the business case for a social office white paper
Post on 22-Jan-2015
402 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
www.encanvas.com
THE BUSINESS CASE FOR A SOCIAL OFFICE
July 2008
Ian Tomlin
WHITE PAPER
2 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Contents
OVERVIEW ...................................................................................................................................... 3
Adoption of new working practises in the office workspace...................................... 4
Expanded use of online social and collaborative technologies ................................. 7
Leveraging online communities ......................................................................................... 10
WHAT DOES A SOCIAL OFFICE LOOK LIKE? ................................................................... 11
ADOPTION CHALLENGES ....................................................................................................... 12
BUILDING A BUSINESS CASE FOR A SOCIAL OFFICE .................................................. 13
Building cohesion ...................................................................................................................... 14
Creating communities and harvesting social ties ......................................................... 14
Improving the productivity of project teams .................................................................. 16
Working on the same page ................................................................................................... 16
Bridging across silos of information .................................................................................. 17
To capture, analyze, present and share content in smarter ways ........................... 17
Improve the utilization of knowledge and corporate information assets ........... 18
BOTTOM–LINE COST SAVINGS ............................................................................................ 19
Environmental savings ............................................................................................................. 19
Time savings (productivity gains) ........................................................................................ 19
Reductions in paper usage .................................................................................................... 20
Contact information ................................................................................................................. 23
3 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
OVERVIEW
The social office is a term used to describe a new kind of working
environment for information workers who discharge their role largely online
(so-called web workers). These are people for whom information capture,
analysis and sharing is integral to their role and is facilitated by the use of
modern online web-based socially oriented technologies and collaboration
tools.
A social office represents a seed-change in perceptions of what an ‘office
workplace’ looks like and how it operates underpinning by the:
1. Adoption of new working practises in the office workspace
2. Expanded use of online social and collaborative technologies
3. Emergence of strategies to gain economic advantage and operational
excellence from socially oriented online business communities
This paper examines the business case for a social online workplace.
4 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Adoption of new working practises in the office workspace
In the latter years of the 20th century, information workers expected to
discharge their work in a corporate office. This bricks and mortar perspective
of ‘the office workplace’ has today become less of a reality for many people
that perform information-working roles. Presented with online and mobile
access to information and applications, many information workers find
themselves more productive when they balance work time between office
locations; including the home office where sometimes they will typically work
for one or two days a week.
Drivers for smarter ways of working are partly encouraged by the growing
capabilities of web-based software tools and mobile phones that enable
people to communicate with colleagues and customers wherever they might
be. Distance and location has become less of a barrier to productivity.
Many employers are playing their part to encourage a change in workforce
operating behaviours towards smarter working. They identify the economic
and environmental rewards that come from helping workers to play it smart
when planning where they work in the week. Why increase costs (plus
environmental impact) and lose time by commuting to the office every day if
you don’t need to physically be there? Another big reason why employers are
listening to their employees on matters of smarter working practises is the fact
that, despite a world population of 1.174 billion young people between the
ages of 15 and 24, it’s estimated there simply aren’t enough Generation Y
workers to meet future employment demands.
While employer attitudes and technologies are influencing factors, it’s
information workers themselves who are pushing for a change in workforce
operating behaviours. Workers today are more time conscious, tech savvy and
environmentally aware than ever before. They don’t want to waste time in a
daily commute when they know they’re just as capable of working from
another location to discharge their role – such as their home office, coffee
house or a more local branch of the business they work for.
Event driven workers
Time awareness is very different to new generations accustomed to instant
rewards when they play digital games, swap Instant Messages with friends or
watch fast-paced action movies. An on-demand consumer world is driving
expectations in the workplace for a working environment that is equally
instant. No surprise that when new generations of information workers meet a
slow-paced working environment and find themselves being asked to
commute to an office miles away that serves no greater purpose than their
“The bricks and mortar perspective of ‘the office workplace’ has today become less of a reality for many people…”
“It’s information workers themselves who are pushing for a change in workforce operating behaviours…”
5 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
downstairs cubby hole, they question the logic of these entrenched operating
behaviours.
Rather than seek a lifetime commitment to a single employer, information
workers increasingly view work as a series of project-based engagements. In
fact, the nature of business has itself become more project oriented and event
driven. With a wealth of cross-organizational projects (many of which extend
beyond the enterprise), senior executives very often find themselves managing
projects, teams and outcomes rather than a dedicated staff. These factors
endorse and support beliefs of information workers that they need to protect
their own best interest by developing their social relationships and grow their
support networks so that they can help themselves step up the career ladder.
