{"id":11569,"date":"2019-11-04T16:29:36","date_gmt":"2019-11-04T16:29:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/?post_type=news&#038;p=11569"},"modified":"2020-08-27T10:38:23","modified_gmt":"2020-08-27T09:38:23","slug":"the-politics-of-optimism","status":"publish","type":"news","link":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/news\/2019\/nov\/the-politics-of-optimism","title":{"rendered":"The politics of optimism"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image-Z2bYOna wp-block-lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image\"><section class=\"fullwidth fullwidth--overflow \" data-aos=\"fade-up\">\r\n  <div class=\"container container--spaced-lg\">\r\n    \r\n    <div class=\"row\">\r\n      \r\n      <div class=\"col-md-6\">\r\n                \r\n                <blockquote class=\"blockquote blockquote--md-right\">\r\n          My political awakening was during the miners&#8217; strike.                  <\/blockquote>\r\n                \r\n  \t\t\t      <\/div>\r\n      \r\n      <div class=\"col-md-6\">\r\n    \t\t<p>Coming from Leeds, with a regular holiday job in Castleford and going to university in Nottingham, it was all around me during &#8217;84 and &#8217;85. It left an indelible impression on my whole generation&#8217;s political outlook.<br \/><br \/>Even now, I follow with interest the commentary of those who were there. In particular, I recall an interview with Neil Kinnock where he described his battles with Arthur Scargill and the militant left that saw Labour defeated by a landslide in &#8217;87. Following this third successive defeat, Kinnock recognised the need for Labour to reclaim the middle ground in order to become electable. He very nearly succeeded, but not quite, with John Major winning unexpectedly in &#8217;91.<\/p>  \t\t<\/div>\r\n  \t\t\r\n    <\/div>\r\n    \r\n  <\/div>\r\n<\/section><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-image-full-width-ZOKtXb wp-block-lazyblock-image-full-width\"><section class=\"fullwidth fullwidth--img\">\n    <img data-src=\"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/923ed1547751dc6bfcd093c68b6be284.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"lazyload img-fluid\">\n\n<\/section><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-text-full-width-Z18HhT8 wp-block-lazyblock-text-full-width\"><section class=\"fullwidth text-center\" data-aos=\"fade-up\">\n  <div class=\"container\">\n    \n    \n    <h4>So, after four successive Tory governments, what caused the turnaround? What kept the Conservatives out of office for the next two decades? I think the answer can be summed up in one word; optimism.<\/h4>\n  <\/div>\n<\/section><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image-Z2feNCC wp-block-lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image\"><section class=\"fullwidth fullwidth--overflow \" data-aos=\"fade-up\">\r\n  <div class=\"container container--spaced-lg\">\r\n    \r\n    <div class=\"row\">\r\n      \r\n      <div class=\"col-md-6\">\r\n        <p>This, to me, was what Tony Blair brought to left-wing politics in the early 90s. Instead of infighting and tribalism, his concept of New Labour brought hope and a feeling of unity, a sense of almost irresistible progress. Things could only get better. It was intoxicating. And it won by a landslide.<\/p>        \r\n                \r\n  \t\t\t      <\/div>\r\n      \r\n      <div class=\"col-md-6\">\r\n    \t\t<p>What, you may be wondering, does modern political history have to do with brands? The answer is that brands and politics are remarkably closely aligned. They observe very similar rules of success and failure. In a way, brands are like political parties in overdrive because, rather than fight an election every few years, they fight an election every few weeks.\u00a0<\/p>  \t\t<\/div>\r\n  \t\t\r\n    <\/div>\r\n    \r\n  <\/div>\r\n<\/section><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image-Z27cvqM wp-block-lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image\"><section class=\"fullwidth fullwidth--overflow \" data-aos=\"fade-up\">\r\n  <div class=\"container container--spaced-lg\">\r\n    \r\n    <div class=\"row\">\r\n      \r\n      <div class=\"col-md-6\">\r\n                \r\n                <blockquote class=\"blockquote blockquote--md-right\">\r\n          And the thing that unites them most is their ability to make people feel good about the choices they&#8217;re making.                   <\/blockquote>\r\n                \r\n  \t\t\t  \t\t\t<div class=\"img-inline img-offset-left-md\">\r\n          <picture class=\"embed-responsive-item\">\r\n            <source data-srcset=\"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/trump.jpg 768w\">\r\n                        <img data-src=\"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/trump.