Everyone Hates
Your Office
The four biggest problems
with your corporate office
and how to fix them
03 The Case of the
Increasingly Confusing
Corporate Office
07 Why Your Office is
Making Your
Employees Unhappy
15 The Solution is in the
Palm of Your Hands
20 Find Your Way to
Better Company
Outcomes
2 The Future of Aviation with Indoor Wayfinding
The case of the
increasingly
confusing
corporate office
The modern company is growing, but the are swapped out for gleaming white tables
modern office is shrinking. In 2010, the and plush beanbags, the entire under-
average office worker enjoyed an aver- standing of what a modern corporate
age of 225 square feet to call their own. office should be is shifting from a cultural
By 2017, that size had shrunk down to an perspective and many companies are still
average of 157 square feet per worker. working out the kinks.
There are multiple reasons for this trend Kick ball leagues, company social outings,
of shrinking personal space, including the and the return of work-life balance are
globalization of companies, the embrace some of the many modern cultural shifts
of mobile working, the popularity of open that are taking hold in companies around
office design, and the reallocation of the world. This has thrilled many office
budget to technology and amenities. workers, but left some wondering just
where they fit. An afternoon tequila tast-
However, it isn’t just the lack of personal ing in an open office is not exactly condu-
space that has thrown some office work- cive for the team that still has to hit that
ers into a tizzy. As rows of tired cubicles 4 p.m. deadline.
3 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
Mobile working is
here to stay
Flexibility is one of the most attrac- frames increases their productivity, happi-
tive benefits to today’s modern worker. ness, and company loyalty.
Gone are the days of being chained to a
desk from nine to five. The competitive Additionally, globalized companies are
company has seen the benefits in offering comprised of teams with members that are
remote working opportunities to employ- scattered around the globe. That means
ees. Employees report remote working physical office locations are rarely running
and working during less traditional time- at full occupancy capacity. As employees
plug in at home, at the neighborhood
coffee shop, or from Aunt Edna’s couch in
Boise, desks at the office are sitting empty.
In fact, recent studies have found that only
Only
59 percent of office desks are occupied on
of office desks an average day.
are occupied on
To adjust, companies are moving towards
an average day the trend of hot desking, in which employ-
ees reserve a desk for the day whenever
they come into the office. This enables
4 Everyone Hates Your Office
companies to make better use of the space
they have, but can create difficulties when
trying to track down individual employees.
The modern open
office design
The shrinking square-footage-per-person
does not necessarily mean entire office
footprints are getting smaller. Companies
are simply squeezing more employees into
existing spaces. The death of the cubicle
farm and rise of the open office concept
means more employees than ever before
are huddled around large tables, elbow to
elbow at clusters of desks, and wandering
through spaces looking for a little quiet
time.
5 Everyone Hates Your Office
In theory, this design move is believed to accelerate innovation,
encourage communication, and foster creativity. But the lack of
personal space and increase in noise and other distractions have
left some employees feeling frustrated.
The most successful
companies invest in
tech
As companies assign less space per employee, they are reallo-
cating that real estate budget into better office amenities and
technology that is more advanced. High end coffee machines,
full spread breakfast bars, fancy office furniture, and the best of
modern technology are all wooing today’s top talent.
In the tech world, for example, three of the industry’s top compa-
nies–Google, Amazon, and Microsoft—are putting more and more
space in between themselves and their competitors because of
significant investments in technology. Namely, their own technol-
ogy. The modern office is becoming increasingly automated and
employees are happy to let software take over the menial tasks so
they can focus on work that is more important.
6 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
Why your office
is making your
employees
unhappy
Millennials, those born between 1981 and Problem 1: Diverse office
1996, now make up the largest generation layouts make it difficult to
in today’s workforce. This generation of find where you’re going
digital natives brings with it new expec- Companies are increasingly adopting less
tations of working life. They work hard, traditional workspaces to accommodate
smart, and fast. And they expect to be the modern needs of employees. It would
provided with the tools and technologies be surprising to walk into an office today
to help them do so. and see an endless row of cubicles. That
sea of beige has been replaced with wide-
As the modern office continues to adapt, open space, fashionable Scandinavian
companies must consider the possible furniture, and large, sunny windows.
repercussions of these changes weighed
against the danger of sticking with the There are fully stocked office kitchens,
status quo. cool on-site coffee bars, and a wealth of
options for common space, conference
7 Everyone Hates Your Office
space, and chilling out space. Many creative companies have given
their meeting rooms fun new names that reflect company culture,
such as Twitter’s bird names, Airbnb’s cities of the world, and the
Food Network’s fruit theme.