Self-confident computer users
Computer literacy in workers is higher today than it has ever been. Computing
is assumed to play a role in most professions and is integral to the education
syllabus of most countries. A 2009 Canadian Survey* of people entering the
workplace from tertiary education found that the majority saw themselves as
computer literate and able to serve themselves with the information they need.
This self-confidence in computing ability has been nurtured by major mobile
and Internet platform providers like Apple, Vodafone, Facebook, Microsoft,
Google and Yaho that provide easy to use tools individuals can learn
themselves to use and work with data. The consequence of this self-confidence
in computing skills is that information workers feel – given access to
appropriate tools – they’re perfectly capable of serving themselves with the
information they need to discharge their roles online, no matter where they
may be physically located.
*Approximately 69 per cent of the more than 1,000 people
surveyed in Freedom to Compute: The Empowerment of
Generation Y said they regard themselves as highly proficient
computer users. This was particularly true among those between
18 and 29 with a postgraduate degree, 80 per cent of whom said
they were highly proficient. Men also tended to rate their IT
expertise highly at 77 per cent. Those who earn more than
$100,000 annually thought they had a good grasp of computing
hardware and software compared to those who earned less than
$50,000.
Environmentally aware-workers
The so-called Generation Y (18- to 25-year olds) just entering, or poised to
enter, the workforce aren’t likely to be satisfied with drab cubicles and wasteful
corproate practises that harm the environment. This highly educated, mobile
“Rather than seek a lifetime commitment to a single employer, information workers increasingly view work role as a series of project-based engagements…”
6 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
and tech-savvy group wants a workplace that is an extension of their college
campus and that’s like them: urban, flexible, collaborative, environmentally
sensitive and unconventional according to a study published in May 2010 by
Johnson Controls Inc. of 3,011 18- to 25-year-olds in the United States, UK
Germany, India and China. With the Baby Boomers retiring and millions fewer
in the younger generations to replace them in the workforce in the US, UK and
Western Europe, employers are trying hard to understand what makes Gen Y
tick.
Changing information worker cultural attitudes
Attitudes* of new generations entering the workplace (currently Generation Y)
towards employment relationships, social interaction, communications and
environment are vastly different to preceding generations. A growing number
of people in the workplace (something like 30% according to recent surveys)
expect to have access to the social networking tools they’re accustomed to
using when ‘out of the office’. But while organizations may be reluctant to
consider adoption of social tools, a shortage of information workers entering
the job market means that great competition exists for talent.
This gives Generation Y far more influence on how the world of work they are
entering should cater for their needs.
Oxygenz is a research project led by Global Workplace Innovation
to understand how important the future workplace is to
generations in the workplace. The research gathered information
from 5,000 students at universities worldwide, and young
employees from a range of professions since February 2008.
Oxygenz aims to understand how important the workplace is to
Generation Y and what factors employers, designers, facilities
managers need to take into account. According to its findings, 18-
25 year-olds view the office as an extension of their home life,
impacting the demands on employers requiring leading talent to
stay competitive.
The consequence of this belief that work-life should be considered ‘an
extension of the social day rather than a prison cell where noone enters and
noone leaves until clocking off time’ is that employee attitudes towards social
rights are at odds with organizational demands for data security, 100%
commitment to the job while employed and the clear separation of work and
home life.
Unfortunately for employers that retain a traditional mindset of how the
relationship between staff and organizations should work, the best talent now
“Gen-Y wants a workplace that is an extension of their college campus and that’s like them…”
“The best talent now comes with the unwanted baggage of embedded social networking behaviour.”
7 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
comes with this unwanted baggage of a natural human tendancy to want to
network. Online social networking technologies provide a new vehicle to make
social networking easier – and it’s habit forming. Fears of the negative impact
of social networking behaviours in the office are not helped by media reports
that suggest well known platforms like Facebook are causing workers to loose
something like 1.5 percent of their productivity.
A 2009 research paper from Nucleus Research reported that
organizations were at risk of loosing 1.5 percent of productive
time because their workers were using Facebook at work. The
research company interviewed 237 randomly selected office
workers about their Facebook use and also found that the social
network is being used as an alternative e-mail platform to Outlook
and similar applications. The research company reported that
seventy-seven percent of these workers had a Facebook account,
with nearly two-thirds of those users accessing Facebook for at
least 15 minutes a day during working hours.
