How Bloomberg just lost the IT vote

From today’s rat in the White House to tomorrow’s new Rat City experiment?

I’ve struggled with the shades of grey in Democratic candidates’ polices like on healthcare: Medicare for all? For all who want it? For all over 50? It’s…complicated. Thankfully Mike Bloomberg said something at the end of 2019 that made not voting for him a pretty easy decision: He wants to turn the White House into an open plan office.

Bloomberg’s been enamored of open office plans since at least the early 2000s. I visited a friend and former perl monger after he joined Bloomberg; it had some of the trappings of “dot com fancy-pants” offices like free food. They embedded stock tickers in floors and walls. And workers sat side-by-side in long rows of tables without partitions. Yuck. I remember thinking, “how does anybody get any real work done like this?”

I’ve been critical of open floor plan since. Research shows that it doesn’t increase knowledge worker productivity; businesses like it because it cuts facilities costs, plain and simple. I’d pass on a full-time, on-site gig in an open plan office at this point. And I’ll pass on a candidate that portrays this nonsense as business savvy.