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Co-location refers to the practice of having a workforce operate from a single physical location, typically an office or workspace. Co-location involves a workforce operating from a single physical location, promoting face-to-face interaction and collaboration. While co-located companies may have limitations in talent acquisition and market reach compared to remote and distributed companies, they benefit from direct in-person communication among team members.
Definition: Co-location means that a company's workforce performs their duties on-site, typically from a centralized office space. Characteristics:
All or most team members work together in person from the same physical location.
Face-to-face communication and collaboration are common.
Limited by the physical location in terms of talent acquisition and market reach. Example: Traditional companies with all employees working from a central office are considered co-located companies.
Definition: A co-located team consists of all or most team members working together in person from the same workspace.
Characteristics:
Team members collaborate face-to-face and share a common physical workspace.
Some co-located teams may have satellite workers or multi-site teams, but the majority work from a single location. Example: A marketing team working together in the same office space is a co-located team.
Flexibility and Coverage:
Co-located companies are restricted to a single physical location, limiting their access to talent pools and markets.
Remote and distributed companies have teams spread across multiple locations and geographies, allowing for greater flexibility and access to global talent.
Co-located companies rely on face-to-face communication and collaboration.
Remote and distributed teams use technology for both synchronous (e.g., video conferencing) and asynchronous (e.g., instant messaging) communication and collaboration.