As the result of concerns over productivity (no doubt encouraged by press
reports like the one above) many organizations are attempting to implement
blanket bans on social networking tools. But this Dickensian approach to
preventing social collaboration is unlikely to yield a long-term answer given
that it doesn’t change the desire of Generation Y to network; or their belief
that it’s within their rights to do so.
Emergant socially oriented working practises
Rather than attempt to stem the tide, enlightened business leaders are
exploring how they can provide information workers with secure and live
online spaces that empower workers to serve themselves with the information,
business applications, and rich social collaborative tools they need to be more
productive; measured not through greater output of files or documents, but by
their contributions to projects, team activities and outcomes.
Expanded use of online social and collaborative technologies
A raft of new computing technologies has emerged in the last decade that
provide web-workers with richer acces to information online, and tools that
enable capture, analysis, presentation and sharing of content.
“Many organizations are now adopting Dickensian steps to attempt to halt the tide of on premises social networking.”
8 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Use of social networking applications designed to serve online communities
such as Facebook, Twitter, MSN, Myspace and Google Maps have become
impregnated into social activity.
Underpinning these technologies are more fundamental innovations in the
way applications can be served to online and mobile users. Core web
operating systems such as Microsoft ASP.NET have made dramatic
improvements in their designg to enable a much broader community of
entrepreneurs to find ways of serving their customer groups with secure and
live online applications and workspaces. A key technology step-change
emerged early in the 21st century with the emergence of AJAX (Asynchronous
Java and XML); a technology innovation that essentially means that browsers
no longer need to refresh an entire page of data when only specific
components are affected by a change. Programmers are today able to design
user interfacing applications that refresh only one component of a page whilst
retaining the remaining components in the memory of the browser. This
means that user experiences are more attractive and intuitive. It also means
that response times online are much improved compared to earlier attempts
to fashion applications for web workers.
Investments by entreprenurs into what Generation Y wants are also having an
impact on the types of approaches and technologies being introduced.
Modern web-based applications technologies that enable users to serve
themselves with information and applications have been grouped into a
technology description called ‘Web 2.0’ suggesting that Web 1.0 was about
URLs and finding information and Web 2.0 is about self-service and the self
formation and organization of online communities. With the advantage of
technologies like AJAX and ASP.NET, Web 2.0 applications provide a similar
user interface quality consistent to installed desktop software.
Whilst the majority of Web 2.0 applications and platforms designed for social
networking have been targeted to the much larger consumer market for online
tools, a new generation of software applications is now emerging built for
business. In addition to the major technology providers like IBM and Microsoft,
a new generation of Web 2.0 software publishers including Social Cast, Jackbe,
Jive Software, Salesforce.com, 37Signals, Zoho and Encanvas are introducing a
new portfolio of tools that provide smarter ways of working for web workers.
“Underpinning these technologies are more fundamental innovations in the way applications can be served to online and mobile users…”
9 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Key genres of Web 2.0 software include:
Personal productivity tools (the equivalent of Microsoft Office online)
Collaboration tools for working together online on the same page
Wiki and blogging tools for self-publishing content
Geospatial mapping tools to locate entities on maps
Applications design tools
Data mashup tools that enable
Social networking tools that facilitate the sharing of user profiles and
communications across online social communities.
Some organizations like Google, Microsoft, Salesforce.com and Encanvas
provide web-based operating platforms able to provide the majority of these
components in a single common architecture.
Fundamental to the success of Web 2.0 software publishers is their security
provisioning including the secure management of data, systems and networks,
users and groups, intellectual property and digital assets. Organizations are
encouraged by the IT press to heavily scrutinize the security and scalability of
Web 2.0 online web working technologies in the belief that any system that
extends people networks beyond the boundaries of the enterprise, must firstly
ensure that data and networks are secure. This is a major challenge for Web
2.0 software vendors that is further complicated by the operating behaviours
and incumbent systems that organizations already use.
The pace of adoption of Web 2.0 technologies by businesses has so far been
relatively slow compared to its progress in consumer markets owing to
concerns over data security and accepted norms of procurement. Today,
organizations are accustomed to purchasing software licenses and then
instaling software on to their personal computers, networks and servers. But
this market behaviour is also changing now that organizations are able to
migrate their entire platforms to multi-tennant hosted services (what’s
becoming known as cloud computing) whereby organizations are able to fully
outsource their incumbent IT systems platforms to outsourced service
providers).
