Technology & Innovation

Untethered employees

July 08, 2014

Global

July 08, 2014

Global
Frieda Klotz

Deputy editor

Frieda Klotz is a deputy editor at the Economist Intelligence Unit, focusing on healthcare, the pharmaceutical industry and technological innovation. Before joining the EIU Frieda worked as a journalist for six years, writing for publications such as the New York Times, the Irish Times, the Daily Telegraph,  the Guardian, the Chronicle of Higher Education and strategy + business magazine. Frieda published a book with Oxford University Press in 2011. She holds a doctorate in literature from the University of Oxford and an undergraduate degree from Trinity College, Dublin.

 

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The EIU examines how the rise of mobile devices is changing the way we work within our office walls in an extended article, sponsored by the Mopria Alliance.

Report Summary 

The landscape of the workplace has changed dramatically, even in the past year. The same forces that have shifted the barriers to remote work—the ubiquity of Wi-Fi networks and high-speed cellular service, the move from boxy desktop computers to sleek laptops and tablets, and the migration from traditional landlines to mobile phones—are also changing the way we work within our office walls. 

New, more mobile devices—laptop computers, tablets and phones—combined with cloud services are continuing to transform work processes by speeding workplace interactions, making communication easier, and creating novel and evolving ways for colleagues and clients to interact. They also affect our assumptions about work—and what employers and employees expect it to involve.

"For any kind of initiative that you launch ... you should ask, ‘Have I allowed for mobile participation?'"

- Gloria Burke, Cheif knowledge officer, Unisys

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