(For those who wish to find more detail, you can find a collection of all the contributions here.)
We Are Not Where We Expected To Be 20+ Years On…
The conversation had a (healthy!) undercurrent of frustration around the lack of progress since digital workplace tools first became available some couple of decades ago.
A1 #PS_Salon – No. And yet many aspects improved. #ESN is widely available in corporates, team collaboration tool-sets like in #O365 are in place. Still we face significant challenges in up-skilling our workforce & get a digital mindset to get more out of tools in our daily work.
— Lukas Fütterer (@lukizzl) April 5, 2019
still the same after all these years eh? i find that FACT very interesting. The industrial era biz mindset is quite resilient #PS_Salon
— ᴍᴀʀᴋ ʙʀɪᴛᴢ (@britz) April 5, 2019
The Focus Is Often On The Wrong Things
Organisations concentrate on how digital tools can make today’s tasks easier, rather than stepping back to consider whether today’s tasks are the most effective way to get things done, or move us towards our strategic goals effectively.
So I guess what I'm saying is we're looking for simple fixes when we need the hard fixes. #PS_Salon
— Sharon O'Dea (@sharonodea) April 5, 2019
groupware 2.0 o/ #PS_Salon LOL
— Lee Bryant (@leebryant) April 5, 2019
And we see repetition of past mistakes…
See? That's the thing. We've been working on this massive change for a good few years & still very little change has happened. It amazes me how little younger generations coming into the workplace seem to have learned from our past mistakes & bound to repeat them again #PS_Salon
— Luis Suarez (@elsua) April 5, 2019
Chat & Messaging Apps Are Perceived As The New Silver Bullet
Not long ago we were told ESNs would save the world of corporate work from its obsession with email and powerpoint. Now, real-time chat apps are the subject of the latest hype cycle…
for me the danger of chat convos is that they are effectively a different form of email threads and therefore hidden/invisible, moreover some platforms create a chat group mirroring a posting group!! I am aware of the transience of chat threads but often contain gold! #ps_salon
— Simon R.J. Fogg (@srjf) April 6, 2019
…but this ignores the other speeds of collaboration necessary for a successful digital workplace ecosystem, that caters to the variety of user needs we see in organisations. Not to mention still being a tools-focused solution.
We think in 3 levels of scale/intimacy: chat/real-time/teams (small world); Groups/networks/Yammer (large group, loose ties); social intranet/ESN (whole firm). The first one shouldn't scale per se, but you can have thousands of them in a network of teams, sharing and boosting
— Lee Bryant (@leebryant) April 5, 2019
#PS_Salon it is a mystery to me…I mean, is there anything you cannot achieve with that combo??
— Cerys Hearsey 👩🏻💻🧜🏻♀️ (@CerysHearsey) April 5, 2019
Tolerating Low Digital Literacy In Organisations Is The Biggest Barrier Holding Us Back
A5: The tools are there. Maybe with the exception for a tool to cross company borders. What is missing is skillset of many people, how to use the tools. Additioanlly a mindset change is needed towards open collaboration for both the individual and the company. #PS_salon
— Marc Habenicht (@Marc_Habenicht) April 5, 2019
A5. Company cultures and lack of willingness to make a change. #PS_Salon
— Tereza Urbankova (@TerezaUrb) April 5, 2019
Especially amongst leaders…
Still we face significant challenges in up-skilling our leaders 😬
😉#PS_Salon A1 https://t.co/bTqR171j2O— Celine Schillinger (@CelineSchill) April 5, 2019
Q4: it's all about the integrations + we have to mandate leaders to work in the DW in the open (mandate, not ask them pat them on the back for one post!). We need exemplars, but we also need to set the digital bar higher and avoid the idea this is a voluntary add-on #PS_Salon
— Lee Bryant (@leebryant) April 5, 2019
But the digital workplace also reveals who the emerging leaders are that can propel us forward.
I do, too, Lee, and I'm nowadays more and more convinced the former is a lost case and the latter a *huge* opportunity. That's why my attention & energy have shifted towards them over time #PS_Salon
— Luis Suarez (@elsua) April 5, 2019
A5 #PS_Salon – Closed mindset, lack of digital skills and knowledge = power thinking.
New digital savvy leaders are emerging and the concept of „leadership in every chair“ is helping to engage new role models and testify the power of an open, connected #DigitalWorkplace
— Lukas Fütterer (@lukizzl) April 5, 2019
Digital Workplace Rollouts Are Too Often Tech-Centric Over User-Centric
Errr, nope! Because the focus is solely around tools and technologies we use and, to me, I still think we are missing a huge piece, the most important one, if ever: sociology. Without it, it's just our tech fetish kicking in again #PS_Salon
— Luis Suarez (@elsua) April 5, 2019
Absolutely! But that can only happen when we stop blaming tools for our misbehaviours and we start fixing our very own mess. Start through through sociology to then have tech supporting the shift as an enabler. Not the other way around. It's a distraction #PS_Salon
— Luis Suarez (@elsua) April 5, 2019
Which means we lose the opportunity to create an end-to-end employee experience.
#PS_Salon a refreshed focus on the employee experience, and on the digital workplace as the foundation of the org-as-a-platform addressing true user needs is where it gets super exciting for me!
— Cerys Hearsey 👩🏻💻🧜🏻♀️ (@CerysHearsey) April 5, 2019
How Can We Learn From The Mistakes Of The Past?
