It seems like everyone is talking about coronavirus: what it means to the global and local economies, how it impacts different industries, even how to make your own hand sanitizer to combat it.
One of the key approaches many organizations are taking is to minimize sustained contact with large groups of people. This has led to the cancellation of numerous conferences and other events; many schools and universities are asking students to stay home and participate remotely.
Similarly, organizations are thinking about whether it makes sense to have employees come into the office and run the risk of getting infected or already being infected and, in turn, infecting others. Maybe it’s time for organizations to more fully explore the idea of a digital workplace.
At AIIM, we’ve been talking about the digital workplace for years. We’ve put together a report outlining how organizations approach this and what’s needed for it to be successful. And as a full-time remote worker since 2004 myself, including more than 9 years at AIIM, I think I have some unique insights I can share on how to make your digital workplace successful.
Many digital workplace initiatives start with technology. But as Sam Marshall notes in a recent blog post, a successful digital workplace requires much more than technology; in fact, much of what makes one successful needs to happen before the technology is put into place.
Planning for a digital workplace needs to start with an understanding of how the organization works today. Ask yourself:
We recommend that organizations do an inventory of their systems and the information they contain and identify systems that are hard or impossible to access remotely.
One of the key challenges to remote work is the assumption, generally invalid, that remote workers spend all day watching March Madness, or playing Words with Friends, or watching cat videos. If your employees are doing that, you have a management problem, not a remote worker problem. Due dates and deadlines still occur in remote environments, and employees need to get the same work accomplished remotely as they would in the office.
It’s also important for the organization to remember that out of sight doesn’t mean out of mind in two respects.
First, if the work is getting done, assignments, reviews, bonuses, promotions, etc. should reflect that and not be granted on the basis of “face time”. And the workday is still the workday. In an office environment, most employers would hesitate to call staff during off hours and wouldn’t have a realistic expectation of employees spending all night doing email. The same thing has to apply for remote workers.
Similarly, employees – and their families and friends – need to understand that working from home is work. While many employers offer some flexibility in the hours worked on any given day, the work still has to get done.
A home office with a door that can close is ideal, but remote work can still be as efficient as onsite work provided the employee has someplace to work without distractions and provided that appropriate boundaries and expectations are set.
It might also be helpful for organizations to determine “core hours” - say, 10-3 every day. That gives a set window when everyone should be available for calls, meetings, etc. as required.
All of that said, there are some technical aspects to address to help ensure your digital workplace is effective.
It’s incredibly important that the organization standardize on tools and systems to the maximum extent possible – remote work is challenging enough without having to check a number of different systems depending on which one Bob in Accounting or Jill in Engineering is using.
When it comes to safeguarding the organization’s information and systems, employees need a lot of guidance. Some of the key things to address include:
Instead, organizations should consider implementing tools designed for collaboration. These can be grouped according to their primary function, though there is significant overlap. Each group has a couple of examples, but this should not be considered an endorsement of those examples.
While the impetus for the digital workplace is currently due to the immediate issues with coronavirus, organizations should also consider whether the digital workplace might actually make employees more effective. Simply reorienting the organization’s processes away from paper to digital can make a significant impact, and what employee wouldn’t be more productive without having spent 60 or 90 minutes (or longer!) in crushing traffic or transit?
It does require proper planning, and the technologies involved should be planned, standardized where possible, and supported by IT. Employers and employees alike have to trust that work will get done in the way it needs to be and with appropriate access controls and security considerations. But organizations should consider remote work and digital workplace capabilities for any employee that is not physically required to be onsite (and meetings don’t!).
For more practical guidance to mapping, standardizing, and automating operational processes with the right strategies and technologies for your digital workplace, consider AIIM's Business Process Management training program.