Everyone Hates Your Office: The Four Biggest Problems With Your Corporate Office and How To Fix Them
Everyone Hates Your Office: The Four Biggest Problems With Your Corporate Office and How To Fix Them
Everyone Hates Your Office: The Four Biggest Problems With Your Corporate Office and How To Fix Them
Your Office
The four biggest problems
with your corporate office
and how to fix them
03 The Case of the
Increasingly Confusing
Corporate Office
modern office is shrinking. In 2010, the and plush beanbags, the entire under-
age of 225 square feet to call their own. office should be is shifting from a cultural
By 2017, that size had shrunk down to an perspective and many companies are still
average of 157 square feet per worker. working out the kinks.
There are multiple reasons for this trend Kick ball leagues, company social outings,
of shrinking personal space, including the and the return of work-life balance are
globalization of companies, the embrace some of the many modern cultural shifts
of mobile working, the popularity of open that are taking hold in companies around
office design, and the reallocation of the world. This has thrilled many office
budget to technology and amenities. workers, but left some wondering just
However, it isn’t just the lack of personal ing in an open office is not exactly condu-
space that has thrown some office work- cive for the team that still has to hit that
3 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
Mobile working is
here to stay
Flexibility is one of the most attrac- frames increases their productivity, happi-
desk from nine to five. The competitive Additionally, globalized companies are
company has seen the benefits in offering comprised of teams with members that are
remote working opportunities to employ- scattered around the globe. That means
ees. Employees report remote working physical office locations are rarely running
and working during less traditional time- at full occupancy capacity. As employees
are occupied on
To adjust, companies are moving towards
time.
cating that real estate budget into better office amenities and
full spread breakfast bars, fancy office furniture, and the best of
In the tech world, for example, three of the industry’s top compa-
employees are happy to let software take over the menial tasks so
6 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
Why your office
is making your
employees
unhappy
Millennials, those born between 1981 and Problem 1: Diverse office
1996, now make up the largest generation layouts make it difficult to
in today’s workforce. This generation of find where you’re going
digital natives brings with it new expec- Companies are increasingly adopting less
smart, and fast. And they expect to be the modern needs of employees. It would
provided with the tools and technologies be surprising to walk into an office today
companies must consider the possible furniture, and large, sunny windows.
against the danger of sticking with the There are fully stocked office kitchens,
their meeting rooms fun new names that reflect company culture,
such as Twitter’s bird names, Airbnb’s cities of the world, and the
and office guests to find where they are going. Fifty percent of
Not only is this a waste of company office floor plans are designed to promote
ity and increases frustration. Any increase but not everyone finds their productive
in frustration is a direct hit to employee groove in this design set up. Some offices
engagement, which is harder than ever have even found this new design has
to foster in today’s competitive corporate done more harm than good to employee
environment. well-being.
A recent Gallup survey reported that only Newly opened work spaces bring with
about 30 percent of U.S. employees felt them the challenges of noises, smells, and
actively engaged in their work. As the past visual stimulations that can drive some
10 years have shown, that will not cut it for employees to distraction and significantly
the average millennial worker, who jump increase stress. Employees battle with
jobs every 3.2 years, on average. Compare feeling self-conscious to take a personal
that to the typical baby boomer, who stays phone call, discomfort with the possibil-
put for an average of more than a decade. ity of someone always looking over their
losing employees to job hopping costs U.S. Offices have responded by providing
businesses $450 to $550 billion per year.1 various styles of working space and
9 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
semi-private rooms for workers to tempo- minor aggression. At worst, it’s a major
vation-based quiet spaces. The rise of Lastly, the lack of dedicated personal
remote working and globalized teams also space means workers have no desk or
mean employees need frequent and easy area to truly call their own. That leaves no
access to rooms with specific tools, such room for family photos, pleasing knick-
on the move.
track of where colleagues are located or knacks, or other personal items that help
find them when needed. According to a employees personalize their space and
recent survey by Senion, 55 percent of find joy throughout the day. It also neces-
office workers report spending excessive sitates that employees schlep all of their
time locating colleagues2. At best, it’s a essential electronics, resources, and other
laptop at home.
ance costs3.
