Prologue
Fading outLindsay McRory September 6, 1995
Sometime last year, towards the end of a late-night management
conference call, I casually announced to my colleagues that my family and
I would be selling everything we owned and sailing around most the globe
for at least a couple of years and probably longer.
After a long pause, someone asked, "You're not quitting work . . . are
you?"
"No, I'll work from the boat. I'll be able to do most of what I do
now."
Another long pause was followed by a machine-gun flurry of questions
about the technology, kids' education, and a hundred other related issues.
Conceptually, sailing around while working is an extreme form of being
"virtual." On a sailboat this means more than being capable of data and
voice communications. If you have to sit at the navigation station for
eight hours a day, it's not worth leaving dock. Nothing would be gained.
Work would have to be re-engineered to make the transition beneficial for
all parties.
There has been much discussion lately about the "virtual organization."
It seems to be commonly accepted that virtual organizations are possible
as a result of the latest developments in technology, specifically data
communications. Technology plays a very large role, but this virtual
evolution is also rooted in changing management styles.
The '50s style of management focused on making workers more
predictable, controllable, and measurable. The "company man" was created.
Elaborate systems were created to ensure all company activities could be
monitored and controlled. Punch the clock, and do what you're told.
Unfortunately, much of this attitude continues to linger in corporate
America.
Today, the corporate clime is different, organized in workgroups with
much of the authority as well as the responsibility pushed as far down the
organization as possible. These workgroups in turn pass authority and
responsibility to individuals. It can become a chain of arm's-length
relationships. Control is no longer the issue. Results are.
As a result, technology and new corporate attitudes make it possible to
globetrot with your family on a sailboat. But is it worth it?
Well, if you can live without mowing the lawn, worrying about what your
kids are really learning in school, or keeping up with the Joneses,
there is no better way to live.
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