Done Working From Home? Prepare for More Hot Desks
Kanebridge News
    HOUSE MEDIAN ASKING PRICES AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $1,626,679 (+0.44%)       Melbourne $992,456 (-0.10%)       Brisbane $968,463 (-0.68%)       Adelaide $889,622 (+1.18%)       Perth $857,092 (+0.57%)       Hobart $754,345 (-0.49%)       Darwin $661,223 (-0.49%)       Canberra $1,005,502 (-0.28%)       National $1,046,021 (+0.17%)                UNIT MEDIAN ASKING PRICES AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $747,713 (-0.42%)       Melbourne $496,441 (+0.20%)       Brisbane $533,621 (+0.58%)       Adelaide $444,970 (-1.69%)       Perth $447,364 (+2.63%)       Hobart $527,592 (+1.28%)       Darwin $348,895 (-0.64%)       Canberra $508,328 (+4.40%)       National $529,453 (+0.63%)                HOUSES FOR SALE AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 10,090 (+30)       Melbourne 14,817 (-21)       Brisbane 7,885 (-45)       Adelaide 2,436 (-38)       Perth 6,371 (-16)       Hobart 1,340 (-9)       Darwin 235 (-2)       Canberra 961 (-27)       National 44,135 (-128)                UNITS FOR SALE AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 8,781 (+13)       Melbourne 8,195 (-49)       Brisbane 1,592 (-18)       Adelaide 423 (-4)       Perth 1,645 (+13)       Hobart 206 (+7)       Darwin 401 (+2)       Canberra 990 (+1)       National 22,233 (-35)                HOUSE MEDIAN ASKING RENTS AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $800 ($0)       Melbourne $600 ($0)       Brisbane $640 ($0)       Adelaide $600 ($0)       Perth $650 ($0)       Hobart $550 ($0)       Darwin $700 ($0)       Canberra $690 (+$10)       National $662 (+$1)                UNIT MEDIAN ASKING RENTS AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $760 (+$10)       Melbourne $580 (-$5)       Brisbane $630 (-$5)       Adelaide $495 ($0)       Perth $600 ($0)       Hobart $450 ($0)       Darwin $550 ($0)       Canberra $570 ($0)       National $592 (+$1)                HOUSES FOR RENT AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 5,419 (-30)       Melbourne 5,543 (+77)       Brisbane 3,938 (+95)       Adelaide 1,333 (+21)       Perth 2,147 (-8)       Hobart 388 (-10)       Darwin 99 (-3)       Canberra 582 (+3)       National 19,449 (+145)                UNITS FOR RENT AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 8,008 (+239)       Melbourne 4,950 (+135)       Brisbane 2,133 (+62)       Adelaide 376 (+20)       Perth 650 (+6)       Hobart 133 (-4)       Darwin 171 (-1)       Canberra 579 (+4)       National 17,000 (+461)                HOUSE ANNUAL GROSS YIELDS AND TREND         Sydney 2.56% (↓)     Melbourne 3.14% (↑)      Brisbane 3.44% (↑)        Adelaide 3.51% (↓)       Perth 3.94% (↓)     Hobart 3.79% (↑)      Darwin 5.50% (↑)      Canberra 3.57% (↑)      National 3.29% (↑)             UNIT ANNUAL GROSS YIELDS AND TREND       Sydney 5.29% (↑)        Melbourne 6.08% (↓)       Brisbane 6.14% (↓)     Adelaide 5.78% (↑)        Perth 6.97% (↓)       Hobart 4.44% (↓)     Darwin 8.20% (↑)        Canberra 5.83% (↓)       National 5.82% (↓)            HOUSE RENTAL VACANCY RATES AND TREND       Sydney 0.8% (↑)      Melbourne 0.7% (↑)      Brisbane 0.7% (↑)      Adelaide 0.4% (↑)      Perth 0.4% (↑)      Hobart 0.9% (↑)      Darwin 0.8% (↑)      Canberra 1.0% (↑)      National 0.7% (↑)             UNIT RENTAL VACANCY RATES AND TREND       Sydney 0.9% (↑)      Melbourne 1.1% (↑)      Brisbane 1.0% (↑)      Adelaide 0.5% (↑)      Perth 0.5% (↑)      Hobart 1.4% (↑)      Darwin 1.7% (↑)      Canberra 1.4% (↑)      National 1.1% (↑)             AVERAGE DAYS TO SELL HOUSES AND TREND       Sydney 31.1 (↑)      Melbourne 33.3 (↑)      Brisbane 32.4 (↑)      Adelaide 26.5 (↑)      Perth 36.1 (↑)      Hobart 32.7 (↑)        Darwin 33.3 (↓)     Canberra 32.4 (↑)      National 32.2 (↑)             AVERAGE DAYS TO SELL UNITS AND TREND       Sydney 31.7 (↑)      Melbourne 32.1 (↑)      Brisbane 31.5 (↑)        Adelaide 23.9 (↓)     Perth 41.0 (↑)        Hobart 34.0 (↓)       Darwin 44.6 (↓)     Canberra 43.1 (↑)      National 35.3 (↑)            
Share Button