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"lazyload img-fluid img-1-1\">\r\n          <\/picture>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n              <\/div>\r\n      \r\n      <div class=\"col-md-6\">\r\n    \t\t<p>Yet the feelgood factor is something that is being widely overlooked in modern politics. Back in June 2016, I speculated about a Trump victory because &#8220;he understands the visceral nature of election appeals and the power of making the disenfranchised feel good about themselves&#8221;. Regardless of your views on Trump, it is clear that his optimistic message of &#8220;Make America great again&#8221; was an important factor in his success.<br \/><br \/>Back in the UK, I think the referendum was lost due to the instinctive negativity of the Remain campaign. Rather than a celebration of European Union membership, it was a series of injunctions about the threats of leaving. &#8220;Taking back control&#8221; proved, with hindsight, a more winning message than project fear. Similarly, in the Scottish independence referendum, &#8220;Better together&#8221; proved the most persuasive rallying cry.<br \/><br \/>As elections loom both in the US and the UK, it will be interesting to see which parties have the most optimistic campaigns. On current form, it looks more likely to be the Republicans and the Conservatives, in which case they begin with a head start. This is an odd reversal because, as already alluded to, until recently it was the modern left that best exploited the power of optimism with &#8220;Yes we can&#8221; and &#8220;New Labour. New Britain&#8221;. Moreover, this was by no means a recent development. JFK was the master of feelgood and Martin Luther King understood the power of a utopian dream.<br \/><br \/>In the cut and thrust worlds of both politics and marketing, it is perhaps worth reminding ourselves that it is the dreamers and the optimists who tend to win. It is easy to become mechanistic, pragmatic and reductive, to focus on the short term and the hand-to-hand combat of monthly sales performance or the latest political wrangle (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.campaignlive.co.uk\/article\/twitter-ceo-announces-ban-political-advertising\/1664143\">Jack Dorsey\u2019s recent decision to ban political advertising on Twitter is no doubt in part a reflection of how enervating negative politics can be<\/a>).<\/p>  \t\t<\/div>\r\n  \t\t\r\n    <\/div>\r\n    \r\n  <\/div>\r\n<\/section><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-quote-full-width-Z1AleyD wp-block-lazyblock-quote-full-width\">  <section class=\"fullwidth fullwidth--top-lg text-center\" data-aos=\"fade-up\">\n    <div class=\"container\">\n\n      <blockquote class=\"blockquote\">\n         The danger is that day-to-day skirmishes can distract us from the real prize, which isn&#8217;t to sell, but to be bought. This is how you win elections, whether you fight them every week or every few years. \n              <\/blockquote>\n\n    <\/div>\n  <\/section><\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":11,"template":"","categories":[191],"class_list":["post-11569","news","type-news","status-publish","hentry","category-agency-news"],"acf":{"news_id":"191","author":{"ID":930,"post_author":"2","post_date":"2020-07-02 12:04:34","post_date_gmt":"2020-07-02 11:04:34","post_content":"","post_title":"Charles Vallance","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"charles-vallance","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2026-01-19 12:22:45","post_modified_gmt":"2026-01-19 12:22:45","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/?post_type=people&#038;p=930","menu_order":0,"post_type":"people","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},"client_id":"","capability_ids":[],"hero_video":"","hero_image":{"ID":10901,"id":10901,"title":"Charles_7","filename":"Charles_7.jpg","filesize":52715,"url":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7.jpg","link":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/news\/2018\/oct\/in-praise-of-tv\/attachment\/charles_7-2","alt":"","author":"1","description":"","caption":"","name":"charles_7-2","status":"inherit","uploaded_to":11374,"date":"2020-08-14 13:16:52","modified":"2020-08-24 