Serious question. If employees are expected to work in an open office and schedule rooms to have in depth discussions, why are leaders given their own offices?
Correct answer, but one corollary: If the only reason you have an office in an open office setting is because you make the rules, you're not a leader. You're a "boss".
I have worked in places where leaders shared the open space, to be honest the was strange since they (as do HR or Finance) have confidential material as part of their day to day work.
In some case where leaders are GIVEN their own offices, they are trusted to have one in exchange for their capability in making important decision which requires low level of noise, and holding confidential meeting which requires privacy.
Open office is notorious for the noise and distractions.
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[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 39.5 ms ] threadOpen office is notorious for the noise and distractions.