An office is a shared space where every choice is emblematic of a vision. It is the physical manifestation of the soul of the collective, the clubhouse for your weird little gang.
Personal productivity is elevated
I’m not talking about productivity from an employer perspective, but individual productivity. Productivity that comes from gaining a shared understanding and alignment of your ideas and dreams. What if you didn’t have to play calendar Jenga to have a chat? What if something that took four Zoom calls could be decided in one live conversation?
Mentorship and observation promote learning
Most of us who have been in the industry for a while learned our trade by doing one thing really well: watching senior people work. We could observe the way they picked apart an idea or handled a difficult client. We could observe how their body language adjusted as they worked a room to get the result they were looking for. We could see what was successful, and just as importantly, what wasn’t.
A huge part of what we do doesn’t happen in a Google Doc. They are skills that are best learned by repeated and varied real-world observation—the ones that get you to the next level.
Additionally, when you’re IRL, you can see when people are outperforming you, right in front of your eyes. You get that “I have to step it up” feeling … the one that helps you advance. By giving up on real-life learning, we are playing a dangerous game with the futures of our young people.
IRL chaos stokes creativity and delight
This last is one of my favorites, and I think it’s the most taken for granted. The routine of the screen does not allow for the chaos that stokes creativity and delight. Our days are rigidly structured, with calendar invites blocking the whole damn thing.
When you go to the office, you open the door to be surprised. The commute. The random combos of people in the kitchen. Overhearing what others are working on. Discovering new things.
We work in a creative industry. The people coming up today should know the joys of our very unique community. Hell, I want to rediscover them for myself. Our work is interesting and alive. Anything else feels like running out the clock to collect a paycheck. If that’s all we are in it for, there are easier ways to make a buck.