Web 2.0 technologies are gradually overcoming the operational performance,
user experience, security, and norms of procurement behaviour obstacles that
have prevented their adoption to this point. A tidal wave of new Web 2.0
software innovations is emerging at a time when the business world is seeking
to find new ways of making its web-workers more productive. For most
organizations, these innovations are not ‘walking in the front door’ but are
being adopted and recommended by middle-managers and small teams that
are quick to register the opportunities they offer and evidence their worth.
“Fundamental to the success of Web 2.0 software publishers is their security provisioning…”
“The pace of adoption of Web 2.0 technologies by businesses has so far been relatively slow..”
10 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Leveraging online communities
Faced with hyper-competitive global online markets, significant changes to
regulatory and compliance standards and huge swings towards cost efficiency
programmes, organizations today are being impacted by external forces that
demand near-constant change in business plans and operating behaviours.
Competitive advantage once embodied by trusted business models that rarely
ever changed is now more transient. Sourcing a competitive advantage for an
organization is expected by most leaders to come from speed-to-market,
ability to optimally leverage assets and relationships or finding a great idea.
Communities play a key role in this new world of competitive advantage. No
longer do organizations expect to deliver their full customer value alone; they
know they will have to depend on supplier partners, stakeholder groups,
channel partners – even customers to source the next competitive edge of
their business. People and talent remain key weapons in the battle for
competitive advantage. Teamworking, realizing and harvesting talent have
become strategic priorities.
But there’s a problem:
As more information workers find themselves working remotely, and in consort
with partners and customers, the practicality of working in a common office or
geography becomes less plausible. Information workers need to be as
productive as they know they can be no matter where they’re located. They
need to communicate with online colleagues, access their information, tools
and core business systems in the knowledge that their data is secure and the
systems they use can be trusted. And they want to feel emotionally supported
by their supervisors and colleagues; they want to feel a part of an
‘organization’ even though they might be drafting a report in an isolated
cubicle, snatching time to update project plans in a café or preparing a
proposal on the way to a meeting.
For executives that need to keep staff on the same page, informed of new
events and want to encourage ideas sharing and problem solving, traditional
personal use desktop software productivity tools hold little reward. The
world’s most popular office worker productivity tools - Microsoft Outlook,
Excel, PowerPoint and Word - were designed for an era of personal
productivity rather than online social collaboration. These tools are made
available to individuals on their personal computers accessible through
identity management systems built for an era when everyone in the team
worked in the same building and were employed by the organization.
“Communities play a key role in this new world of competitive advantage..”
11 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
The appearance of Web 2.0 technologies comes at a time when organizations
are keen to find better ways to nurture and support online web worker
communities; providing tools and mechanisms to create secure and live
workspaces that extend people networks and processes beyond the traditional
bricks and mortar boundaries of the enterprise.
WHAT DOES A SOCIAL OFFICE LOOK LIKE?
A social office is a way of working for information workers that is supported by
a enabling technology platform. This new way of working is characterized by:
Organizations having the ability to…
Create, operate and harvest the talents and relationship potential of online
communities
Meet project resourcing needs by staffing on-demand by leveraging the
specialist skills of their addressible online talent markets (whether they be
inside or outside of the enterprise).
Understand the talent and capabilities of their enterprise.
Lever creative potential and ideas from their employees and online
communities.
Make sense of how their enterprise actually works rather than believing the
structural picture presented by the organogram.
Boost the productivity of workers by ensuring their activities are contributing
to project activities and strategic outcomes.
Web workers having the ability to…
Serve themselves with user group design, information and applications without
needing to re-key or re-purpose data.
Discharge their role from any location by having access to their social
networks, information, business systems, content and processes via a web
browser or mobile phone.
“Web 2.0 technologies come at a time when organizations are keen to find better ways to nurture and support online web worker communities..”
12 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Feel emotionally supported and part of a team; being kept informed of events
and community activity through online contact and communications; abel to
be on the same page as colleagues and customers at any time.
Perform social processes online (in a similar way as people do today in an
office environment).
Managers having the ability to…
Engender emotional intelligence and followership.
Create and manage projects, create and supervise work teams.
Provide mentoring and emotional support – without necessarily having to be
present / in the same location.
