A question of discipline 
Pioneering thinkers have long been predicting the demise of the nine-to-five working day. This demise still hasn’t come about, thanks to the conservative, cowardly mindset of society. That is, however, set to change. Look at me, for example: at 15, I left high school, and became an unpublished “freelance” author. Since then, my novels have made it to the market, although the journey was always more important than the destination.
I wanted to escape from the unimaginative education system, which despite the Internet, globalization, and the postindustrial revolution, still wants to equip the working class with the basic skills, to produce cogs for the moneymaking machines. This system molds entire generations, perpetuating the nine-to-five mentality.
It’s no surprise that this approach to learning, and its function, mimics that of robots. Robots are easier to program than people, so how many of us will work (as we do today) in the future? So the question should be: can people better serve their company when they are happier and more flexible? Or rather: how should the business world change in order to support people so that they can be productive and creative? After all, the ultimate purpose of a chosen profession is not to earn money, but to develop as a person.
The “shift work” mentality of factories, influenced by Frederick Winslow Taylor’s scientific management concept, has infiltrated the office world so that employees work, network and talk amongst themselves. That was very efficient, in an old-fashioned way. International business in various time zones, with cheap communications and travel, free us from this structural monopoly. Would you rather be controlled by your work, or be in control of your work?
Clearly, everyone has different mental and physical rhythms. Some people are early birds, others night owls. Ideas may come to you in the shower. Variety nurtures innovation, yet the shared staff experience, the sense of community, must not be neglected. It calls for more discipline to be your own boss, for reasons of inertia, not laziness. The bottom line is yes to flexibility, no to lack of structure.
In my opinion, the debate over where and when people work is long overdue, and it doesn’t go far enough in view of the coming revolutions. We have to look at the issue in a much more fundamental way. We have to decide whether mankind is made for work or work for mankind.