First, we need to recognise the digital agenda belongs to everyone (and no-one).
A3. No-one AND EVERYONE should own it. It's a co-creative effort where everyone chips in their best tidbits to make magic happen & if you'd need some steering go for the least expected bunch: HR folks. Time for them to get their act together after all of these decades! #PS_Salon
— Luis Suarez (@elsua) April 5, 2019
A3 #PS_Salon I also feel assigning ownership to anyone area of the organisation creates the feeling of ‘otherness’. It is really time for digital to just be how we get sh*t done…
— Cerys Hearsey 👩🏻💻🧜🏻♀️ (@CerysHearsey) April 5, 2019
But a Digital Leadership Group is a good way to kick-start this shift in mindset.
A3: a network of enthusiastic and ahead-thinking people from #HR, #IT, #COMs and #Training with tons of budget and working customer-centric in a REAL agile way close to the important decision makers 😇 #PS_Salon
— Katharina Krentz (@Katha_Pe) April 5, 2019
Q3: I am not a fan of all powerful CDOs – we tend to set up a digital leaders group with access to the C-suite and then use an ops group + guides network to get things done. Nobody should 'own' digital IMHO #PS_Salon
— Lee Bryant (@leebryant) April 5, 2019
We Also Need More Focus On Change At The Individual Level
A4: self-reflection first. Start with yourself first. #shareDontSend, #SharingIsCaring, supporting others, open mind, cuiosity. Any maybe think about the term work itself. Is work where work happens or where we „go to work“? #digitalworkplace can be everywhere. #PS_salon
— Marc Habenicht (@Marc_Habenicht) April 5, 2019
A6. We got the tools, now we need to lead by example, shifting our mindsets & adapting to new habits & behaviours, walking the talk, challenging the status quo of how work happens, focus on the sociology aspect of change & embrace tech as an enabler. Own the change work #PS_Salon
— Luis Suarez (@elsua) April 5, 2019
Learning communities, hosted on the digital workplace, are a powerful way to accelerate this.
Oh, and pls as well the tool service community 🙋♀️ #PS_Salon
— Katharina Krentz (@Katha_Pe) April 5, 2019
A4 #PS_Salon – Real work use cases meeting enough space to experiment & learn 💪🏼
The #DigitalWorkplace needs to provide a significant value add in everyday work situations with a low entry barrier to create new routines and un-learn inefficient behaviors like e-mail ping-pong
— Lukas Fütterer (@lukizzl) April 5, 2019
So What’s Next And Where Do We Go From Here?
There was a strong call for rethinking our structures and systems for getting things done. They are no longer fit for purpose for the type of value-creating workflows that digital tools enable.
A6a. I find it interesting how much we just accept systems/structure and really work around it. So many orgs try direct behavior change efforts that will always fall short if the system isn't congruent #PS_Salon
— ᴍᴀʀᴋ ʙʀɪᴛᴢ (@britz) April 5, 2019
But beyond that I think we need to look at the overall experience. Integration, automation. #PS_Salon
— Sharon O'Dea (@sharonodea) April 5, 2019
This applies not only to the structures within our organisations, but also how orgs operate within their wider ecosystem. Partnerships and networks are the structures that enable digital age business, so organisations must find a way to operate effectively in the liminal space between internal and external.
A6 #PS_Salon – To me the blending of „internal“ and „external“ is a big thing, tools supporting new partnerships among „frenemies“ and a #DigitalWorkplace easily inter-connecting individuals, start-ups, small enterprises and multinationals.
— Lukas Fütterer (@lukizzl) April 5, 2019
It was clear that those taking part had a huge amount of passion for the future of work. But there was a thought-provoking word of caution from Celine Schillinger that we need to be careful that in our enthusiasm to enable change we don’t create deeper divisions.
A6. A greater divide between those who're "in" and those who're "out", if we don't pay attention to this.
As we can already see in politics. #PS_Salon— Celine Schillinger (@CelineSchill) April 5, 2019
Clearly, the message that simply implementing digital tools has not been enough to enable transformational change, has made it through to big corporates. There is a definite need for helping people understand how the potential of the digital workplace toolset can change their daily work for the better. However, we must be careful not to mistake this for organisations being unable to cope with anything other than the basics of using digital technology. There are many well-intentioned cultural interventions being led in organisations at the moment, but these will only go so far. Encouraging an open, sharing culture using digital tools is a good first step, especially since it is something that individuals can easily take ownership of themselves. But it will not address the structural changes needed to create an organisation that can sense and respond to the future.
We need to push organisations to do the harder work of true transformation, rather than settling for layering technology on top of existing processes. They are still not thinking about the capabilities that the digital workplace provides and how they can capitalise on them. The digital workplace toolset, when leveraged effectively, should act as the foundation of a service-oriented approach to organising teams. Each team should be using the digital workplace to offer and fulfil the services they provide to customers and the organisation, and developing the lateral connections needed with other teams to do this.
This is how digital tools become embedded in the flow of work rather than somewhere we go to talk about work. It allows teams to become more autonomous as they become responsible for continually optimising and delivering their service offering to the business, radically changing the fabric of the organisation. It also creates the foundation necessary for us to take real advantage of the current and near-future technology innovations of data, AI and automation. In my opinion, until an organisation recognises the need and builds this foundation, they just aren’t taking the digital workplace, or indeed digital transformation seriously.