ADOPTION CHALLENGES
It’s not easy for organizations to move from their traditional ways of working
and familiar incumbent technologies like email and MS Outlook to the social
office in a single jump. Vendors of social office technologies like Encanvas still
lack the ability to provide customers with robust migration .
Current moves to adopt social office approaches are haphazard and not seen
as a collective all-embracing shift to something new. Organizations are
exploring specific pieces of the social office puzzle such as social networking,
online collaboration, desk sharing, but none of these offerings so far present a
coherent and complete technology platform to support the move to a social
office approach.
In addition, there are a number of roadblocks that organizations must
overcome:
Security concerns over how data, systems and networks will be
protected from attach or thoughtless misuse.
Cultural reluctance to change.
Poor management appreciation of the rewards of a social office.
Embedded belief systems like ‘I get my own desk when I get promoted’
and ‘I commute to the office every day because that’s what I do’.
Lack of confidence over the business benefits of a social office working.
IT leaders and teams that feel they are losing power, authority and/or
control of IT in the enterprise
“Current moves to adopt social office approaches are haphazard…”
13 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
These and other factors mean that leaders attempting to make progressive
step improvements towards may find their projects planted at the base of the
priority list even though a social office approach could make a significant
impact on project performance, costs and strategic outcomes.
A typical roadmap for moving towards a social office approach includes:
1. Provisioning of a socially-oriented self-service IT architecture –
designing information management strategy to organize and serve up
data so that it can be consumed by workspace applications. This
architecture must include provision of a federated identity
management solution.
2. Selection of a social office portal platform calable of bringing people
together on the same page by providing social profiling, social
graphing, contact management, mashup and data self-service tools,
collaborative tools, integrated communications etc. – key vendors
include Google, Jive software, Encanvas, Social Cast, Microsoft, IBM,
Oracle, and Salesforce.com.
3. Re-designing the IT function to re-assign business analysts to become
Process Value Improvement Consultants able to re-educate and
support end users with expertise on how to harness social office tools.
BUILDING A BUSINESS CASE FOR A SOCIAL OFFICE
What executives are now exploring are technology-enabled initiatives to solve
a series of obstacles to smarter working for their web-workers. How to:
Build cohesion and a company ‘spirit’ that provides emotional support
and informs colleagues on organizational matters and events
Create communities and harvest social ties (build a sense of
community)
Improve the productivity of project teams
Give people the ability to work ‘on the same page’ no matter where
they’re physically located
Bridge across silos of information
Capture, analyze, present and share content in smarter ways
Improve the utilization of knowledge and corporate information assets
In this section we examine the business justification for each of these key
changes to operating behaviour.
“..leaders attempting to make progressive step improvements towards may find their projects planted at the base of the priority list…”
14 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Building cohesion
Good leaders want to create a cohesive workforce where individuals feel a
deep bond with the organization they work for and are prepared to go ‘above
an beyond’ obligatory effort levels in support of business activities. Creating
this bond demands that leaders can provide emotional support to staff in
addition to keeping them informed, providing practical tools and information
services.
The reward for leaders that create an engaging, supportive environment for
their workforce is normally measured by the things that DON’t HAPPEN such
as – high levels of absenteeism (because workers don’t feel any emotional
commitment towards their employer), lack of creativity and innovation, poor
performing teams, a decaying quality of customer service, soured relationships,
low levels of cooperation, difficulties in recruiting new talent and negativity
towards improvement and change initiatives.
Can these negative business impacts be measured in terms of a monetary cost
to an organization? It’s true that many organizations are able to operate with
all of these sub-optimal factors. Perhaps the bigger issue is not the short-term
impact of a lack of cohesion but the long-term sustainability implications given
that attempts to achieve operational excellence will inevitably be undermined.
Creating communities and harvesting social ties
The 21st business world is becoming a battle communities. Whether it’s
winning the hearts and minds of employees, engaging with stakeholders and
industry partners, collaborating with project teams or building online customer
groups, communities perform an increasing role in business. For many
industries, the focus of business success has moved from the value of assets to
the number of clicks or customer relationships. The Internet makes it easier for
organizations to stay in touch with their customers and feel more of a bond
with the people and organizations they communicate with, while Web 2.0
technologies such as Wikis, Crowdsourcing tools and online chat systems
make contributors feel more empowered.