15:04:16","menu_order":0,"mime_type":"image\/jpeg","type":"image","subtype":"jpeg","icon":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-includes\/images\/media\/default.png","width":1920,"height":720,"sizes":{"thumbnail":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-150x150.jpg","thumbnail-width":150,"thumbnail-height":150,"medium":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-300x113.jpg","medium-width":300,"medium-height":113,"medium_large":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-768x288.jpg","medium_large-width":640,"medium_large-height":240,"large":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-1024x384.jpg","large-width":640,"large-height":240,"1536x1536":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-1536x576.jpg","1536x1536-width":1536,"1536x1536-height":576,"2048x2048":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7.jpg","2048x2048-width":1920,"2048x2048-height":720,"Header":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-1920x720.jpg","Header-width":1920,"Header-height":720,"Wide":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7.jpg","Wide-width":1920,"Wide-height":720,"Square":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-1152x720.jpg","Square-width":768,"Square-height":480,"Tall":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-768x720.jpg","Tall-width":307,"Tall-height":288,"Mobile":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-768x720.jpg","Mobile-width":768,"Mobile-height":720,"Facebook":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-1200x630.jpg","Facebook-width":1200,"Facebook-height":630,"Grid-Item-Square":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-768x720.jpg","Grid-Item-Square-width":768,"Grid-Item-Square-height":720,"Grid-Item-Wide":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-768x384.jpg","Grid-Item-Wide-width":768,"Grid-Item-Wide-height":384,"Grid-Item-Tall":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7-384x720.jpg","Grid-Item-Tall-width":307,"Grid-Item-Tall-height":576}},"relateditems":[{"relateditem":{"ID":11538,"post_author":"11","post_date":"2019-09-30 15:40:29","post_date_gmt":"2019-09-30 14:40:29","post_content":"<!-- wp:lazyblock\/two-column-text-quote-image {\"text-right\":\"\\u003cp\\u003eIt means having an internal locus of control, self-determination and self-sufficiency. But it is a word that is in danger of being hijacked, of having its positive connotations put to less than positive ends.\\u003cbr \\\/\\u003e\\u003cbr \\\/\\u003eI am talking about the world of \\u0022autonomous\\u0022 technology. To some extent, the autonomous revolution is still a way off \\u2013 it is probably five to 10 years before autonomous driving becomes prevalent, for instance. But the vision of autonomous driving is emblematic of the semantic trick that is being played on us. Because driverless cars do not give us autonomy. They make us dependent. Like children being ferried around. Only with big tech as our parents.\\u003c\\\/p\\u003e\",\"quote\":\"Autonomy. It sounds like a very good thing. And it is.\",\"blockId\":\"zIEIp\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image-zIEIp\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/image-full-width {\"image\":\"%7B%22alt%22:%22%22,%22title%22:%22Daimler-driverless-car-e1515703361137%22,%22caption%22:%22%22,%22id%22:10912,%22link%22:%22https:\\\/\\\/www.vccp.com\\\/?attachment_id=10912%22,%22url%22:%22https:\\\/\\\/www.vccp.com\\\/wp-content\\\/uploads\\\/2020\\\/08\\\/Daimler-driverless-car-e1515703361137.jpg%22%7D\",\"blockId\":\"Z2hiG9F\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-image-full-width-Z2hiG9F\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/text-full-width {\"text\":\"\\u003ch4\\u003eNow, does this matter? I don't think it does in any individual case, but I am more ambivalent about the cumulative effect.\\u00a0\\u003c\\\/h4\\u003e\",\"blockId\":\"Z1GJz2R\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-text-full-width-Z1GJz2R\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/two-column-text-quote-image {\"text-left\":\"\\u003cp\\u003eTake satnav, for instance. To what extent are we letting the way-finding part of our brain get lazy by never reading a map or planning a journey? And it's not just in cars. I increasingly use GPS to navigate by foot. Shortcuts breed shortcuts. There's something contagious about mental laziness.\\u00a0\\u003cbr \\\/\\u003e\\u003cbr \\\/\\u003eAnd, like many contagious things, it's also prolific. We are faced with a growing multitude of lazy options, all of which are designed to carry out tasks our brains used to perform.\\u003c\\\/p\\u003e\",\"text-right\":\"\\u003cp\\u003eWhen you step back, it's surprising how much of our daily intellectual effort has already been outsourced to new tech platforms, from spellcheck to autocorrect, from the memory in our phones to Google translate and search. What once taxed our brains \\u2013 language, spelling, remembering things \\u2013 increasingly requires no exertion. Voice activation adds to the mental delegation; Alexa means we no longer need to tune in to a radio station, tell the time or know the date.\\u003c\\\/p\\u003e\",\"blockId\":\"mtlEJ\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image-mtlEJ\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/two-column-text-quote-image {\"text-right\":\"\\u003cdiv\\u003eThis seems to me a threat that merits wider discussion than it currently receives, especially when you consider the broader social context of the other life tasks we now delegate to third parties. To use an odd phrase: we live in a world that's in danger of becoming both physically and intellectually obesogenic.