How to Measure Hybrid Productivity While Ensuring Employee Well-being
Remote work has evolved from a tech office perk to a necessity for many organisations. The COVID- 19 pandemic has permanently changed the expectations of how and where people work. Many organisations have already begun to shift to a hybrid or fully remote work model in response to these changes.
Adopting this new model has several advantages, including flexible work hours and a lack of commute. However, remote work has its challenges. A Buffer survey of remote workers found that loneliness is a common challenge experienced by remote workers. Another reported downside was the struggle to establish a healthy work-life balance, or ‘unplug’ at the end of the workday. And according to a Slack report, both experience and new remote workers are affected by a sense of isolation at work.
Organisations have focused wellness efforts on meditation and mental health to address these remote work challenges. Mindfulness applications like Headspace have seen a steady increase in corporate customers in recent years.
For prospective hires, professional development and coaching are both in the top 2 of benefits employees look for when choosing where to work. This is an indication that “today’s employees are looking for an employer who values their growth and development as well as their personal wellbeing”.
For organisations seeking to address the specific challenges faced by their remote workforce, data will continue to be a key asset. But changes in working patterns will change the way that it is accessed and used to create business value. Data therefore needs to be accessible from anywhere and in real-time. 85% of participants in Cisco’s survey of global organisations stated that cybersecurity is more important now than before the pandemic. Awareness around online privacy continues to grow, and data protection legislation has come into effect in countries across the globe. As such, cybersecurity, privacy and compliance and cloud-based access to data all become critical issues for remote teams working in a remote/hybrid environment.
Technology that both measures key factors affecting employees’ wellbeing and provides recommendations to help workers build better habits can be invaluable. Applications like Viva Insights, part of Microsoft’s new employee experience platform, can help leaders support remote workers and increase efficiency and flexibility throughout the organisation. Companies that adopt these technologies can remain on the cutting edge and take full advantage of all the benefits of remote and hybrid work.
Productivity Declined with Work from Home. It doesn’t have to
Productivity Declined with Work from Home. It doesn’t have to
Sep 03, 2021
People have worked in an office environment for decades and the approaches to being productive have been refined over the years and are well understood. We haven’t yet learnt how to optimally collaborate and communicate when not co-located. A prerequisite is, of course, that organisations provide employees with the digital tools they need to succeed. The good news is that these tools exist. As an example, let’s look at research [2] by Nemeretes published in April 2020 across 564 firms (12 countries, 5000+ average workers) who had adopted Team Collaboration applications such as Microsoft Teams or Webex Teams. Results indicated that nearly 40% had an average improvement in productivity of 24% and nearly a quarter reduced the need for meetings by an average of 30%.
Team Collaboration applications allow users to communicate and collaborate in their working context. This drives much of the improvement. In addition, let’s also revisit the scenario we used above. When stuck, a user can ask a question of their team directly in their messaging area. When someone starts to answer then everyone can see that they are typing. This is a digital equivalent of lifting one’s head and asking. The alternatives, such as email and phone, can’t adequately do this.
Team Collaboration also avoids long and unnecessary email trails, allows documents to be co-created, action items to be updated as soon as completed and much more. Gone are the days of needing to wait for a meeting to communicate changes in the status of a project or work item. In addition, asynchronous communication is valuable for remote work as it allows flexibility to work at different times.
There is a common consensus that hybrid work or flexible WFM working styles are here to stay and are the future of work. Team Collaboration applications have the potential to improve productivity in these scenarios. However, an increase in productivity doesn’t happen automatically. It requires proficiency in using the tools and adaption of processes to take advantage of the capability. Adoption and Change Management is the foundation for this and will accelerate the journey.
Outcome Engineering: The Key to Success
Crucially, business outcomes aren’t achieved automatically. A focused and systematic approach is required.
The starting point is to capture the Business Outcomes the solution is expected to deliver. Why was the solution purchased? What will constitute success? There will almost certainly be a gap between where the
Once the KPIs are captured then the gap between the
Business outcomes are only achieved when the solution is widely and appropriately used. A key barrier may well be resistance to change.
Typically, Business Outcomes are not achieved overnight. It’s therefore important to measure progress toward reaching KPIs with metrics and analytics. Usage data gives the
Technology can be a hefty investment, so it only makes sense that
[1] Video: “What is Outcome Engineering?” https://www.tsia.com/blog/video-outcome-engineering
Customer Success – the secret to achieving a Win-Win for Customer and Supplier
Customer Success – the secret to achieving a Win-Win for Customer and Supplier
What does Salesforce have in common with a newspaper? Success Management of course!
What does Salesforce have in common with a newspaper? Success Management of course!
One of the most interesting sessions at the recent Pulse Europe conference in London was by Shannon Hyson, Global Head of Customer Success at the Financial Times. The Financial Times recently became the first traditional newspaper to earn more revenues from digital than from print. It also earns more from content than from advertising. Print circulation fell from 500 000 in April 2001 to 200 000 in April 2016 but digital subscriptions went from negligible to nearly 600 000 in the same period. Clearly the Financial Times has transformed into a thriving digital content business. Their Success Managers work with existing and prospective customers to understand the value they get from their content access. They build and execute plans to enable customers to realise that value. In addition, they highlight additional opportunities and strive to build a long-term, mutually beneficial partnership. Customers can use the APIs to integrate content into their workflow. Organisations with enterprise-wide access are even allocated a dedicated Customer Success Manager!
Is it time to consider the impact that Success Management can have on your business?