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The mobile workforce

The mobile workforce

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 21 Oct 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Working where, how and when it makes the most sense.

Not everyone agrees on what a mobile workforce is, but what it is not is work from home, said Joel Ratekin, president of Ratekin Consulting, a Mechanicsville, Va.-based firm specializing in alternative workplace strategies.

The idea of the distributed mobile worker formally started about five to six years ago, according to Ratekin, who created the flexible work programs at both Capital One Financial Corp. and American Express Co. This isn’t teleworking or telecommuting, he pointed out.

Distributed work is the umbrella phrase for different types of work happening simultaneously across geographic locations around the world, whereas mobile workers are a subset category of people who work in different types of settings throughout the day, he explained.

One of the problems with telecommuting, and why it doesn’t work for everybody, is that the work-at-home lifestyle often leads to feelings of isolation, he said. “I get to a place of dissatisfaction because I’m not around people, so now I find myself having to go out to the coffee shop just as a way to engage with people,” said Ratekin.

But mobile workers are empowered with all sorts of choices, he said. Mobile working enables people to work wherever they want in order to accomplish a task at hand, noted Ratekin, and this includes spending a lot of time in their workplace environment. “I don’t have to go to the coffee shop anymore because the office is set up to support me,” he said.

Flexible workers

In a mobile work environment, employees aren’t tied to designated offices or cubicles. Spaces are designed to offer options, such as coffee lounges, team rooms, project areas and quiet zones. These are “places to go where I can be most productive while I’m there,” said Ratekin.

While a lot of people think they would love to work from home, they change their mind once they are actually in that environment, said Mark Lang, architect of the Flexible Work Styles program at Telus Corp. “There are really very few people who can stomach working from home on any kind of consistent basis,” he said.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.

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