changing lifestyles, Cities, People Place Performance, Sharing economy, Workplace strategy

Why would Deloitte鈥檚 Silicon Valley think-tank be studying online gamers and kite surfers? John Hagel and John Seely Brown鈥檚 is that engaged employees will not be enough to sustain performance in uncertain times and where the half-life of a business model is constantly contracting. They argue that to thrive in the twenty-first-century world, a particular kind of 鈥渟calable learning鈥 is needed: learning driven by passionate people who are committed and connected to their industry, and who actively seek out challenges to rapidly improve their performance.

These people thrive on challenges and draw energy from environments that allow them to learn. The early cohorts of digital natives are now graduating from schools where personalised learning has been integrated into the curriculum. They expect to be an active participant, not a passive observer.

The transformation in our schools is being played out in our workplaces. Technology is shifting both the means of work and the relationships that manage it. Knowledge-based processes are increasingly automated or outsourced. Hierarchies are being routed by networks.

According to聽a 2013 by Carl Frey and Michael Osborne, two Oxford University researchers, 47% of all jobs are likely to be replaced by a computer 鈥撀爊ot just factory work, but any process governed by an algorithm of rules where best practices can be identified.

What鈥檚 left for us humans is arguably the more interesting stuff that relies on higher-order thinking, collaboration, innovation and relationships. These are the qualities that people bring that robots聽aren鈥檛 so good at聽鈥撀爄nteractivity, emotional intelligence, flexibility, quirkiness.

They鈥檙e all qualities found in聽the growing companies that we most admire.

In Australia, the poster child for such progressive, human-led but technology-enabled companies is software development company 鈥撀燼 company that is on the verge of an IPO that would see the two 34-year-old co-CEOs valued at over A$1b each. The success of this company is founded on a set of targeted squarely at the new world of work:

  1. Open Company, No Bullshit
  2. Build with Heart and Balance
  3. Don鈥檛 #@!% the Customer
  4. Play, as a Team
  5. Be the Change you Seek

Both Deloitte鈥檚 passionate people and many prospective Atlassian staffers 鈥渕ay struggle with clearly defined roles, organisational silos, and predictability鈥. Seely Brown and Hagel argue that organisations need to redesign their work environments 鈥 both physical and virtual environments 鈥撀燼nd management systems to attract and retain passionate people.

The changes in the physical workplace are well underway. Andrew Laing鈥檚 2013 paper on the ITC sector in New York sets out a comprehensive survey of the shifts both in demand and supply for workspace. The conventions of the relentlessly efficient single-use office tower, the long commercial lease, the privately owned work point are all crumbling. Many of our clients are already using less space and looking for new ways to share the space they have. Work is leaving the building, and looking for聽new toeholds across the city 鈥 the new hubs and third places, and the old libraries, cafes and public spaces.

The spaces in between will be the real attractor for the Googles, the Atlassians and the Kulgans. Curating these spaces will be the next challenge for precinct planners and city strategists who have long understood the place-making contributions of landscape and art. The next generation of installations will be playful hybrids of virtual and physical worlds 鈥 not just for the tech sector, but for every human with a super computer in her or his pocket. Urban gaming will be serious play.

Play offers the freedom to invent, to improvise and experiment. To do things that would look like failure in other contexts. Over the past five years a whole new ecology of games has emerged with the saturation of the smart phone and GPS technologies.

deviator_feature-689x270

Gaming is play across media, time, social spaces, and networks of meaning. It requires players to be fluent in a series of connected literacies that are multi-modal, performative, productive, and participatory in nature.鈥

Serious urban games now exist for training for , for health and for social cohesion. They range from covert individual experiences through to gleeful group quests. Here are four examples of the rapidly growing field.

1. Soulfill

is a mobile assisted role-playing game for public transport. It wants you to focus on the people in the environment around you, not on the screen in your hand. The game prompts are minimal. You listen to a narrator who challenges you to move past the awkwardness of initiating eye contact. You score points by initiating and maintaining eye contact with strangers 鈥 and you lose points by making eye contact with those already looking at you.

