Using a coffee shop as a remote office or meeting room is, I believe, a great strategy for leaders.
Where, exactly, do you "do ministry"?
As a freelance writer, I work from home. But I often pack up my laptop and head for a local coffee shop to work. A recent Chicago Tribune article referred to people like me, who take over a table with a laptop and slowly nurse one Venti latte for three hours, as "laptop sqatters." Nice, right?
That same article quoted Kate Lister, president of Telework Research Network, a research firm that focuses on work done outside the office. (It's an interesting commentary on our culture that there's a whole firm just researching the work we do when we're not at work!) She compared today's coffee shops to "the marketplaces of medieval times," where groups of entrepreneurs gather to make business connections.
You may have an office or at least a cubicle in a church or parachurch organization. But using a coffee shop as a remote office or meeting room is, I believe, a great strategy for leaders. Keep reading
2 comments:
I think you missed the point. Work is a verb, not a noun. When you're at work, working in other words, it doesn't matter where you are as long as your productive. And it turns out, people are much more productive, 15 to 55% more productive, when they aren't in an office.
Tom,
The articles that I publish do not necessarily represent my own views nor do I necessarily agree with the views presented in them. Your point is well taken.
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