Out of Office: The Big Problem and Bigger Promise of Working from Home

Out of Office: The Big Problem and Bigger Promise of Working from Home

  • Downloads:3502
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-12-09 06:51:57
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Charlie Warzel
  • ISBN:0593320093
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

A future-looking, game-changing book from two leading culture reporters about the radical and transformational potential of working from home, offering a path toward a new kind of work-life balance that can improve our lives and strengthen our communities

If you think you've been working from home during the pandemic, Charlie Warzel and Anne Helen Petersen are here to tell you otherwise。 What we've been doing is something else entirely, a jury-rigged compromise made under the duress of a national crisis that's satisfactory for neither the worker nor the employer。 For Warzel and Petersen, the past year has revealed that there may be another path forward for work, one that doesn't involve hellish daily commutes and the demands of jam-packed work schedules that no longer make sense。 As a society, we have talked for decades about flexible work arrangements。 In this book, the authors make clear that we are at an inflection point where this becomes possible for many companies and their employees。

Out of Office combines groundbreaking reporting and the couple's own experiences after they made the decision to leave their desk jobs in New York City for Montana。 They describe how workers and employers across America, and around the world, are finding new ways of working that make people happier and more productive, and make companies more profitable。 This is a book that aims to reshape our entire relationship to the office。

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Reviews

Jeremy Anderberg

While the title and subtitle would have you think this is a book about remote work, Petersen and Warzel go much deeper than that, focusing on the larger problem of work/life balance。 For the 40% of Americans who classify as "knowledge workers," the line between work and life has blurred more and more as technology "allows" us to be connected at all times。 More than anything, Petersen and Warzel make the case that work should fit into your life, not the other way around。 If we become more product While the title and subtitle would have you think this is a book about remote work, Petersen and Warzel go much deeper than that, focusing on the larger problem of work/life balance。 For the 40% of Americans who classify as "knowledge workers," the line between work and life has blurred more and more as technology "allows" us to be connected at all times。 More than anything, Petersen and Warzel make the case that work should fit into your life, not the other way around。 If we become more productive, as a species, shouldn't we work fewer hours rather than just do more tasks? What's the point of all this work if not to live harder and more in line with what we truly enjoy doing? An urgent, necessary read that fits in well with the likes of FOUR THOUSAND WEEKS and Celeste Headlee's DO NOTHING。 。。。more

Sarah

Author quoted in this article: https://www。theguardian。com/lifeandst。。。 Author quoted in this article: https://www。theguardian。com/lifeandst。。。 。。。more

Scribe Publications

Having left their New York desk jobs and moved to Montana, leading culture journalists Warzel and Petersen see today's pandemic-driven work-at-home situation as a cobbled-together compromise and explain how we can create true out of office work schedules benefiting both workers and employers。Library Journal Having left their New York desk jobs and moved to Montana, leading culture journalists Warzel and Petersen see today's pandemic-driven work-at-home situation as a cobbled-together compromise and explain how we can create true out of office work schedules benefiting both workers and employers。Library Journal 。。。more