Choosing Office Furniture That Works

July 20, 2010 · Posted in home improvement 

In order to select the perfect office furniture needed for your office, you need to consider who will be using it and what their roles are, the equipment that will be included, and what type of business it is.

If it is the office of a doctor or dentist, they usually have rows of files along the walls that represent their patients. There is a receptionist answering phones and booking appointments, so she will be using a computer and there is a certain type of desk or work area for that. A file clerk will be sorting and alphabetizing files, so he or she will need a desk with plenty of counter space for his or her tasks. An accountant is usually also in these offices to track the billing. The accountant will be in a separate, semi-private cubicle, also with a computer and the necessary desk or work space for that.

The dentist or doctor has rooms for his patients, but he will also need his own office. He will have a phone with an intercom system for paging him, room on the side of his desk for personal files, and some additional shelving, or a book shelf for reference books and leaflets.

A telemarketing company needs very different furniture. Rows of desks with computers and phones on them are usually all that is needed. An area for a pad for notes and some pens is also needed, but probably not much more than that.

For a printing and publishing establishment, drafting tables may be used. Huge sheets of paper are coded and examined, so large work areas are needed. They also use computers to look at and approve work, and they need counter space, too. Sales offices, as well as insurance and real estate offices usually have partitions for the staff. They have computers, phones, and other equipment that they may even share. That is because these professionals are sometimes working out in the field, and they come back to the office periodically to check their emails, and so forth.

The office space nearly always needs to be designed before the furniture, equipment, file cabinets, and so on are placed there. Procedure also needs to be considered, as it may involve the people at two or more desks working closely with each other. In this case, it would not make sense to put each at different corners of the room.

The boss will also need an office, and with a certain amount of privacy. He needs to be able to store confidential information in his office, and yet he needs to be able to relate to his staff. He has to be apart from the rest, and yet close enough to communicate with them.

Also, if the office can be put together with ergonomically, the staff will be more comfortable. Ergonomic chairs can be adjusted to each different back and neck. There should be typing desks that make sense for administrative staff that does a lot of typing. Telephones should be in a convenient place, and if a lot of phone work is needed, the staff should have access to an ear piece, instead of having to hold the phone on their shoulders. A little consideration, along with design will create sensible decisions for buying office furniture.

Comments

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.