It is at this intersection between group effort and individual contribution that the union of content and cognition made possible by the touch-screen is so potentially revolutionary. Complicated file trees and the creation of tedious bullet-pointed PowerPoint presentations go away because everything lives on the Wall. It will be a living, scalable, infinitely flexible information universe literally at one’s fingertips.
The individual device then becomes a facsimile of the Team Wall that, because all of the information is somewhere in the cloud, travels with the user wherever he or she goes. Like The Jetsons and Minority Report all rolled into one, mobile employees will have a constant portal to the Team Wall, adding ideas and “writing on the wall” in a way that is not an unfamiliar concept to fans of social networking sites. Check in on the team’s brainstorming from the road, add new ideas, and present them to a client in real-time. Mobile employees won’t miss a beat, but they probably also won’t be able to wait to get back to the team.
A future without cubicles and mindless slide presentations? It sounds pretty bright to me.
Randy Howder is an associate in Gensler’s San Francisco office and a senior strategist in the firm’s Consulting practice. His particular focus is the evolution of work and the workplace’s changing role in the future. With a portfolio that reflects his diverse skill set, he has helped the FBI, HP, Genentech, Harvard, Chevron, Facebook, and other clients align their workplace environments with their strategic goals. Contact him at randy_howder@gensler.com. |