Each creative new flourish can bring tremendous benefits to the
productivity, motivation, and morale of employees. But re-defin-
ing how a modern office looks, committing to diverse spaces, and
eschewing many of the traditional office functions can also create
a significant amount of directional confusion.
Additionally, many businesses share buildings and even floors
with other companies, which can add confusion to the corporate
landscape and make it difficult to navigate from point A to point B
within the office walls.
Diverse office layouts make it burdensome for both employees
and office guests to find where they are going. Fifty percent of
office workers report spending excessive time looking for confer-
ence rooms due to wayfinding problems. The average office
employee reportedly spends up to 30 minutes a day hunting for a
room for their purposes. That means a company of 1,000 employ-
8 Everyone Hates Your Office
ees spends an average of 60,000 hours a Problem 2: Lack of personal
year searching for meeting rooms. That’s space increases stress
the equivalent of 30 full-time positions. Modern office design has brought about
the rise in activity-based working. Open
Not only is this a waste of company office floor plans are designed to promote
resources, it affects employee productiv- collaboration, innovation, and creativity,
ity and increases frustration. Any increase but not everyone finds their productive
in frustration is a direct hit to employee groove in this design set up. Some offices
engagement, which is harder than ever have even found this new design has
to foster in today’s competitive corporate done more harm than good to employee
environment. well-being.
A recent Gallup survey reported that only Newly opened work spaces bring with
about 30 percent of U.S. employees felt them the challenges of noises, smells, and
actively engaged in their work. As the past visual stimulations that can drive some
10 years have shown, that will not cut it for employees to distraction and significantly
the average millennial worker, who jump increase stress. Employees battle with
jobs every 3.2 years, on average. Compare feeling self-conscious to take a personal
that to the typical baby boomer, who stays phone call, discomfort with the possibil-
put for an average of more than a decade. ity of someone always looking over their
shoulder, and pressure to look busy at all
This is incredibly costly for companies. times.
According to that same Gallup survey,
losing employees to job hopping costs U.S. Offices have responded by providing
businesses $450 to $550 billion per year.1 various styles of working space and
9 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
semi-private rooms for workers to tempo- minor aggression. At worst, it’s a major
rarily utilize, such as huddle rooms, barrier to productivity.
private phone booths, and other reser-
vation-based quiet spaces. The rise of Lastly, the lack of dedicated personal
remote working and globalized teams also space means workers have no desk or
mean employees need frequent and easy area to truly call their own. That leaves no
access to rooms with specific tools, such room for family photos, pleasing knick-
as video conferencing technology and
projection. This puts employees regularly
on the move.
Not only does the rise of the modern office
make it difficult for employees to find
of office workers
specific rooms or other points of interest,
but also it makes it even more difficult to spend excessive
find each other.
time locating
As employees move more fluidly through colleagues
office spaces, perhaps taking up residence
in a new desk, room, or common area
each day, it can become difficult to keep
track of where colleagues are located or knacks, or other personal items that help
find them when needed. According to a employees personalize their space and
recent survey by Senion, 55 percent of find joy throughout the day. It also neces-
office workers report spending excessive sitates that employees schlep all of their
time locating colleagues2. At best, it’s a essential electronics, resources, and other
10 Everyone Hates Your Office
accessories to and from the office every
day. I can’t be the only one who has ever
experienced the agony of settling into the
office in the morning and realizing I left my
laptop at home.
All of this contributes to employee stress,
which hurts your company more than you
might think. Stress currently accounts for a
loss of an estimated $300 billion to compa-
nies in the U.S. each year, connected to
accidents, absenteeism, employee turn-
over, and other medical, legal, and insur-
ance costs3.