There are four major stages to the life-cycle of community management:
1. Formation
2. Operation
3. Harvesting
4. Sustaining
“Good leaders want to create a cohesive workforce where individuals feel a deep bond with the organization they work for…”
15 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Formation
Creating the community. This could be as simple as uploading a contact list
and inviting everyone on it to join. But it’s more common for organizations not
to know all of the potential individuals that go to make up a community.
Therefore, individuals need to be alerted to the existence of a community and
they need to be encouraged to join. Normally an individual’s consent will be
needed to secure their involvement in a community. Security of the community
will be a key factor. So too will be the terms of use of the community. And any
online community demands a supporting platform that’s able to provide
account administration and personalisation features.
Normally the greatest challenge in forming a community is encouraging
individuals to want to join. Participation in any community demands time and
effort. Unless the personal rewards are obvious, savvy web workers are unlikely
to want to expend effort. In most cases, it's the existence and/or endorsement
of other community members that convinces people to join an online
community – so for any community, there will be a critical mass of members
required to participate in order to secure its future.
Operation
The operation of a community demands that participants have access to useful
content and tools. Increasingly, participants want access to self-service
features that enable them to capture, manipulate, sort, view, organize and
share their content. They may also value collaborative tools to enable sharing
of ideas, working together on documents, asking questions, booking facilities,
managing schedules etc.
Harvesting
Making the most of social ties is not a precise art, but there are clear benefits
in understanding how social relationships work and having the ability to
leverage bonds of trust between individuals to affect introductions and get
things done. Modern online social office platforms provide social graphing
tools that enable participants in a community to understand degrees of
relationship tie separation, strength of ties, nature of ties etc. This insight helps
participants to realize the full potential of their community and encourages
them to grow their networking credentials and community relationships to
achieve a wider breadth of influence.
Sustaining
Without frequent reasons to visit a community space – probably because of
helpful insights, news, helpful organizer tools etc. - the value to participants of
communities soon decays and attendance drops. Maintaining the energy and
commitment to a community demands that managers and owners constantly
“Increasingly, participants want access to self-service features that enable them to capture, manipulate, sort, view, organize and share their content…”
16 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
consider what matters most to the community in terms of value. Sometimes, in
the case of internal team spaces for example, being attentive to community
needs is not so easy and can itself become a burdon.
What’s the monetary impact of underperforming community management
tools? The answer to this question largely depends on the circumstances of the
organization. Some enterprises depend more on their communities to drive
success. The inability to harness online communities is somewhat more
important to book publishers and research companies selling their intellectual
property perhaps when compared to a bearing manufacturer. Nevertheless, all
organizations have their communities (including shareholders, staff, customers,
suppliers etc.) that can benefit from online collaborative and community
development solutions.
Improving the productivity of project teams
Most organizations have adopted project-based behaviours in their operations
given the significant numbers of cross-organizational and collaborative
activities that now happen. The adoption of outsourcing and shared service
strategies to support non-core strains of business activity have perpetuated
the need for project portfolio management and tools to manage and
coordinate the activities of project teams.
Web 2.0 secure and live portals powered by data mashup tools enable project
teams to acquire data from back-office systems and office files to bring
together information needed to support project activities.
Working on the same page
Social networking and collaboration tools bring project teams together on the
same page so they can work more efficiently together nomatter where they’re
located. People are able to use mapping and data visualization tools to work
on the same page and see landscapes of their business in a single holistic view
that exposes events and non conformities in data behaviours.
Use of these sorts of tools enable web workers to make sense of large volumes
of data and not get overwhelmed by the large amounts of data on the
Internet. Web workers are able to make more informed decisions on the data
they’re looking at and are often able to dramatically reduce the time spent on
analysis; particulalry when analysis typically involves referencing multiple
systems.
“Social networking and collaboration tools bring project teams together on the same page ”
17 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Bridging across silos of information
It’s common for information workers to struggle to access the important data
they need from business systems because it’s not accessible to them. This
accessibility problem may be caused by:
Knowledge – The person wanting the data doesn’t know it exists.
IT bottlenecks– either technical weaknesses, resource capacity issues or
just the unwillingness of an IT function or provider to want to help.
Skills – The person wanting to use the data doesn’t know how to use
the tools they’ve been provided with to access it.
Format – The format of the file is incompatible or not presented in the
right way – so it has to be re-purposed
Tools – The tools provided to the user
Security – A security policy prevents an individual from accessing the
data they need (this might be a legimate policy or could just be the
consequence of poort user and group security governance)
Other operational silos not being prepared to share their data
Whatever the reason why a user is prevented from accessing the data they
need, the consequences to operational effectiveness are likely to be these:
Users are required to invest time in re-keying and repurposing data.