Done Working From Home? Prepare for More Hot Desks

As employees return to the office, more of them will find that they no longer have an assigned workspace that’s all theirs.

By KRITHIKA VARAGUR
Wed, Jun 16, 2021 12:03pmGrey Clock 4 min

Sarah Vanunu started a new job three weeks ago at MyHeritage, an online genealogy platform based in Or Yehuda, Israel, and thanks to Israel’s speedy vaccine rollout, she has been eligible for in-person work since she began. But she only goes in on Mondays and Wednesdays and leaves nothing on her assigned desk in between, since different people work there the other days of the week.

“It’s so funny to start a new job and not meet everyone up front,” she says. “I still don’t know half of my colleagues.”

MyHeritage, which employs about 400 people in Israel, is still operating at reduced capacity due to Covid restrictions. Ms. Vanunu, who directs the company’s public relations, comes to work with just a laptop and mouse. There’s a completely clean desk waiting for her there, with nothing on it but a monitor. If she wants to come in any other days, she must make a reservation online and get assigned to a random desk elsewhere.

As millions of workers head back to the office this summer, many will return without a desk of their own. Some appreciate the flexibility of these hot-desk arrangements, which aren’t completely new but have become vastly more popular as part of post-pandemic plans for hybrid work.

But hot desks also mean extra time spent managing reservations, coordinating with teams and helping employees feel a sense of belonging without a dedicated spot for them in the office. Experts and workers say there are ways to optimize these spaces, including assigning desks to groups instead of individuals, planning schedules, designating areas for socializing and being extra-mindful of workers with special needs or disabilities.

A major reason desk reservations are a big part of so many companies’ return to work is that most workers haven’t yet been ordered to come in five days a week, so their schedules remain variable. And many offices are reopening at lower than maximum capacity. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon wrote in his annual shareholder letter in April that the bank may need only 60 seats for every 100 employees after the pandemic.

“You have to have most employees coming in nearly every day to justify assigning them a desk,” says Amy Yin, San Francisco-based founder of OfficeTogether, an office reservation and scheduling software company.

Some companies also want to avoid assigning desks so they can clean them more frequently as part of enhanced pandemic-era hygiene protocols.

The key concept emerging around desk-reservation systems is “neighbourhoods,” where certain teams can gather a few days a week, as opposed to individual workers reserving their own desks and coming in willy-nilly.

MyHeritage, which opened for in-person work in April, designated one or two specific weekdays for each team, such as research and development or product, says the company’s facilities manager, Katerina Breitman.

The most popular day for in-person work at the moment is Thursday, according to data compiled in May from about 10,000 offices around the world by Robin, a workplace management platform. (The least popular is Friday.)

Flexible work arrangements are likely here to stay: In one 2020 survey of 77 firms worldwide by CBRE Research, 56% of those surveyed anticipated more use of flexible office space.

