American office workers love their jobs, and love them even more when the technology their companies use is viewed as being ahead of the curve.
A recent online survey of more than 1,000 office workers in the U.S., which Adobe conducted during two weeks last month, finds 70% saying they love what they do. And a remarkable 81% say that state-of-the-art technology was more important to them than an office’s design or on-site amenities.
Seven out of 10 U.S. workers believe technology improves the work-life balance, and 81% say technology helps them connect with colleagues more efficiently. Those respondents who think their company’s technology is “ahead of the curve” feel about twice as creative, motivated, and satisfied as respondents who work for companies with less-than-cutting edge technology.
The rub is that only 25% of the survey’s U.S. respondents think their company’s technology excels. Nevertheless, more than half (53%) expects technology to be handling more of their offices’ menial tasks—copying, filing, etc.—over the next two decades, even as 55% remain convinced their jobs could never be replaced by a machine.
In fact, there seems to be more than a hint of ambivalence about the benefits of technology among the 75% of respondents who are concerned that relationships and health suffer when people become to attached to their devices.
Technology trumps other office amenities in what keeps workers content. Image: Adobe's “Work in Progress” report.
The Adobe survey portrays an American workforce for which work and life are inseparable, almost to the point of obsession. More than half of the respondents say they’d keep working if they won the lottery. U.S. workers say they spend, on average, 78% of their waking hours during the work week and 41% of their days off thinking about their jobs. Indeed, 57% of respondents agree with the statement “work defines who I am.”
The desire to work is further punctuated by the finding that one in three U.S. office workers moonlights in jobs outside of his or her primary occupation, and that moonlighters are more likely to be happier and more optimistic than non-moonlighters.
However, 69% of U.S. workers also say they work multiple jobs because they need the money. Nearly three-fifths of American workers are likely to leave their jobs for a better opportunity. (That number is 50% even among people who say they profess love for their current job.)
Related Stories
| Aug 11, 2010
Let There Be Daylight
The new public library in Champaign, Ill., is drawing 2,100 patrons a day, up from 1,600 in 2007. The 122,600-sf facility, which opened in January 2008, certainly benefits from amenities that the old 40,000-sf library didn't have—electronic check-in and check-out, new computers, an onsite coffeehouse.
| Aug 11, 2010
BIM school, green school: California's newest high-performance school
Nestled deep in the Napa Valley, the city of American Canyon is one of a number of new communities in Northern California that have experienced tremendous growth in the last five years. Located 42 miles northeast of San Francisco, American Canyon had a population of just over 9,000 in 2000; by 2008, that figure stood at 15,276, with 28% of the population under age 18.
| Aug 11, 2010
Platinum Award: The Handmade Building
When Milwaukee's City Hall was completed in 1896, it was, at 394 feet in height, the third-tallest structure in the United States. Designed by Henry C. Koch, it was a statement of civic pride and a monument to Milwaukee's German heritage. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973 and designated a National Historic Landmark in 2005.
| Aug 11, 2010
Great Solutions: Products
14. Mod Pod A Nod to Flex Biz Designed by the British firm Tate + Hindle, the OfficePOD is a flexible office space that can be installed, well, just about anywhere, indoors or out. The self-contained modular units measure about seven feet square and are designed to serve as dedicated space for employees who work from home or other remote locations.
| Aug 11, 2010
Special Recognition: Kingswood School Bloomfield Hills, Mich.
Kingswood School is perhaps the best example of Eliel Saarinen's work in North America. Designed in 1930 by the Finnish-born architect, the building was inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright's Prairie Style, with wide overhanging hipped roofs, long horizontal bands of windows, decorative leaded glass doors, and asymmetrical massing of elements.
| Aug 11, 2010
The pride of Pasadena
As a shining symbol of civic pride in Los Angeles County, Pasadena City Hall stood as the stately centerpiece of Pasadena's Civic Center since 1927. To the casual observer, the rectangular edifice, designed by San Francisco Classicists John Bakewell, Jr., and Arthur Brown, Jr., appeared to be aging gracefully.
| Aug 11, 2010
Great Solutions: Technology
19. Hybrid Geothermal Technology The team at Stantec saved $800,000 in construction costs by embedding geothermal piping into the structural piles at the WestJet office complex in Calgary, Alb., rather than drilling boreholes adjacent to the building site, which is the standard approach. Regular geothermal installation would have required about 200 boreholes, each about four-inches in diameter ...