Sometime last month, architects and interior designers everywhere traded in their old job titles for a shiny new one: Social distancing consultant.
After a binge-read of the CDC’s reopening guidelines, they’ve started shopping out their skills to restaurants, airlines, and malls — businesses that need to reinvent themselves for a 6-feet-apart world.
Pandemic planners are in high demand: Companies only have so much space to play around with.
Without statistical models to guide them, you can imagine restaurant employees crawling across the floor with rulers in hand on their first day back to work.
Marker found several firms that have leaned into the rebrand:
The consultants recommend buying a raft of social distancing tools — like giant stickers that remind people to stay apart, and a whole lot of thermal scanners. Other jobs could soon take off — like in-flight janitors.
Other players are pivoting in the opposite direction: B2B companies are leapfrogging CEOs and pitching straight to employees who work from home. They’re offering virtual fitness classes, mental health services, and — of course — refillable snack supplies.
If you’re thinking of hiring a consultant, keep in mind: Hardware like buzzing wristbands may be nice, but you can still find low-tech social distancing solutions on the cheap.
To keep its customers apart, a German cafe is handing out hats equipped with foam pool noodles.