change for better
It’s difficult to avoid advertisements or news stories about the amazing technological feats the modern “intelligent car” can perform. One of the most impressive is that a vehicle can now “know” its position on the road, sense when it may be veering into another lane and transmit a warning vibration through the seat to jolt a drowsy driver into attention.
This type of technological innovation, that makes our lives safer and easier to navigate, is set to extend to the workplace. Already, there are smart chairs that measure our posture and how long we’ve been sitting, as well as smart work surfaces that know when we’re present.
In an interview on “The Future of Work,” Alan Hedge, director of the human factors and ergonomics laboratory at Cornell University, points out that this type of technology is just the start. “We are at the very beginning of a revolution in ‘active’ objects and products that have sensors built into them.”
Professor Hedge terms this interaction between people and design technology “everywhere ergonomics.” While smart chairs and surfaces may not have made their way to all workplaces just yet, many people will already be using everywhere ergonomics at home. “It’s only a matter of time before the boom in wearable devices begins to have a transformative effect on the workplace. Think back to how the widespread adoption of smartphones kick-started the shift to mobile working promised by portable computers years earlier. I believe this boom could be bigger.”
Convenience and ready access to information will be the impetus behind everywhere ergonomics in the workplace, with healthier working habits not far behind. For wearables, employee well-being is already a significant driver. A PwC report called ‘The Wearable Future’ released in 20141 revealed that more than 80 percent of consumers listed eating healthier, exercising smarter and accessing more convenient medical care as important benefits of wearable technology.
Professor Hedge sees these technologies “increasingly being embedded into the very fabric of our environments” giving us unified access to personal and professional information, as we interact with smart surfaces and materials all around us. It is a tantalizing glimpse into the world of the connected workforce. Here, people rather than technology become the mobile device, with access permitted through pretty much any surface, accessory or clothing – eliminating the need for a dedicated mobile device. The demand for a more seamless way of working anywhere at any time is already apparent. Research commissioned by Ricoh into what we term the “iWorker” revealed that business leaders expect the majority of their workforce to be made up of employees who have 24/7 access to all the necessary information, by 2018.
Yet despite the technology emerging and the clear advantages of a fully mobile and digitally mature workforce, some organizations are reluctant to adapt. In other research we commissioned into the technologically evolved workplace of the future, only 29 percent of employees said that their company has a strong appetite for creating new ways of working and deploying technologies to make the future a reality.
Some organizations are equally slow to adopt processes to measure employee well-being, something that will become a greater issue in an age of everywhere ergonomics. Devices that give feedback on posture and stress levels simultaneously provide employers with valuable employee health data, which, used appropriately, can help to create a collaborative and creative work experience.
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1 PwC survey: The Wearable Future. https://www.pwc.com/us/en/technology/publications/wearable-technology.html