\\u003c\\\/div\\u003e\\n\\u003cdiv\\u003e\\u00a0\\u003c\\\/div\\u003e\\n\\u003cdiv\\u003eSo much nowadays is done for us. Our food shopping is driven to us, our meals are prepared ready for us to eat and Amazon delivers just about everything else. We subcontract our memory to Google, Alexa and our phone. Cars will drive us; we won't drive them. Without our knowledge, the media we consume is individually pre-edited to make it more palatable, personal and \\u0022relevant\\u0022. We are thus spared the responsibility of even deciding relevance for ourselves. If things continue this way, we run the risk of becoming digital equivalents to the slack-jawed, entitled layabouts caricatured in Downton Abbey. A class of people infantilised by a system that operates us more than we operate it.\\u00a0\\u003c\\\/div\\u003e\\n\\u003cp\\u003e\\u003cbr \\\/\\u003eThere is an established, tech-led narrative about the need for seamless, friction-free experiences. And these will remain the gold standard for customer-centric service design. But perhaps in the public domain, and in the broader purposes of the brands we work for, we should consider a counter-narrative. Of building structural (pleasant) inconvenience back into experience \\u2013 getting people to use their brains as opposed to intellectual delegation, to use the stairs as opposed to the lift, to go off track so that, serendipitously, they can smell the roses they may not otherwise have noticed.\\u003c\\\/p\\u003e\\n\\u003cp\\u003eSwitched-on brands are, in my view, already on the case. They tend to be the ones who champion big, collective experiences and all the noise, messiness and spilt beer that goes with them. They tend to be the ones with the \\u0022chatty aisle\\u0022, an inefficient checkout where people with time on their hands can check out with garrulous inefficiency.\\u00a0\\u003c\\\/p\\u003e\",\"quote\":\"These little removals of mental responsibility, masquerading craftily as increased autonomy, could potentially diminish us over time in the way they displace mental resourcefulness.\",\"image\":\"%7B%22alt%22:%22%22,%22title%22:%22DowntonAbbey-clean_S06-KA-fafe982%22,%22caption%22:%22%22,%22id%22:10915,%22link%22:%22https:\\\/\\\/www.vccp.com\\\/?attachment_id=10915%22,%22url%22:%22https:\\\/\\\/www.vccp.com\\\/wp-content\\\/uploads\\\/2020\\\/08\\\/DowntonAbbey-clean_S06-KA-fafe982.jpg%22%7D\",\"blockId\":\"41vb5\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image-41vb5\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/quote-full-width {\"quote\":\"They tend to be the ones that confront with heat \\u2013 rather than remove without friction \\u2013 online hate towards their staff or communities. They tend to be the ones that manage to see what a hi-tech, individualised world can make invisible, such as the loneliness that may come with old age. They tend to be more human. The ones putting \\u0022me\\u0022 back into autonomy and \\u0022us\\u0022 back into autonomous.\",\"blockId\":\"1KpUuP\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-quote-full-width-1KpUuP\"} \/-->","post_title":"There's not enough 'me' in autonomy","post_excerpt":"It's surprising how much of our daily intellectual effort has already been outsourced.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"autonomy","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2020-08-27 10:44:55","post_modified_gmt":"2020-08-27 09:44:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/?post_type=news&#038;p=11538","menu_order":0,"post_type":"news","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}},{"relateditem":{"ID":10718,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2019-09-04 10:06:08","post_date_gmt":"2019-09-04 09:06:08","post_content":"<!-- wp:lazyblock\/video {\"video-id\":\"357765945\",\"blockId\":\"ZonqYm\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-video-ZonqYm\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/two-column-text-quote-image {\"text-right\":\"\\u003cp\\u003eThat\u2019s why Cadbury Dairy Milk have launched a new brand campaign, 'Donate Your Words', in support of Age UK. For the first time ever the UK\u2019s number one chocolate brand has removed the words from its iconic purple bars and is 'donating' them to the Charity to help alleviate loneliness amongst older people.\u00a0\\u003c\/p\\u003e\\n\\u003cp\\u003eThe limited edition bar will be sold in supermarkets nationwide with 30p from each bar going towards Age UK to help provide vital services and support when older people need it most.