.

And the opportunit­y for designers is to learn how to guide them in doing so.

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