The idea behind Intersect is to collect and discuss various responses to the changing world of work. It will look at practical ideas that will help us do things better in a world where paying work — a regular job — will no longer be the primary way in which wealth is distributed and the means by which people support themselves. It will look at proposals for everything from worker cooperatives to shorter working hours to universal basic income. It will consider the ways in which education, training and learning will have to change. It will examine the new technologies themselves and consider how they can be made to work for us rather than against us. As such, Intersect will not just be another place for discussion and argument about the future of work, but a collection of information that will help us build a more equitable, democratic world in a future that is likely to be postwork.