\\u003c\/p\\u003e\\n\\u003cp\\u003eThe campaign will also encourage Brits to donate their words by pledging to reach out and have a chat with older people in their communities, supported through social media, TV show partnerships, retail pop up experiences and even a custom built Facebook chatbot conversational interface.\u00a0\\u003c\/p\\u003e\",\"quote\":\"There's a crisis in the UK. 1.4 million older people struggle with loneliness. 225,000 often go a whole week without speaking to anyone.\",\"blockId\":\"CPf5Q\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image-CPf5Q\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/image-full-width {\"image\":\"%7B%22alt%22:%22%22,%22title%22:%22ChatBot%20(1)%22,%22caption%22:%22%22,%22id%22:10720,%22link%22:%22https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/?attachment_id=10720%22,%22url%22:%22https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/ChatBot-1.jpg%22%7D\",\"blockId\":\"Z1eQbm4\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-image-full-width-Z1eQbm4\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/quote-full-width {\"quote\":\"We\u2019re so proud to announce this partnership and to be supporting Age UK - it\u2019s such an important charity that is really tackling the issue of loneliness. We are donating the words from our bars of Cadbury Dairy Milk and encouraging people up and down the country to donate theirs through small gestures that could really help change the lives of older people.\",\"quotee\":\"Laura Gray, Brand Manager at Mondelez\",\"blockId\":\"CSD4B\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-quote-full-width-CSD4B\"} \/-->","post_title":"Donate Your Words","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"donate-your-words","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2020-08-26 23:52:41","post_modified_gmt":"2020-08-26 22:52:41","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":10331,"guid":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/?post_type=work&#038;p=10718","menu_order":0,"post_type":"work","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}},{"relateditem":{"ID":11572,"post_author":"11","post_date":"2019-09-02 16:35:46","post_date_gmt":"2019-09-02 15:35:46","post_content":"<!-- wp:lazyblock\/two-column-text-quote-image {\"text-right\":\"\\u003cdiv\\u003eGetting away with these hours sometimes used to require a certain amount of guile (B, B and H were all early birds and not huge siesta devotees) but, generally, I've found that the ad industry is reasonably relaxed about your hours, provided you put them in.\\u003c\\\/div\\u003e\\n\\u003cdiv\\u003e\\u00a0\\u003c\\\/div\\u003e\\n\\u003cdiv\\u003eThe new frontier for flexibility, however, isn't any longer just about flexibility of time. It is also about flexibility of place. Not just when you put your hours in, but also where. This has many upsides in many ways, especially for new parents, but I also think it potentially has some unexpected downsides.\\u003c\\\/div\\u003e\\n\\u003cdiv\\u003e\\u00a0\\u003c\\\/div\\u003e\\n\\u003cdiv\\u003eI was at a family do the other day that included a number of my son's peer group in their early twenties. I was surprised to find that several of them, who had quite impressive-sounding corporate jobs, hardly ever went to the office. Instead, they were expected to work remotely from home. Did they enjoy it, I asked. Not remotely. In fact, they looked on quite enviously at the people in their companies who could command an office job.\\u003cbr \\\/\\u003e\\u003cbr \\\/\\u003eIt may seem a surprise that working in an office now seems aspirational, given how many grudging things are said and written about the place. Not least in the withering satire of The Office. The ad industry, too, has its own habit of disparaging our humble work abode, often advocating a more \\u0022hot-desked\\u0022 future and new shape-shifting business models. Indeed, I remember an ad from BT (which, quite understandably, has a stake in a remote world) confidently predicting the end of the office altogether. And yet the skyline only seems to see more and more office blocks going up.\\u003c\\\/div\\u003e\\n\\u003cp\\u003e\\u003cbr \\\/\\u003eSo why does the office stubbornly persist as our preferred work forum given the many valid alternatives that now exist? Why do these alternatives remain complementary rather than substitutional? There are a thousand answers. But two of them reside in Daniel Pink's brilliant study on human motivation at work, which he distils into three key components: autonomy, mastery, purpose.\\u00a0\\u003c\\\/p\\u003e\",\"quote\":\"I'm a long-term fan of flexible working. I\\u2019ve never been at my most productive before 10.00am and, following an afternoon lull, nearly always feel most alert and energetic from about 4.00pm to 7.30pm.