"Oscar Wilde is said to have quipped
that “God, in creating man, somewhat overestimated his ability.” Our species is
capable of folly on a grand scale. Exhibit 4,000 in this litany of woe is the
continued existence of open plan workplaces.
For decades, research has found that
open plan offices are bad for companies, bad for workers, bad for health and
bad for morale. And yet they just won’t die. Human beings, if they are to
thrive, need a bit of privacy — walls and a door. And yet employers, decade
after decade, neglect to give workers what they need, refuse to do what’s in
their own self-interest.
The ideology of open plan workplaces
associates walls and rooms with authoritarianism, hierarchy and social
isolation. If you put people together in one big room, or in low cubicles, the
popular thinking goes, they will collaborate, a spirit of egalitarian
togetherness will reign.
This high-minded theory nicely
dovetails with the somewhat less idealistic logic of cost per square foot. If
you jam a lot of people into a crowded space with no separations, you can
squeeze in more employees at lower cost.
The first problem is that open floor
plans don’t foster more face-to-face collaboration, they foster less. People
can take only so much social interaction. If you shove them together cheek by
jowl they will just put on headphones and burrow into themselves. A much-cited study by Ethan
Bernstein and Stephen Turban found that when companies made the move to more
open plan offices, workers had about 70 percent fewer face-to-face
interactions, while email and instant messaging use rose.
Another study of open office workers
in major U.S. cities found that 31 percent held back their sincere thoughts on
phone calls because they didn’t want their co-workers to overhear them.
It turns out that if you take out
physical walls, people will create norms that discourage communication, what
Bernstein and Ben Waber call a “fourth wall.” As they wrote in Harvard Business Review,
“If someone starts a conversation and a colleague shoots him a look of annoyance,
he won’t do it again. Especially in open spaces, fourth-wall norms spread
quickly.”
The second problem is that open
floor plans hurt morale and productivity. In 1997, some employees in an oil and
gas company in western Canada switched to an open plan design. Six months later
psychologists found the employees reported being worse off across the board —
stressed, dissatisfied, less productive.
In 2011 psychologist Matthew Davis
and others reviewed over 100 studies about office environments. A few years
later Maria Konnikova reported on what he found in The New Yorker — that the
open space plans “were damaging to the workers’ attention spans, productivity,
creative thinking and satisfaction. Compared with standard offices, employees
experienced more uncontrolled interactions, higher levels of stress, and lower
levels of concentration and motivation.”
A 2020 study by Helena Jahncke and
David Hallman found that employees in quieter one-person cell offices performed 14 percent better than employees in
open plan offices on a cognitive task.
The third problem with open space
floor plans is they are bad for the health of employees. It should be obvious
that people have trouble concentrating and maintaining a calm demeanor when
they are bombarded with noise.
A study led by Elizabeth Sander
found that open plan office noise increased negative mood by
25 percent and sweat response by 34 percent. A study published in The
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment and Health found that compared to
people in cellular one-person offices, people who work in two-person offices
had 50 percent more days of sickness absence and
people who work in open-plan offices had 62 percent more days of sickness
absence.
A lot of the evidence I’m citing here is not new. It has
been around for years. And it confirms the rhythms of human creativity that
have been observed for centuries. To do creative work, most people need periods
of solitude when they are gestating their ideas, then they need periods of
sociability when they are testing their ideas and then they need more periods
of solitude when they are refining their ideas.
And yet this ancient wisdom and the
more recent flood of evidence has had limited influence on how many companies
actually design their offices. Periodically there are articles heralding the
end of the open floor plan office, and yet the end doesn’t fully arrive.
Fortune reports that
post-pandemic many companies are increasing the number of conference rooms and
decreasing the number of individually assigned desks — which could make the
privacy problem worse.
It could be that short-term budget
considerations trump a firm’s long-term self-interest. It could be that Taylorism never really dies. Managers want the
illusion that they can see and control their employees, allegedly to maximize
efficiency. It could be that the ideology of transparency never dies either,
the false assumption that if we make all organizations see-through we will
increase trust. It could also be that there’s a power dynamic at play. If
people have their own offices, they get to control what they are like, not the
employer.
Either way, this suboptimal
workplace lives on, another sign, as Oscar Wilde would no doubt observe, of
human folly."
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