Relier Pairs Bus Comm-Ch1 Sec 3Version en ligne Term for Business Communication Ch 1 par Kerri Stegman 1 credibility 2 smartphone app 3 sharing economy 4 disrupting 5 digital nomads 6 teaming 7 anytime, anywhere office 8 ad hoc teams 9 gig economy 10 coworking 11 karoshi 12 nonterritorial workplace 13 virtual office 14 bossless organizational structure 15 co-living 16 holacracy 17 palatte of places A sector of the labor market that relies on free agents hired on a project basis or doing short- term independent work Coworking spaces and accommodations available to digital nomads with the help of platforms such as Roam or PodShare Variable workspaces, e.g., tiny soundproof rooms for intense concentration, team spaces, and standing desks, found mostly in IT businesses An economic model in which individuals rent or borrow assets owned by others, for example, when using services such as Uber, Lyft, or Airbnb A method of decentralized management, in which authority and decision-making are distributed among self-organizing teams rather than resting on a management hierarchy Unassigned workspace that is up for grabs by employees; also called a mobile platform or hot desk An office that requires only a mobile phone and a wireless computer Referring to ad-hoc teams that are formed to solve particular problems and then disbanded once they have accomplished their objectives A system of self-management popular among tech start-ups in particular A work arrangement in which professionals share communal office space on an as-needed basis A trait that engenders trust so that people believe the writer or speaker is telling the truth, is experienced, and knows what he or she is talking about A nontraditional mobile and decentralized workspace Japanese word for death by overwork Software applications designed to work on mobile devices A worker with a wandering lifestyle enabled by technology, who often travels to exotic locales for extended periods of time Nontraditional project-based teams that disband after they accomplish their objectives; the opposite of standing teams New players, such as ride-hailing services and other upstarts, that challenge and displace long- established business models