An office fit for Kings?
The physical space is an amazing thing. It has the ability to alter human behavior and even change our perception of ourselves and others. In the HBO series Game of Thrones for example, why do you think a seat on the physical Iron Throne was so sought after? The actual throne itself wasn’t very comfortable. It’s what the physical seat represented that created an instant change in behavior on the part of both the person who sat on it as well as all the people who believe in what it represents.
The physical space in a work environment is another, clearer example of how this phenomenon works.
If you remove all the people from a workspace, or walk into it on a holiday when no one is around, you will gain an understanding of the human dynamics that exist there. A damp, cold office space with stark white overhead lighting and low ceilings, with many tiny desks lined up together in rows, white walls with gray scuff marks, no living plants in sight, and a watercooler in the far corner beside an old coffeemaker, may just be enough to imagine a predictable and monotonous buzz in that space on a regular workday. Whereas walking into a workplace with brightly colored walls, warm ambient lighting, lounging areas with sofas and club chairs, a foosball table in the corner, and desks by the windows, will probably entice you to imagine a more spontaneous energy in the workspace with a lot of intermingling between coworkers.
Now imagine if you witnessed both of these very different workspaces within a single corporate office, each space divided only by a thin wall and maybe a set of double doors. Wouldn’t that make you wonder about the dynamics of that corporate work environment? What set of parameters would define whether a person is placed in one workspace versus the other? Could it have to do with corporate hierarchy? Job function or description? There may even be questions around whether people from these two different office spaces even interact – and if they do, what it must feel like for them to cross over and enter into such a different work environment.
What I have found from living and working in different cities around the world with distinctly different cultures, religions and business practices, is that human beings all react the same way to a physical environment. Environments can change our perspective of ourselves and others.
When a person is given a luxurious office that is starkly different from the offices of the majority in the same company, a sense of superiority in that person becomes inevitable. It’s the degree of superiority and how individuals use it either to their advantage or for others, that differs. Likewise, if a person is given a workspace that is dingy, dark and secluded – or its opposite: assigned to desk number 42 in row after row of the same tiny desk space in a large vast room where everything is exactly the same and no one knows you by name – their sense of self-worth within the company inevitably drops.
These different workspaces even become a way by which others in the company perceive an individual’s value. Joe Smith could come into the office looking like everyone else, but the minute someone mentions that Joe works in the luxurious offices, the perception of him is altered, and he is bestowed a high sense of worth, which even alters the way people interact with him. In the same effect, if someone mentioned that Joe works at desk #42 in the common work area, the perception of his worth in the company also changes, and his name is all too often eventually forgotten.
Understanding this dynamic, and the power that the physical environment inevitably has over human beings and their perceptions, is even more important today than ever. More and more, companies are embracing corporate values grounded in terms such as “Inclusivity and Diversity”, especially as technology enables organizations to become more global. Using these terms in a corporate environment means embracing and respecting what makes people unique individuals, and supporting an environment where each individual is made to feel that they are treated equally – not better nor worse than anyone else in the company, regardless of what their role is.
I’m not an expert on corporate culture nor on what values a company should or should not embrace. But I am an expert on physical work environments, and how they impact human beings. Hence, if your company is not one to embrace such values as Inclusivity and Diversity, then having a work environment with spaces that are so divided in their look and feel, where employees derive their corporate sense of self-worth and value through their assigned workspace, then at least your sense of identity is consistent.
But if your company claims to uphold values that are indeed rooted in Inclusivity and Diversity, then having a workplace environment that also consistently supports, expresses, and enhances these values equally in all workspaces is the most important way for your employees to know what it is to feel embraced for their differences, and be valued equally by the company.
The
physical space is an indeed amazing thing. It’s profound ability to change
human behavior and our perception of ourselves and others is both remarkable and
inevitable. At a time when diverse human backgrounds and experiences have
already proven to provide an unparalleled impact on a single decision, why
would a company today want to build Iron Thrones?








