Workers seek change of scene

The office worker of 2012 is straddling two different time zones.

On the one hand, 21st century technology lets them work anywhere. On the other, 20th-century work habits mean they are still expected in “the office.”

Workers are feeling the stretch.

Thus, in a recent survey, 89 percent said the option to work remotely is one of the three main job perks. Almost a third would take a reduction in paid vacation, and a quarter a pay cut, in order to work remotely.

The rise of the third place

Working at home is not necessarily the answer, though. Of those who do work at home, 43 percent say they watch TV or movies, 20 percent play video games, 26 percent take a nap.

Sounds like the ideal work-life balance? Apparently not: another study shows that only 12 percent of people want to work at home all the time.

There are too many distractions, not enough facilities, and they miss the professional atmosphere of an office.

So, the trend sweeping Europe is working in a “third place.”

Instead of working at the office (the “first place”) or home (the “second place”), people are taking laptop, tablet, and/or smartphone to libraries, business lounges, business centers, co-working hubs and coffee shops.

There’s no single, definitive “third place” to work; people opt for the place that best suits their location, working style and schedule.

The trend for third place working goes hand in hand with the spread of more flexible work practices, such as giving people choice over where and when they work.

A big 72 percent of businesses globally say this leads directly to greater productivity.

A third space is coming near you

Third place is not new. We all know about co-working, but it’s become branded as something for the urban creatives, the tech guys.

That image is misleading, because it obscures the tens of millions of other people in the US who already work at third spaces-checking e-mails at a coffee shop, working in their parked car, and so on.

They just don’t think of it as a “third space.” And they would probably benefit from a more work-conducive third space—professional workspaces instead of stressing out in a noisy coffee shop or their car.

Unusually, Europe is setting the pace on this. Across Europe, flexible workspaces are opening closer to or actually at the places where people live and travel.

The French and Dutch rail operators, SNCF and NS Trains, have joined forces with Regus to open walk-in business lounges at busy rail stations.

Shell and Regus are piloting instant-access workspace at gas station forecourts in Europe. Regus and Extra Motorway Services are opening drop-in work places next to key highways in the UK.

Time better spent

Those new networks of third places mean that, instead of being forced to travel to an office tower that happened to be convenient in the 1980s, people can access equivalent facilities—wifi, meeting space, printers, and the networking opportunities that coalesce around them—at a place nearer where they want to be.

It could be close to home, customers, or near shops and leisure facilities. Ten percent of Regus’ business centers in the US are in shopping malls, and owing to people’s desire to work at locations that fit their daily lives, they’re seeing high occupancy rates and rapidly rising demand. Less time in the car, more time to work and shop.

Technology is the enabler for third space working. Time is the driver. Latest census results in the US show the average commute in the US is now over 25 minutes.

In parts of New York, New Jersey, Washington DC, Baltimore, Chicago, Atlanta, California and Virginia, it is 30 minutes or more.

The 200-plus hours that many people spend traveling to and from the office each year is more than many of them spend on vacation. You have to really love your car or commuter train to think that’s the right balance.

Luxury or office must-have?

So, what’s in all this for employers? Isn’t third space working a luxury that benefits people, not businesses?

Many employers remain skeptical—despite the fact it can reduce real-estate costs—because they want their staff right in front of them, away from the lure of TV, household chores and video games.

But giving employees more freedom to choose where they work can improve well-being, employee engagement, and performance.

The fact that 72 percent of firms relate productivity to flexible working is evidence of that.

Rigid, office-bound working practices hold corporations back from boosting productivity.

Employees are already yearning to loosen their ties with the fixed office; with the help of third spaces, employers should let them cut the knot.

The author is CEO of Regus Asia.

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