Curse and blessing of the home office - a guest article of Gunter Dueck

Picture of Written by<br>Prof. Dr. Guenter Dueck
Written by
Prof. Dr. Guenter Dueck
Today, the pandemic is forcing many people to work in the home office. They are now experiencing how work at home is done. I myself have known this situation for perhaps 20 years. I liked it right from the start. But I do have my own spacious office under the roof, which is where I speak at online conferences today. Our adult children are now often in the home office themselves.
Managers worry that they can no longer see their employees at work, which they consider to be a form of control. In online meetings they cannot really be controlled and it is possible to make good use of meeting time in the home office: eBay, gaming, shopping, online banking, telling jokes in WhatsApp to colleagues when the boss starts getting boring. You can experience all this for yourself these days. I just want to forecast what the medium-term outcome will be. Offices are often empty, and large areas of factory farms are sparsely occupied. Managers are considering how they can control their employees. They complain: “I can’t see them anymore!” In addition, they are upset by the quiet in the half-empty open space. Before their rare start, cars indicate: “Battery charge low.” Employees (-couples) get stress in too small and too expensive city center apartments.
[In the picture a little boy in his home office sees an Excel file for the first time in his life and observes how confidently his father handles his work in a cell.]

Companies will realize that they can save office space

An example: I worked at the IBM Scientific Center in Heidelberg. 20 sqm individual office. Because the company wanted to save money and allowed home offices, more and more space became available in the eleven-story building in Mannheim. Heidelberg was given up as a location and I had to move to such a noisy area in 2003. At that time, IBM rented about five floors, then four, then three… When I left IBM in 2011, it was still about 1.5 floors, and in 2019, all employees were moved elsewhere. The IBM laboratory in Böblingen, which once had thousands of employees, is also closed. This whole transformation has dragged on for almost twenty years. What I want to say is that the office towers will be empty, not immediately today, not immediately tomorrow. It will drag on endlessly and joylessly. I have already seen headlines like “Ghost City London”. The vision of emptying skyscrapers is true, but it takes time! What will the cities look like then?
If you only have to go to the office once or twice a week, you can also live further out, the driving time remains the same (more km per trip with fewer trips). Will there be an escape from the city?

Managers need other control instruments

Managers need other control instruments when there is no on-site time recording. You switch to “Targets”. It is no longer traditionally measured how long you worked, but how many tasks you completed. This puts a lot of stress on the employees, because now everyone can see who has done how many actions or how much turnover. Employees who are less efficient could try to work overtime to get a lot done. But the top performers want to be rewarded, they go to the point of self-exploitation, which is almost normal in the consulting profession. Managers can now raise the targets “inhumanly” because they don’t have to look the employee in the eye; he is in the home office. When a company talks a lot about balance, well-being or wellness, it already softens and conceals the pain of exploitation.
The costs for office space are falling, the company is pocketing side profits.
Are the trade unions taking note of this early enough? Doesn’t the entrepreneur now have to pay part of the rent, say, half a room? With consulting firms there is no thank you. Now that home office is more common, will we protect our interests?
Since you don’t drive to work as often, the cars last longer. This will have an impact on the industry. For work in the future car office, it would be good to have self-driving cars available. Families could buy a car together. Companies can organize carpooling opportunities for their employees via app. [Commercial break: I am an investor in RideBee, see if you don’t like that and want to ask your HR manager to do the same. Of course you can still invest. RideBee shows who wants to go where with you, you take them with you, the detour kilometers etc. are recorded by the app, a monetary compensation is done e.g. through the salary.]

Building railroad lines and small airports on "heaps"

In the past, I have already demanded that intercity train lines and small airports should preferably be built on ” heaps” and that they should be run or flown to half-empty for a long time with high losses at the expense of the state. Then, over the years, new cities will be emerging … that naturally requires patience, which is increasingly being lost completely in Munich. Good living space needs good infrastructure, which will probably have to be built first. In China we laughed about ghost towns. We always laugh…and close the airports again when the guests are missing. But we have to wait years until the houses come. And they will certainly come, thanks to Home Office. You no longer need large industrial plants on site to have good jobs there.

Gunter Dueck as Keynote Speaker at All About Remote 2020

Gunter Dueck will be the closing speaker at the online conference on December 1 and will share his satirical-philosophical views. You are welcome to participate in the event.
All About Remote is the yearly inhouse conference of the multiple award winning scale-up company oculavis GmbH. Launched as a customer workshop back in 2016, All About Remote has developed into a leading congress on visual remote support services, augmented reality and related digital business models over the last years. The 2020 edition takes place completely online. This enables all interested specialists and managers from mechanical engineering and manufacturing industry to explore all aspects of Visual Remote Support, Augmented Reality Workflows and Digital Business Models comfortably from their home office.
Gunter Dueck (born 1951) lives as a writer, philosopher, business angel and speaker near Heidelberg. After a career as a professor of mathematics, he worked at IBM for almost 25 years, most recently as Chief Technology Officer when he went into retirement. He is known for humorous-satirical-critical-unvarnished speeches and books.
YouTube