Multi-player games are more carefully programmed in time and space 鈥 and this orchestration accounts for the influence of performance arts groups in urban gaming.

2. Deviator

Perth-based pvi collective鈥檚 game known as recently took over the inner Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst.聽Deviator聽is an immersive,聽outdoor game聽played in teams with smart phones. Audience members are charged with the mission of聽temporarily transforming their city into a playground by engaging with a number of not-so-serious challenges.

I鈥檓 still not sure how pole dancing in Oxford Street qualified, but the gleeful fun of sack races on cross walks, 鈥渒iss chasey鈥 in Taylor Square, and blowing up balloons until they burst resonated 鈥 most of them were straight out of the school yard. Other locations asked for more subversive play 鈥 (follow someone without their knowledge until they turn into a doorway) 鈥 or regenerative (here are some seeds you might want to plant) or declarative (what message would you like to leave on this blackboard). But the need to rack up as many points inside an hour made for an hilarious frenzied night of fun. Watch .

3. Black market

The group behind deviator has another project in development titled . Part game, part social experiment, black market takes place on city streets and locates the players inside a world of economic collapse. Inspired by the core philosophies of the ‘occupy’ movement and the financial bankruptcies in Europe, players need to survive in a world where money and material wealth have collapsed. Bartering and bargaining come to the fore.

mmw3

4. Massively Multiplayer soba

Massively Multiplayer Soba is a focused on culture, food and language that culminates in a meal. Points are awarded on the basis of complexity and the depth of interactions, rather than a scavenger hunt. The game is designed to encourage people to mix and interact with residents in meaningful ways that challenge preconceptions of race and language.

Where to next? The next generation of urban gaming might see more pervasive games that leave traces of activity in spaces for future visitors. Or games that create more open-ended stories. Even games that connect people more intensely over time. The one thing we can be sure about is that the growth will be extraordinary, and with .

鈥淭he phone takes the processing power of yesterday鈥檚 supercomputers 鈥 even the most basic model has access to more number-crunching capacity than NASA had when it put men on the moon in 1969 鈥 and applies it to ordinary human interactions鈥.

Ordinary human interactions are the stuff of our cities. Watch out for the rise of serious play.

 

Sue WittenoomSue Wittenoom (sue.wittenoom@aecom.com) is a director of 91影视鈥檚 Strategy Plus practice in Australia. She鈥檚 presenting at GreenCities 2015 in Melbourne on March 18. Follow her on twitter @swittenoom

More urban gaming links:

: a mobile, geolocation-based game that calls on players to travel to real-world locations such as landmarks and public art, where they use their phones to open and close portals that can help or hinder an invading alien race

:聽random hacks of citizenry

: A Playable City is a city where people, hospitality and openness are key, enabling its residents and visitors to reconfigure and rewrite its services, places and stories.

References:

The Playful and the Serious: An approximation to Huizinga鈥檚 Homo Ludens. Hector Rodrigeuz the international journal of computer game research volume 6 issue 1 December 2006

The Second Machine Age, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee, 2014

The Implications of a Networked Urban Landscape for Architectural Programming. Andrew Laing Volume Art & Science of Real Estate Volume 42 2014 #4

Work and workplaces and the digital city, Andrew Laing, Columbia University Centre for Urban Real Estate, 2013

Propositions for Sydney. Andrew Laing and Sue Wittenoom, 2014

The Power of Immersive Media Frank Rose, strategy+business February 9, 2015

The Play Report. Protein Journal Issue 13

Serious Urban Games. From play in the city to play for the city Gabriele Ferri and Patrick Coppock, February 2012

The future of Employment: How Susceptible Are Jobs to Computerisation?聽Carl Frey and Michael Osborne, 2013

Unlocking the passion of the Explorer. Report 1 of the 2013 Shift Index series. Deloitte Center for the Edge

The truly personal computer The Economist February 28th 2015

 

Originally published Mar 16, 2015

Author: Sue Wittenoom