On a Roll
Stuck for extra office space? Mobile furniture could help you maximize the space you've already got.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2004/february/66556.html
When Tracie Stier-Johnson needs a bigger showroom for a special
sales event at Broadway Paper, the 35-year-old Milwaukee entrepreneur
does it with a push. That's all it takes to reconfigure the
mobile work pods Stier-Johnson bought for her three-person design
and administrative staff last year to turn their offices into sales
areas. "We're able to squash all these pods together to
gain extra square footage for sales," she says.
In the past several years, all sorts of office furniture has
grown wheels. Desks, filing cabinets, tables and even walls can now
be rolled around to make room, reconfigure spaces or set up
temporary workgroups. "At this point," says Jeff
Reuschel, a manager of Holland, Michigan, furniture maker Haworth Inc.,
"you can get just about everything on wheels."
Rolling office furniture helps entrepreneurs deal with
challenges ranging from real estate costs to employee turnover.
Being able to change a boardroom into a training room or an office
into a showroom lets you rent less total space. And when you can
quickly set up or dismantle a new workstation, it simplifies the
task of integrating new workers.
Flexibility is a major advantage of wheeled furniture. Movable
desks and file cabinets mean workers can set up a meeting space or
screen off a private work area without having to call for the
movers. "You can move things around more quickly to adapt to a
changing marketplace," says Barbara Armstrong, a principal at
Milwaukee's Kahler Slater Architects Inc.
Overall, the rising role of teams in business has probably
provided the biggest boost to the mobility movement. That's why
team-based organizations such as design, PR, advertising and
product development firms were the first to embrace it.
If you're thinking about going mobile, consider that wheeled
furniture generally costs more than stationary pieces.
Stier-Johnson, for instance, spent approximately $25,000 on three
workstations, despite obtaining a discount from the manufacturer
because she was the first in her city to purchase the line.
Don't count on getting a similar deal. "The ability to
adapt costs money," says Armstrong. "You have to be
careful about how you spend it."
Still interested? Think about whether you are actually going to
ever move a piece before asking for wheels on it. And consider
whether simply adding wheels will make the item truly mobile. Big,
heavy filing cabinets may not be all that mobile even if you add
wheels, says Reuschel. Armstrong recommends trying out a mobile
design with a mock-up or a limited test before outfitting an entire
office.
A test will also help you plumb your employees' attitudes
toward mobile furniture. Some people prefer to have fixed
boundaries delineating their own turf and are threatened by
flexible work spaces. "I personally don't like the idea of
my walls being mobile," says Reuschel.
Realize, too, that portable furniture is only part of the
mobility puzzle. You also need mobile power and communications to
make an office worker really ambulatory. Unless your space has
raised floors or a wireless data network to allow relocation of
electrical and communications hookups, you may find your wheeled
pieces rendered stationary by their tethers to the utility grid.
Wireless networks are becoming commonplace, and raised flooring,
which allows easy access to power and data cables and is already
popular in Europe, is becoming more widespread in the United States
today, adds Reuschel. Another trend that will augment mobility is
modular interior partitions instead of drywall construction for
offices, he says.
At press time, Stier-Johnson's 12-person, 8-year-old
enterprise was on track to notch 2003 sales of $750,000, up from
$500,000 the year before. She credits the jump in part to her
mobile office furniture, which features an eye-catching swooping
design and orange accents that attract passersby who glimpse them
through her office's floor-to-ceiling windows. She says,
"The response has been really great."
Mark Henricks writes on business and technology for leading
publications and is author of Not Just a Living.
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