By loading the video, you agree to YouTube's privacy policy.
Learn more

Load video

Image credits on this page: Laurin Schmid, Adobe Stock

FURTHER ARTICLES FROM THIS CATEGORY

PRODUCT

SOLUTIONS

RESOURCES

LOCAL EDITIONS
Die All About Remote Local Editions sind ein Angebot der

oculavis GmbH
Vaalser Str. 259
52074 Aachen
Deutschland

Mit dem Kauf von Tickets für die Konferenz erklären Sie sich mit den folgenden Bedingungen einverstanden:

  • Die Eintrittskarten werden unter keinen Umständen zurückerstattet, außer bei Absage der Veranstaltung. In diesem Fall werden die Karteninhaber über die Absage informiert. Alle Karteninhaber müssen dann innerhalb von 7 Tagen nach der Stornierung eine Rückerstattung per E-Mail beantragen: support@allaboutremote.com.

  • Die Eintrittskarten sind nicht übertragbar. Beim Kauf von mehr als einem Ticket müssen die verbleibenden Tickets mit einem Registrierungscode personalisiert werden, der nach dem Kauf mitgeteilt wird.

  • Es besteht keine Verpflichtung zur Erstattung oder zum Umtausch von Tickets, wenn die oculavis GmbH das Programm aufgrund von Ereignissen oder Umständen, die außerhalb ihres Einflussbereichs liegen, ändert oder variiert. Alle Tickets werden unter dem Vorbehalt von Programmänderungen verkauft.

  • Der Karteninhaber erklärt sich als Zuschauer mit der Anfertigung von Film- und Tonaufnahmen einverstanden.

  • Die oculavis GmbH behält sich das Recht vor, Tickets ohne Angabe von Gründen zu stornieren und den Ticketpreis zu erstatten.

  • Die Online-Konferenz wird über unsere eigene Streaming-Plattform übertragen.

  • Die Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen der oculavis GmbH sind Bestandteil dieser Anmeldebedingungen.

Bei weiteren Fragen wenden Sie sich bitte an unseren Support per E-Mail oder telefonisch unter +49 241 8943880.
NOVEMBER 23, 2023
Die Online-Konferenz All About Remote ist ein Angebot der

oculavis GmbH
Vaalser Str. 259
52074 Aachen
Deutschland

Mit dem Kauf von Tickets für die Konferenz erklären Sie sich mit den folgenden Bedingungen einverstanden:

  • Die Eintrittskarten werden unter keinen Umständen zurückerstattet, außer bei Absage der Veranstaltung. In diesem Fall werden die Karteninhaber über die Absage informiert. Alle Karteninhaber müssen dann innerhalb von 7 Tagen nach der Stornierung eine Rückerstattung per E-Mail beantragen: support@allaboutremote.com.

  • Die Eintrittskarten sind nicht übertragbar. Beim Kauf von mehr als einem Ticket müssen die verbleibenden Tickets mit einem Registrierungscode personalisiert werden, der nach dem Kauf mitgeteilt wird.

  • Es besteht keine Verpflichtung zur Erstattung oder zum Umtausch von Tickets, wenn die oculavis GmbH das Programm aufgrund von Ereignissen oder Umständen, die außerhalb ihres Einflussbereichs liegen, ändert oder variiert. Alle Tickets werden unter dem Vorbehalt von Programmänderungen verkauft.

  • Der Karteninhaber erklärt sich als Zuschauer mit der Anfertigung von Film- und Tonaufnahmen einverstanden.

  • Die oculavis GmbH behält sich das Recht vor, Tickets ohne Angabe von Gründen zu stornieren und den Ticketpreis zu erstatten.

  • Die Online-Konferenz wird über unsere eigene Streaming-Plattform übertragen.

  • Die Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen der oculavis GmbH sind Bestandteil dieser Anmeldebedingungen.

Bei weiteren Fragen wenden Sie sich bitte an unseren Support per E-Mail oder telefonisch unter +49 241 8943880.
NOVEMBER 23, 2023
The online conference All About Remote is an offer of

oculavis GmbH
Vaalser Str. 259
52074 Aachen
Germany

By purchasing tickets for the conference, you agree to the following terms:

  • Tickets are not refundable under any circumstances other than cancellation of the event. In this instance, ticket holders will be informed of any cancellation. All ticket holders must then request refunds via email: support@allaboutremote.com within 7 days of the cancellation notice

  • Tickets are not transferable. When purchasing more than one ticket, the remaining tickets must be personalized by using a registration code that will be provided after the purchase.

  • There is no obligation to refund or exchange tickets if oculavis GmbH alters or varies the programme due to events or circumstances beyond its control. All Tickets are sold subject to programme changes.

  • Ticket holders consent to the filming and sound recording as members of the audience.

  • oculavis GmbH reserves the right to cancel any tickets without providing a reason and by refunding the ticket price.

  • The online conference will be broadcast via our own streaming platform.

  • The general terms and conditions of oculavis GmbH are part of these terms of registration.


For further questions please contact our support via email or phone under +49 241 8943880.