11 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
Problem 3: Work is regularly A study published in the Journal of Experi-
interrupted mental Psychology found that after only a
An office that is navigationally challenging 2.8-second interruption, subjects doubled
to employees is doubly so for office guests. their error rates when they returned to
This is a breeding ground for stress and their task. After a 4.5-second interruption,
frustration for everyone. Those looking for error rates tripled5.
rooms will either waste time wandering or
interrupt the work of someone else to ask Reports of exhaustion are higher for
for help. those who are frequently interrupted, and
those employees are more likely to report
Nothing kills productivity faster than feeling overloaded with work. The Inter-
frequent interruptions. Interruptions also national Journal of Stress Management
rapidly drain energy and decrease work- also reports that interruptions aren’t just
place satisfaction. According to a study fatiguing, they can be attributed to phys-
by University of California Irvine4, office ical health problems, such as migraines
workers spend an average of 11 minutes and back pain, in as many as 12 percent of
on a project before they are interrupted. employees6.
Even worse, it then takes an average of 25
minutes to get back to the point they were Decreased productivity, energy, and work
at before the interruptions. satisfaction from interruptions costs U.S.
companies an estimated $588 billion a
year, according to research by Basex7.
12 Everyone Hates Your Office
Employees have better things to do than The group taking the biggest brunt of the
act as directional guides to colleagues and directional burden is the front desk staff
guests. Woe is the unlucky employee who who become de facto tour guides to office
sits closest to the floor entryway. They visitors. This takes away from time that
should be spent on more important office
tasks.
Office workers
spend an average of Problem 4: The old way is…
11
old
When is the last time you unfolded a
paper map to figure out where you were
minutes going? The same can be said of today’s
workforce navigating the modern corpo-
on a project before rate office. Old-fashioned signage is not
they are interrupted cutting it when it comes to helping people
find where they are trying to go. Confusing
layouts and unclear maps and signs only
add to employee irritation.
will tell you they spend loads of time each
day giving directions to people looking for It’s been said the average human attention
conference or meeting rooms to those span is eight seconds. Whether that is true
from a different company, building, or or not, the fact is that in a busy office envi-
floor. ronment, no one is going to take the time
13 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
to stand in front of a traditional mounted
wall map and confidently map their route
to their destination. Most offices are noisy
and visually distracting. This makes it hard
for people to take in the necessary infor-
mation from a floor map, no matter how
simple the design.
When we become overstimulated or suffer
information overload, our brains compen-
sate by taking in even less of the informa-
tion we may be trying to retain. In fact,
office signs and maps are typically viewed
for less than a second. If the information
people need cannot be absorbed nearly
instantly, they will turn somewhere—more
specifically, someone—else for help.
Regularly shifting office environment also
mean these mounted maps can quickly
become outdated. That’s one more
expense for companies and one more
hassle for employees.
14 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
The solution is
in the palm of
your hands
Add up the estimated costs of dissatisfied, A comprehensive indoor wayfinding solu-
stressed out, and regularly interrupted tion puts searchable, interactive indoor
workers, and it could be said that corpo- maps into the hands of every employee
rate office layouts are costing companies and office guest. Users can pull up maps
$1.4 trillion a year. So what has to be done? right on their smartphones to navigate
There is one solution for all four corporate through every floor of the office to find
office problems: indoor wayfinding. specific rooms, desks, or printers.
MapsPeople’s MapsIndoors solution, for
Solution 1: Indoor example, is built on Google Maps technol-
wayfinding helps ogy. That means the same type of inter-
employees find their way face and functionality of Google Maps
An increasing number of companies are is now available inside the hallways of
investing in indoor wayfinding solutions to your office. Employees can access the
solve the problems of the modern office. maps from existing applications on their
15 Everyone Hates Your Office
mobiles or desktops, or use it as a stan-
dalone application.
Even on unfamiliar floors or different build-
ings on the corporate campus, employees
always have the assurance of step-by-step
instructions and foolproof maps, which
eliminates all that time spent wandering
hallways and searching for conference
rooms or other spaces.
