A Personal “Spare the Air” moment
Yesterday was a “Spare the Air” day here in the San Francisco Bay area. If you had turned on your television, you would have been bombarded with public service announcements and news anchors exhorting you to take public transit to work, and - yes - “Spare the Air”
I have a different solution, and maybe more obvious one that will “Spare the Air” every day - don’t drive.
While I know not everyone can telecommute all the time, I’m lucky enough to be able to do so often. So I shared some of my story on how that works for me over on the WebEx: Ideas in Motion blog yesterday, and I thought I’d share it with you as well.
I started by asking the question: Where do you get your best ideas?
There are two myths I want to debunk:
1) I don’t own fuzzy slippers
2) I don’t (usually) get my best ideas in the shower
But I do something that is increasingly common: I tele-commute.
And tele-commuting comes with a set of stereotypes (like the one about working in your fuzzy slippers), most of which are rooted in the 1960s-era concept that anyone doing any serious business did it in an office. But I work from lots of places, and the people I work with are scattered, quite literally, around the world.
My friend and colleague, Andrew Winston, asks “Will Video Conferencing Kill Business-Class Travel?” and he’s not the first to suggest that tele-work technologies will replace a lot of travel and commuting (and eliminate a significant volume of carbon emissions in the process). Web Worker Daily asks if this is “The End of Cubicle Dwelling?” concluding that many jobs can be easily (and maybe better) done from anywhere.
My colleagues here at Cisco also just released a study showing that tele-commuting increases productivity, flexibility and job satisfaction.
Convinced? Good. Now back to my question.
If you’re like me, you have ideas. If you’re more like me, you love to talk with your colleagues, friends and other associates. And I know when I do, my ideas get better. New ideas get merged and hatched. And brilliant plans start to take shape. That’s how my ideas turn into initiatives that produce real results.
Sound familiar?
But when I’m sitting at my desk at home, there are no colleagues or friends there to talk with. Just me, my brilliant diagrams and my laptop.
And my WebEx account.
And that’s where things start to get interesting. I immediately reach the people – often scattered around the world - who really help make my ideas great. I can show them – not just tell them – my great idea, and every conversation helps turn those ideas into reality and results.
This is how I “pass the ball.” This is also how I make tele-commuting work for me.
I’m not the only one. Take a look at this this and this idea that people have shared on making tele-commuting work.
Try it for yourself. And share your ideas on how you make tele-commuting work for you.
And going back again to my original question: I don’t know about you, but I get ideas at the strangest times and in the most unusual places. But I know that wherever I am, I can act on them right then and there, and instead of letting them wither away in my head, share them and let others help me make them better – and make them happen.
So, tell us, where do you get your best ideas?
Posted by Jeff Weinberger at 03:35PM PST
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Jeff Weinberger
WebEx Green Initiative
WebEx Corporate Social Responsibility
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