‘Shadow systems’ are created by users making best use of the available
desktop tools they have access to in order to fashion, organize and
analyze data.
Poor decisions are made because of an absence of insights.
Projects and activities don’t happen because people can’t get their jobs
done without having access to the data they need.
Paper documents and forms are used as a conduit between systems to
paste over the cracks in systems that don’t speak to one another.
Labor intensive approaches are adopted to overcome weaknesses in
data flows.
Opportunities are missed to do better things because managers and
workers are unable to exploit the knowledge their organization
posseses.
To capture, analyze, present and share content in smarter ways
In the absence of useful tools to work with databases and make sense of data,
desktop tools like spreadsheets, wordprocessing document and presentation
tools become the defacto ‘best-fit’ answer to re-using and re-purposing data
for information workers. The challenge this represents is that data held in
these containers is not secure. Another wasteful aspect of this approach is that
“In the absence of useful tools to work with databases and make sense of data, desktop tools like spreadsheets become the defact answer to re-using and re-purposing data.”
18 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
data is consistently re-purposed in order to make sense of it, summarize it or
present it. Some organizations employ dedicated analysts simply to re-
gurgitate information in this fashion (and recently, the U.S. Military has been in
the news because of its war on Powerpoint claiming that the organization has
become so dependent on PowerPoint as a conduit for data interchange and
discovery that it’s become an operational overhead, creates the ‘illustion of
understanding and being in control’ and represents a major security threat).
A fundamental improvement in information management happens when data
held in unstructured forms such as paper documents, and quasi-informal
forms such as PowerPoint slides and Word documents, becomes organized in
relational databases. It’s recognized that up to 60% of corporate information
resides in forms beyond the control of IT because it’s not held in databases.
When data exists beyond the database it’s very difficult to re-use and just as
difficult to protect. But ask the average office worker whether they could
create a database by themselves and most would still say no. Tools used to
create databases are designed for business analysts and database developers,
not users.
New enterprise mashup tools and point-and-click database design and
reporting applications are progressively pushing back the boundaries on what
users can do to serve themselves with databases. Given access to these tools
through social office systems, web workers are better equipped to use data
held in its source without having to create quasi-unstructured content. This not
only increases the usefulness of the data for the specific application, but it
normally leads to data being enriched or improved as the consequence of its
use.
Improve the utilization of knowledge and corporate information assets
Organizations lack the basic tools to leverage their corporate intelligence.
Workers are more likely today to use Google to search for documents that
workers know they’ve referenced before than to scour intranet systems. One of
the major challenges information workers face is the difficulties in accessing
and making sense of data held on disparate IT systems designed to serve a
specific purpose. Often the data structures of these databases are such that
users aren’t familiar with where data is held or how they can access it.
Improving the ability of users to access data makes a huge impact on their
productivity. Data can become much more valuable when referecned against
other data. Enterprise mashup tools and geo-spatial referencing of data can
bring new value to data that’s sitting around the enterprise’ under-utilized.
“Organizations lack the basic tools to leverage their corporate intelligence.”
19 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
BOTTOM–LINE COST SAVINGS
For organizations there are substaintial bottom-line rewards to be gained by
adopting a social office culture and platform:
Environmental savings
Collaborative tools (see Webshow360 from Encanvas) mean that staff
make fewer trips to meet with colleagues, partners or customers
because they can share documents online.
Workers have less reason to meet to attend meetings or commute to
the office given that they have access to their people networks, systems
and processes from anywhere via their web browser.
Social office technology platforms are web-based and are normally
deployed on hosted cloud platforms which means organizations do not
need to run the server themselves. Personal computers and laptops
only require a basic specification and so power and energy can be
minimized.
A reduction in the amount of paper used and distributed has a
significan impact on meeting environmental targets – not forgetting
the obvious impact on office space savings and power consumption.
Advanced social office platforms include facilities to share desk (so-
called desk hotelling solutions) that mean workers can book a desk at
the most appropriate location anytime they want one.
