Don’t you hate it when people text radio shows to say they’re ‘dancing round the kitchen to all the great music’? If true, it paints a rather sad picture; and the (equally sad) reality is more likely that they’re not dancing, but sitting at the kitchen table on a computer. If the tech industry wants to cash in on home working, it’s not fancy new Zooms, Teams and snazzy software that’s needed; it’s the practical, hardware-type stuff. Keyboards that don’t give you wrist and backache, screens which let you keep your eyesight and that you can see if you want to sit in the garden in sunglasses. And maybe a coffee machine in the hall where you can stand and talk to the dog. Anything to get out of the kitchen.
“Hybrid Advice: Do The Numbers Stack Up?”
Hybrid advice has become a buzzword in our business, and the problem is it means different things to different people.