| Bob Kraiss: Anything you would do at home that would take away from work we want them to do at work. You can get your oil change, laundry, dental check up, dry-cleaning. | |
| Kit Tuveson: Is that a kind word for saying we're going to squeeze more blood out of the turnip? I don't think it is. But when you go back to remaining element of time that people have it has to be at a higher peak of quality. | |
| Bob Kraiss: I'm almost tying that to a reverse commute here. You do all your work at home and you do your errands at work. Cause they are all at one place. | |
| Marina Van Overbeek: The other day I went into work and a colleague of mine, literally had a basket of laundry | |
| Bob Kraiss: We should do a list of all the things we've added, we've added take home dinners. For people who travel for weeks, if their family is sick they can call us because we will take care of it. If you have a plumbing problem, just call us and we'll take care of it. | |
| Abe Darwish: We have a site concierge program, which is basically, does any errand for you. All the way from arranging your guest dinner to going to your house and sitting there until your plumber gets there and fixes your leaking valve. Convenience, I call it convenience and amenities on site. It's almost like going back to the future, meaning becoming more like a company town. | |
| Kit Tuveson: A virtual company town | |
| Dolores Nelson: There is something also that we have not talked about, myself included, is our computer. We love our computer and we donít want anybody farting around on our computers. And there is a possessive nature and it is not necessarily age dependent, but it becomes almost part of you. I mean you specialize it, you do all these things to it, and you donít want someone else necessarily changing it or changing any of the settings on it. So that that part of it will probably become the dependent part of where the person goes to do work. Not necessarily the surroundings but the equipment itself, the technology itself. |