Social interaction may be one of the trickiest parts of these arrangements in the long run, since workers can no longer drop by the permanent desk of a colleague for unplanned chitchat. A 2018 survey by Workthere, a co-working space company, found that only 46% of workers surveyed felt that they were more productive in a hot-desk environment compared with having their own desk.

One workaround is to designate areas just for socializing. The Austin, Texas, office of the consulting firm Bain & Co., which reopened in May in a WeWork, has a “bullpen” area, an open space with larger tables that can seat about 25 people, to facilitate water-cooler moments, says Peter Bowen, a partner there.

Live feeds can also help workers keep track of each other, says Zach Dunn, Boston-based co-founder of Robin. “At the beginning of the year, [our software] basically showed desks and seat assignments, but now it’s a map updated in real-time as people move through the office.”

Over time, companies have gotten better at the extra layer of planning required to work in an office that accommodates fewer people in more locales. In Austin, Bain asks employees to indicate on a mobile app which days they plan to come in the following week. If many people plan to come on a particular day, they might allot the morning to a certain team and the afternoon to a different one.

OfficeTogether allows booking up to 30 days in advance, but Ms. Yin says most companies tend to book about two weeks out.

Workers with disabilities, as well as workers who are used to having specific accommodations at their workstations, may find it harder to adjust to hot-desking.

It’s important to design such offices so that they are accessible from the outset, says Deborah Foster, a professor at Cardiff Business School in Wales who studies diversity in the workplace. “Ensuring that the layout is wheelchair-accessible and putting sensory markers on floors to guide people with sight impairments are two considerations,” she says. Also important: proper lighting and ensuring that there are quiet spaces for workers who need to use assistive technologies like voice-recognition software.

For workers who can’t be accommodated in the short-term, employers should be more flexible about allowing them to continue working from home, Dr. Foster says.

One final thing that workers may miss with hot desks is the chance to spruce up their workspaces with personal memorabilia.

Mr. Bowen, at Bain, used to keep all kinds of tchotchkes at his old desk in Chicago: photos, a binder of 20 years’ worth of company presentations, a trophy from his company golf tournament. He will eventually go back there to retrieve his mementos, but no longer feels he needs to have them at his desk for colleagues to see. Instead, he’ll just store them at his new home in Texas.

“The rise of the home office has kind of created a second place for all that stuff,” he says.

Reprinted by permission of The Wall Street Journal, Copyright 2021 Dow Jones & Company. Inc. All Rights Reserved Worldwide. Original date of publication: June 12, 2021



MOST POPULAR
11 ACRES ROAD, KELLYVILLE, NSW

This stylish family home combines a classic palette and finishes with a flexible floorplan

35 North Street Windsor

Just 55 minutes from Sydney, make this your creative getaway located in the majestic Hawkesbury region.

Related Stories
Money
The generational investment divide for Australians
By Bronwyn Allen 17/05/2024
Money
The Power Move of Working the 5-to-9 Before the 9-to-5
By CALLUM BORCHERS 17/05/2024
Money
The Art Market is Down. A Cyberattack at Christie’s May Make Things Worse.
By KELLY CROW 15/05/2024
The generational investment divide for Australians

A new report on the impact of cost of living pressures reveals a stark contrast between age groups in investment strategies

By Bronwyn Allen
Fri, May 17, 2024 3 min

Four in five Australians say they have changed their investment and savings goals over the past 12 months, with 44 percent doing so primarily to make ends meet during the costofliving crisis. A further 25 percent say theyve switched strategies to protect their wealth against inflation, according to a new survey by financial advisory firm, Findex.

The Superannuation and Retirement Insights report shows Australians have also changed their goals to grow their wealth (31 percent), to create a regular income stream (29 percent) and to reduce taxes (17 percent). Transferring wealth to their children or other family members has motivated 10 percent of Australians to alter their investment plans, which is likely reflective of the increasing role played by the Bank of Mum and Dad in young people’s first home purchases.

