Beyond Zoom Fatigue: Ritual and Resilience in Remote Meetings

COVID‐19 has precipitated a massive social experiment – the sudden shift of millions of knowledge workers from their traditional offices to homes or other remote work locations. This has inspired heated debates and new ways of imagining the future of work. This paper hopes to contribute to a better...

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Veröffentlicht in:Conference proceedings (Ethnographic Praxis in Industry Conference) 2022-11, Vol.2022 (1), p.56-73
Hauptverfasser: THOMAS, SUZANNE, SHERRY, JOHN, CHIERICHETTI, REBECCA, ASLAN, SINEM, MANDACHE, LUMINIŢA‐ANDA
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:COVID‐19 has precipitated a massive social experiment – the sudden shift of millions of knowledge workers from their traditional offices to homes or other remote work locations. This has inspired heated debates and new ways of imagining the future of work. This paper hopes to contribute to a better understanding of these changes by reporting on the results of several dozen in‐depth interviews with remote workers from a variety of geographies, industries and professions. We focus in particular on their experiences of remote meetings, with special attention to complaints workers have with their current implementation. As we learned, workers' complaints tended to be driven by social – rather than productivity or technical – concerns. We explore this social dimension in depth, propose a framework for thinking about meetings as rituals, and suggest how this emphasis might inform the design of technology to support remote collaboration.
ISSN:1559-890X
1559-8918
DOI:10.1111/epic.12103