An office has been for centuries the domain of the established peer in whatever field of endeavour he has chosen. The office is rightfully, a successful person’s center of activity. The activity that accounts for his livelihood. We, as visitors to an office, whether my appointment or request, judge the person who is in charge of the office by the immediate visual contact we make with the Executive inhabiting the office.
Our visual contact has much to do with our response and with the Executive’s success in dealing with us and in using his office to procure a wealthier more productive future. Much of what we can consider visual contact has to do with the most obvious, and, yet, most often dismissed necessity of an office, a desk chair. An Executive office chair determines the visual impact he makes on others and psychologically accounts for his own measure of self appreciation. An Executive who can’t reach his desk comfortably to write feels physically deficient. His Desk chair must be bought with a great deal of care to insure that the Executive who is going to sit in it, actually fits in it.
Too many times an Executive office chair is purchased because it comes with the desk that was bought. If the Executive hasn’t tried out the chair, he shouldn’t buy the desk. If the Desk chair makes him feel uncomfortable than he should ask for a different matching chair or look for another desk.
Of all the power seeking tools an Executive can make use of in his office, the Swivel chair should be on top of his list. The swivel chair is like having unlimited control in your office space. It gives the Executive the flexibility of movement and of feeling in control of his movement. The choice of a Desk chair can make you feel more like an Executive.