hoteling
Hoteling is a term used to describe two distinct concepts in economics and office management. In economics, it refers to Hotelling's location model of spatial competition, developed by Harold Hotelling in 1929. In workplace management, hoteling denotes a desk-sharing system in which employees do not have permanently assigned workstations but reserve desks or workspaces as needed.
Hotelling's location model imagines a linear marketplace where customers are uniformly distributed along a line, and
In office management, hoteling enables flexible use of real estate by allowing staff to choose a workspace
Hoteling remains widely used in large organizations and government agencies, particularly where space is constrained or