1. EachPod
EachPod

Stingers at Ten Paces

Author
Jason D. Rowley, Graham C. Peck
Published
Mon 08 Nov 2021
Episode Link
https://fullyvested.co/episodes/041-stingers-at-ten-paces-UI5sUuqD

General

Subscribe to Fully Vested at FullyVested.co or through your podcast app of choice.

The present and future of work

The first cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by a novel coronavirus called SARS-CoV-2, were identified near Wuhan, China as early as November 2019. A few months later, in early 2020, much of the world went into lockdown.

As the COVID-19 crisis approaches its 2nd full year, it's becoming increasingly clear that the way we work has changed, if not forever than for what's likely to be the next 5 or 10 years at least. This is especially true for knowledge workers.

Technology as an enabler

  • It's kind of hard to imagine what this pandemic would've been like had it happened in, say, 1989.
  • Tools and services like video conferencing, workplace chat, remote event/conference platforms, cloud storage, and others enable partially or fully-distributed work.

Concerns about the role of tech

  • "Zoom fatigue" and other phenomena are very real.
  • Some companies are implementing systems to surveil workers.

Flexibility as a mega-trend in knowledge work

  • Especially before vaccines became widely available, professionals often had to balance work, family, and personal needs all from one place: their homes. For folks with children, working adults needed to meet their professional obligations, while also serving as a teacher or supervisor of school-aged kids engaged in remote learning. These circumstances necessitated increased flexibility in work arrangements.
  • With more time away from the office, more workers are coming to terms with the fact that commuting to an office and spending the majority of the day there has taken up a lot of mental bandwidth.

Reading list

About The Co-Hosts

  • Jason D. Rowley is a researcher who has previously worked with Uzabase, Golden.com, Crunchbase News and others. He volunteers with startup outreach for the open-source community and sends occasional newsletters from Rowley.Report.
  • Graham C. Peck is a Venture Partner with Cultivation Capital and additionally helps companies build technology development teams in partnership with Brightgrove and other technology development organizations.

Share to: