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Open plan offices, hot-desking, group brainstorming sessions: collaboration seems to be king in the modern workplace. Recent studies have found that we are spending up to 80% of our working days either in meetings or dealing with requests from our colleagues. But is working together really the best way? Is the idea of collaboration something we’re fetishising at the cost of productivity and creativity, and have we lost sight of the benefits of working alone?
Nastaran Tavakoli-Far shares her own dislike of the BBC’s open-plan office and asks, in some desperation: why should we work together?
Guests:
Art Markman, professor of psychology and marketing at the University of Texas at Austin, and author of Bring Your Brain to Work
Image: Workers in an open-plan office (Credit: Getty Images)
By BBC World Service4.6
182182 ratings
Open plan offices, hot-desking, group brainstorming sessions: collaboration seems to be king in the modern workplace. Recent studies have found that we are spending up to 80% of our working days either in meetings or dealing with requests from our colleagues. But is working together really the best way? Is the idea of collaboration something we’re fetishising at the cost of productivity and creativity, and have we lost sight of the benefits of working alone?
Nastaran Tavakoli-Far shares her own dislike of the BBC’s open-plan office and asks, in some desperation: why should we work together?
Guests:
Art Markman, professor of psychology and marketing at the University of Texas at Austin, and author of Bring Your Brain to Work
Image: Workers in an open-plan office (Credit: Getty Images)

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