The future of meetings
How to get employees, clients and investors into a room
A LOBBY CAN shape the first impressions of a business. Guests at the building housing the New York headquarters of Jefferies, an investment bank, were once greeted by a section of the Berlin Wall purchased from the East German government. In the London office of Slaughter and May, a law firm, water trickles down an atrium wall into a shallow pool made of natural stone. The San Francisco home of Salesforce, a software giant, welcomes visitors with a 106-foot (32-metre) video wall displaying anything from soothing waterfalls to Pac-Man clips.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Update your calendar”
Business September 4th 2021
- The future of meetings
- Flush with billions, Databricks has momentum and big plans
- An electric-vehicle startup aims for a stellar valuation
- China imposes the world’s strictest limits on video games
- The trial of Elizabeth Holmes gets under way
- Why people are always so gloomy about the world of work
- In the metaverse, will big gaming eventually become big tech?
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