Time savings (productivity gains)
Time savings result from the following activity areas:
Reducing re-keying and re-purposing of content
Finding social connections
Accessing knowledge and data
Sourcing ideas and solving problems
Keeping informed
Working on the activities that matter
Not having to manually distribute paper
Capturing data at source
20 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Reductions in paper usage
The ability to distribute, share and manage files online provided by
social office platforms means that less paper is used, printed and
distributed. This also means less paper documents are copied and
saved.
SUMMARY
There are obvious and quantifiable bottom-line cost savings – i.e. time,
transport costs, reduced paper usage and energy savings – of moving
to a social office orineted workplace.
It’s difficult today to monetize the full business impact of social office
working practises. This is partly because the innovation is so new that
no conclusive research has been performed, but it’s also because its
impact is likely to be felt in every aspect of business behavior – finding
customers, winning customers, energizing staff and partners, working
smarter, making the most of corporate intelligence, to drive smarter
decision making, reducing the environmental impact of business
operations by reducing the number of people that need to commute or
make unnecessary trips, improving performance and productivity of
work teams and projects etc.
The authors believe that - in the next 5 years - social office working
practises and technology will become endemic to the modern
enterprise. As such, many of the rewards and benefits gained from
investments into social office approaches will be attributed as a bi-
product of ‘the way we work’ rather than any specific technology
component or aspect of operational effectiveness.
Reductions in the cost of IT matched by improvements to the quality
and usefulness of IT will no doubt be one of the more recognizable
rewards of adopting social office technologies, accepting that most
information workers do not believe they have seen any great
improvement to their productivity enabled by IT since the introduction
of the spreadsheet.
Organizations can expect to see a step-change in the productivity of
information workers and the ability to do more with less. The economic
impact of this change will likely be equivalent to the introduction of
21 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
email where managers found they were able (or required) to manage
their own administration leading to a reduction in the number of
people engaged in supportive roles. While the output produced by
managers may have declined slightly as the result of this, savings in
administrative positions have been seen to clearly benefit operating
budgets.
The social office will create a more open and engaging enterprise. The
economic benefits of closer emotional ties with customers,
stakeholders, colleagues and industry partners will vary considerably
depending on capabilities. It will improve the ability of both employees
and employers to measure direct productivity towards project
outcomes. While this will encourage trust in remote and home working,
the probably consequence of the social office is that individuals will be
asked to absorb non-productive tasks that do not directly contribute to
project success into the twilight hours of their working week (in much
the ame way as contracted staff today have to invest their own time in
project scoping and expenses management).
The authors anticipate that the social office will lead to a much greater
specialization of skills made possible by employers being able to tap
into specialist practitioners for projects on demand without the high
costs of recruitment and move employment behaviors further in the
direction of project working.
22 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
About Ian Tomlin
Ian Tomlin is a management consultant and technology advocate. As co-founder of
NDMC Consulting he has for the last 10 years led or contributed to transformation
projects for large public and private sector organizations seeking to achieve greater
business agility and customer value.
About NDMC Consulting
NDMC Consulting is a pioneering management consulting business focusing on the
application of agile software technologies and large-scale information change
management engagements. The company also provides market insights and horizon
scanning services for some of the world’s largest technology companies.
About Encanvas
Encanvas®
software makes the workplace work better. We bring added value to the
Microsoft®
enterprise platform by creating the technologies organizations need to
spend less and receive more from their software investments. Our Secure&Live™
platform enables the design, deployment and operation of applications without
coding or scripting all made possible by a single tightly coupled architecture. It
facilitates the massive scaling of portal architectures; so users can communicate, share
information and their applications in real-time while operating in ‘secure spaces’ that
protect systems, data, identity and intellectual property.
More reading
To find out more about this subject, please read ‘Cloud Coffee House’ by Ian Tomlin,
available from www.amazon.com.
23 © 2008 Encanvas Inc.
ENCANVAS WHITE PAPER | The Business Case for a Social Office
Intellectual property
All information of whatever kind contained in this documentation remains the property
of Encanvas Inc. Encanvas Inc.’s appointed data controller is Mr Nick Lawrie. Further
information is available on request.
Contact information
Encanvas Inc.
2710 Thomas Avenue
Cheyenne
Wyoming 82001
United States of America
+1 201 777 3398
Encanvas Europe
Dove Cottage Offices
Abingdon Road
Marcham
Oxfordshire
OX13 6NU
United Kingdom
+44 1865 596151
www.encanvas.com
Encanvas is a registered trademark of Encanvas Inc. All other trademarks and trade names
contained in this document are recognized as belonging to their respective owners.
top related