Goodbye, Dilbert: 'The Rise of the Naked Economy' » Knowledge@Wharton - 2 views
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sensorica the rise of the naked economy book review
shared by Kurt Laitner on 09 Jan 14
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“teaming”: bringing together a team of professionals for a specific task
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The old cubicle-based, static company is increasingly being replaced by a more fluid and mobile model: “the constant assembly, disassembly, and reassembly of people, talent, and ideas around a range of challenges and opportunities.”
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Therefore, the new economy and its “seminomadic workforce” will require “new places to gather, work, live, and interact.”
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The consumer electronics company Plantronics, for example, knowing that on any given day 40% of its workforce will be working elsewhere, designed its corporate campus to only 60% capacity
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Their joint enterprise, NextSpace, became their first venture into what they call “coworking,” or the creation of “shared collaborative workspaces.”
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also nurtures what the authors call “managed serendipity” — ad hoc collaboration between people with diverging but complementary skills
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Coonerty and Neuner found that the most productive collaborations tended to pair highly specialized experts with big-picture thinkers
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Clients get the specialized help they need at a cost below that of a full-time employee or traditional consulting firm, and specialists are well compensated and rewarded with flexible schedules and a greater degree of choice about which projects to take.
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This has produced a new market dynamic in which the headhunter of yesteryear has been replaced by “talent brokers” who connect highly specialized talent with companies on a project-by-project basis
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Matthew Mullenweg, doesn’t have much faith in traditional office buildings or corporate campuses: “I would argue that most offices are full of people not working.”
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On the other hand, Mullenweg is a big believer in face-to-face collaboration and brainstorming, and flies his teams all over the globe to do so.
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Additionally, a 2010 Kauffman-Rand study worried that employer-based health insurance, by discouraging risk-taking, will be an ongoing drag on entrepreneurship