11 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
Problem 3: Work is regularly A study published in the Journal of Experi-
to employees is doubly so for office guests. their error rates when they returned to
This is a breeding ground for stress and their task. After a 4.5-second interruption,
interrupt the work of someone else to ask Reports of exhaustion are higher for
Nothing kills productivity faster than feeling overloaded with work. The Inter-
rapidly drain energy and decrease work- also reports that interruptions aren’t just
minutes to get back to the point they were Decreased productivity, energy, and work
act as directional guides to colleagues and directional burden is the front desk staff
guests. Woe is the unlucky employee who who become de facto tour guides to office
sits closest to the floor entryway. They visitors. This takes away from time that
tasks.
Office workers
spend an average of Problem 4: The old way is…
11
old
When is the last time you unfolded a
day giving directions to people looking for It’s been said the average human attention
conference or meeting rooms to those span is eight seconds. Whether that is true
from a different company, building, or or not, the fact is that in a busy office envi-
13 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
to stand in front of a traditional mounted
14 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
The solution is
in the palm of
your hands
Add up the estimated costs of dissatisfied, A comprehensive indoor wayfinding solu-
stressed out, and regularly interrupted tion puts searchable, interactive indoor
workers, and it could be said that corpo- maps into the hands of every employee
rate office layouts are costing companies and office guest. Users can pull up maps
$1.4 trillion a year. So what has to be done? right on their smartphones to navigate
There is one solution for all four corporate through every floor of the office to find
investing in indoor wayfinding solutions to your office. Employees can access the
solve the problems of the modern office. maps from existing applications on their
dalone application.
Solution 2: Indoor
wayfinding helps employees
find their colleagues
Not only does MapsIndoors make it easy
a screen.
16 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
MapsIndoor’s indoor positioning provider Guests who arrive for meetings can seam-
possible to pinpoint the location of other to indoor navigation that takes them all the
users. Those who need a quiet space way from their front door to their specific
completely free of interruption can adjust conference room for the big meeting.
Eliminating the frequency of lost employ- to the point they were every time a worker
ees and guests eradicates a major produc- is interrupted, which happens on average
tivity disruptor. Front desk staff and every 11 minutes in the typical office envi-
employees are no longer tasked with help- ronment. It’s a wonder any work ever is
points of interest within the building or Indoor wayfinding will reduce errors, help
of absenteeism, medical costs, and insur- indoor wayfinding has a direct correlation
18 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
The most successful companies invest in ing employees with the information they
the tech that helps their employees work need to do their jobs better. Just as work-
better, smarter, and faster. This is not only ers need to regain control of their envi-
advanced video conferencing and intuitive Indoor wayfinding solutions also help
messaging apps so teammates around the control the natural flow of people. Employ-
world can keep in constant contact with ees or guests who enter the building to
one another. Web-based project manage- find a throng of other workers waiting for
ment and workflow platforms make organ- the same elevator can use indoor wayfin-
izing and sharing tasks easy. There are ding to show them an alternate route to
tools for minimizing distractions, collabo- their final destination. Indoor wayfinding
rating better, and giving and taking notes. can even guide employees directly to an
Indoor wayfinding is the next step in open parking space in the office parking
automating minute tasks and empower- lot, saving time and frustration.
19 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
Find your way to
better company
outcomes
Bring your office floor plans to life with fully integrated, search-
able indoor maps from MapsPeople. For more than 120 years,
2 https://senion.com/office-worker-survey/
3 https://www.stress.org/workplace-stress/
4 https://www.ics.uci.edu/~gmark/chi08-mark.pdf
5 http://psycnet.apa.org/record/2013-00033-001
6 https://www.apa.org/pubs/journals/features/str-a0031637.pdf
7 http://www.basexblog.com/2005/09/09/cost-of-interruptions-588-billion-and-growing/