Solution 2: Indoor
wayfinding helps employees
find their colleagues
Not only does MapsIndoors make it easy
to find specific rooms or resources within
an office, it also makes it easy to find
colleagues who might be hot-desking on a
different floor, holed up in a phone booth,
or working in a huddle space at the tap of
a screen.
16 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
MapsIndoor’s indoor positioning provider Guests who arrive for meetings can seam-
records specific devices’ locations so it is lessly transition from outdoor navigation
possible to pinpoint the location of other to indoor navigation that takes them all the
users. Those who need a quiet space way from their front door to their specific
completely free of interruption can adjust conference room for the big meeting.
privacy settings to be sure they cannot be
found. Consider all that wasted time spent giving
directions and then trying to get back into
the disrupted productivity groove that
Solution 3: Indoor would be saved if your office offered the
wayfinding reduces tools that made it impossible to get lost.
interruptions Remember: It takes 25 minutes to get back
Eliminating the frequency of lost employ- to the point they were every time a worker
ees and guests eradicates a major produc- is interrupted, which happens on average
tivity disruptor. Front desk staff and every 11 minutes in the typical office envi-
employees are no longer tasked with help- ronment. It’s a wonder any work ever is
ing colleagues and guests find their way done at all.
to conference rooms, restrooms, or other
points of interest within the building or Indoor wayfinding will reduce errors, help
throughout the corporate campus. employees complete assignments faster,
17 Everyone Hates Your Office
and help employees feel less burdened Solution 4: Indoor
from both a mental and physical perspec- wayfinding increases
tive. The gains in productivity alone would workplace satisfaction
be significant. Consider also the reduction In addition to increasing productivity,
of absenteeism, medical costs, and insur- indoor wayfinding has a direct correlation
ance costs. with increased employee satisfaction that
extends much further past the ability to do
their jobs with fewer interruptions or easily
Indoor wayfinding
find their way to the nearest restroom.
is the next step
in automating The bulk of your employees were born
minute tasks and plugged in to the internet and grew up
with smart phones in their hands. They
empowering
walk through their cities with Google Maps
employees with the showing them the way. They order their
information they meals delivered with a few taps of their
need to do their jobs fingers on their phone screens. They keep
better in constant touch with friends and family
by instantly clicking hearts and leaving
comments in their social apps. And they
expect the same level of one-click conveni-
ence to follow them into their office.
18 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
The most successful companies invest in ing employees with the information they
the tech that helps their employees work need to do their jobs better. Just as work-
better, smarter, and faster. This is not only ers need to regain control of their envi-
an investment in outputs, but in happier ronment with various workspace options,
employees. they also need the tools to help them navi-
gate there easily.
The modern office is equipped with
advanced video conferencing and intuitive Indoor wayfinding solutions also help
messaging apps so teammates around the control the natural flow of people. Employ-
world can keep in constant contact with ees or guests who enter the building to
one another. Web-based project manage- find a throng of other workers waiting for
ment and workflow platforms make organ- the same elevator can use indoor wayfin-
izing and sharing tasks easy. There are ding to show them an alternate route to
tools for minimizing distractions, collabo- their final destination. Indoor wayfinding
rating better, and giving and taking notes. can even guide employees directly to an
Indoor wayfinding is the next step in open parking space in the office parking
automating minute tasks and empower- lot, saving time and frustration.
19 The FutureHates
Everyone of Aviation
Your Office
with Indoor Wayfinding
Find your way to
better company
outcomes
Bring your office floor plans to life with fully integrated, search-
able indoor maps from MapsPeople. For more than 120 years,
we have worked with maps and helped people navigate the
world. From hand-drawn maps to today’s cutting-edge
indoor mapping technology, MapsPeople are the industry
experts. We have worked with Google Maps for more
than seven years and we are proud to be a
Premier Google Partner.
For more information on how
MapsIndoors can help your
company improve outcomes,
increase employee satis-
faction, and free up
resources, contact us.
20 Everyone Hates Your Office
References
1 [Link]
2 [Link]
3 [Link]
4 [Link]
5 [Link]
6 [Link]
7 [Link]
21 The Future of Aviation with Indoor Wayfinding