The report found that traditional investment avenues, such as property and superannuation, remain the most popular choices, with more than eight out of 10 survey respondents ranking these asset classes highly. But there is also an increasing inclination towards investments that offer the potential for quicker returns, additional perceived safety, and better liquidity or accessibility to funds.

Eighty percent of survey respondents also nominated bank savings as among their top five investment choices right now, followed by shares (66 percent) and cash (51 percent).

This shift reflects a broader strategy to mitigate current financial uncertainties, balancing the pursuit of long-term wealth accumulation with the need for immediate financial security,” the report says.

While superannuation is considered a cornerstone investment for retirement and long-term wealth accumulation, 85 percent of Australians are exploring investments outside superannuation. The most common investments outside super are bank savings (64 percent), property (38 percent), cash (35 percent) and shares (34 percent).

However, when the data is broken down by generation, stark differences are revealed in how each age cohort chooses to invest their spare income and why.

Most popular investments outsider super and the motivations to invest by generation

Baby Boomers (born 1965-1964)

Outside superannuation, Baby Boomers prefer to invest in bank savings (60 percent), property (50 percent) and shares (46 percent).

By far, their primary motivation for investing is planning for retirement (80 percent). They also want to build wealth (51 percent) and support their children or other family members (25 percent). Other motivations include preserving wealth to beat inflation (22 percent) and paying off a mortgage or other debt (20 percent). They are the least likely generation to be saving for an investment property.

Gen Xers (born 19651980)

Gex Xers prefer to invest in bank savings (57 percent), property (43 percent) and shares (36 percent).

They are motivated to invest for retirement (66 percent), to build wealth (50 percent), to save for emergencies (36 percent), and to pay off a mortgage or other debt (30 percent). Interestingly, Gen X is the generation most concerned with supporting their children or family members (33 percent). This may be because Gen Xers have grown up during Australia’s long-standing property boom that began in the late 1990s and continues today.

Millennials (born 1981-1996)

Millennials have the strongest interest in bank savings as an investment avenue (70 percent), followed by property at 41 percent. They also like cash (35 percent) and shares (33 percent). Millennials have the highest uptake of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) at 21 percent. ETFs are a relatively new type of asset class, with the first ones trading on the ASX in 2001. ETFs are a basket of shares that can be purchased in a single transaction for instant diversification. Millennials are also the generation most interested in cryptocurrencies, with 22 percent invested.

Their biggest motivations for investing are to build wealth (55 percent), save for emergencies (50 percent) and plan for retirement (49 percent). They also want to support their kids (32 percent) and pay off their mortgage (32 percent). Millennials are the generation most likely to be saving for an investment property (28 percent) rather than a first home (17 percent).

Gen Zs (born 1997-2009)

Gen Zs spread their money across more asset classes than their elders. They like investing in bank savings (66 percent), cash (42 percent), shares (22 percent), ETFs (17 percent), property (14 percent) and cryptocurrencies (13 percent).

While Gen Zs are the youngest age cohort within the survey, they also have long-term goals just like their elders. The biggest motivation to invest among Gen Zs is to build wealth (52 percent). More Gen Zs are saving for a first home than any other generation, with 42 percent pursuing this goal. They are also the generation most concerned with preserving wealth to beat inflation (29 percent). Gen Zs also want short-term security, with 46 percent saving for emergencies. They’re also the generation most likely to be saving for other major purchases like a car or holiday (41 percent) and investing just for enjoyment (26 percent).

MOST POPULAR

Consumers are going to gravitate toward applications powered by the buzzy new technology, analyst Michael Wolf predicts

11 ACRES ROAD, KELLYVILLE, NSW

This stylish family home combines a classic palette and finishes with a flexible floorplan

Related Stories
Lifestyle
Distilling the traditions of whisky: 15 minutes with James Buntin
By KANEBRIDGE NEWS 12/12/2023
Lifestyle
The Uglification of Everything
By Peggy Noonan 26/04/2024
Money
World’s Major Economies Fall Behind U.S.
By JOSHUA KIRBY 16/02/2024
0
    Your Cart
    Your cart is emptyReturn to Shop