\\n\",\"image\":\"%7B%22alt%22:%22%22,%22title%22:%22VCCP%20working%22,%22caption%22:%22%22,%22id%22:10854,%22link%22:%22https:\\\/\\\/www.vccp.com\\\/?attachment_id=10854%22,%22url%22:%22https:\\\/\\\/www.vccp.com\\\/wp-content\\\/uploads\\\/2020\\\/08\\\/VCCP-working.jpg%22%7D\",\"blockId\":\"Z1KaX5O\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image-Z1KaX5O\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/text-full-width {\"text\":\"\\u003ch4\\u003eThe trouble with remote working in its absolute sense (and I realise there are many variations) is that it can only really satisfy our drive for autonomy. And autonomy on its own is a lonely place or, as The Eagles sang in Desperado: \\u0022Freedom, well that's just some people talking \\\/ Your prison is walking through this world all alone \\\/ And not having the amenity of an office to fall back on.\\u0022 (I made up the last line.)\\u003c\\\/h4\\u003e\",\"blockId\":\"1g4HMv\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-text-full-width-1g4HMv\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/image-full-width {\"image\":\"%7B%22alt%22:%22%22,%22title%22:%22VCCP%20reception%22,%22caption%22:%22%22,%22id%22:10851,%22link%22:%22https:\\\/\\\/www.vccp.com\\\/?attachment_id=10851%22,%22url%22:%22https:\\\/\\\/www.vccp.com\\\/wp-content\\\/uploads\\\/2020\\\/08\\\/VCCP-reception.jpg%22%7D\",\"blockId\":\"1vWF3D\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-image-full-width-1vWF3D\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/two-column-text-quote-image {\"text-left\":\"\\u003cp\\u003eIn many ways, too much autonomy can actually restrict the opportunity for mastery and purpose. Most of what we learn at work \\u2013 most of our mastery \\u2013 isn't formally taught and can't be relayed remotely. It involves watching people in action, in meetings, in pitches, in argument, in agreement, in corridors, in pubs and in restaurants, in front of clients, in defeat and in victory. It is very difficult to get this training sitting at home in your onesie logged on to a webinar or video conference. Or, worse still, disappearing down the wormhole of social media, where the illusion of friendship and heterogeneity can, in the words of Eli Pariser (The Filter Bubble), leave us inhabiting a \\u0022ghetto of one\\u0022.\\u003c\\\/p\\u003e\",\"text-right\":\"\\u003cp\\u003ePurpose, even more than mastery, is a collective and contextual endeavour. You know instinctively when entering a building whether there is unity of purpose and a true team spirit. Such an atmosphere is irreplaceable and hard-won. Not all offices can necessarily hit these highs, but they can all play a vital role in building a sense of common purpose and belonging. And, if they don't, you can always have fun undermining the management that's making a mess of things. Counterculture can become a purpose all of its own \\u2013 which is really what drove most of the humour at Wernham Hogg, right down to the jellied stapler.\\u003c\\\/p\\u003e\",\"blockId\":\"5eB2K\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-two-column-text-quote-image-5eB2K\"} \/-->\n\n<!-- wp:lazyblock\/quote-full-width {\"quote\":\"Harold Kushner famously quipped: \\u0022No-one said on their deathbed: 'I wish I'd spent more time at the office.'\\u0022 Perhaps so. But this assumes decades of enjoying all the benefits an office brings. There may be a remote generation coming through who take a rather different view.\",\"blockId\":\"2nKgWT\",\"blockUniqueClass\":\"lazyblock-quote-full-width-2nKgWT\"} \/-->","post_title":"In Praise of the Office","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"in-praise-of-the-office","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2020-08-27 10:54:59","post_modified_gmt":"2020-08-27 09:54:59","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/?post_type=news&#038;p=11572","menu_order":0,"post_type":"news","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}}],"related_content_title":"YOU MAY ALSO LIKE","websites_to_publish":[],"visible_on_home_page":[],"meta-title":"The politics of optimism","meta-description":"My political awakening was during the miners' strike. Coming from Leeds, with a regular holiday job in Castleford and going to university in Nottingham, it was all around me during '84 and '85. It left an indelible impression on my whole generation's political outlook.","social-media-image":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Charles_7.jpg"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/news\/11569","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/news"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/news"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/11"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=11569"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.vccp.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=11569"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}