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The Digital Workplace Podcast
Mary Beth Oakes - The future of office furniture is more interesting than you think
Ep. 216
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The office isn't dead by a long shot. It may have fainted, but it has a chance for a great rebirth.
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222. Sheela Subramanian - How the future works
25:59||Ep. 222The future of work is on your doorstep. Accepting it brings all sorts of changes, but they lead to a better world of work.221. Ali Greene - 5 things the experts disagree about for remote work
26:29||Ep. 221Ali Greene is the co-author of Remote Works and has been a remote manager since 2014. She and Neil talk about 5 things that even the experts don't fully agree on.220. Ana Neves - You’ve got cash just laying around your workplace
24:56||Ep. 220Knowledge management has changed as the workplace has gone digital, and it's become even more important219. Liam Martin - More collaboration is not the answer
31:37||Ep. 219We've been taught that more collaboration is always better. But that's making digital work very noisy. Should we have a different goal?218. Phil Simon - This is what life after email looks like
29:03||Ep. 218Email dominated digital collaboration for two decades. What will work look like after email isn't the king?217. Chinedu Eleanya - Can you plan serendipity? Can you afford not to?
25:17||Ep. 217Serendipity happens automatically in an office, but not in a digital workplace. What can leaders do to create the conditions for serendipity to occur?215. Luke Thomas - Building a new home for digital work
27:03||Ep. 215Digital work is great, but it doesn't have a centering home like the office. Luke Thomas tells us how Friday looks at the core objects of work and supports digital teams.214. Lara Hogan - A new kind of manager for the digital age
26:48||Ep. 214Lara Hogan is training managers for a new age. Old expectations and mindsets for managers in the office won't work anymore, and managers need new skill sets to support the humans around them.