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Workspace transformed: taming the digital tiger

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Workspace transformed: taming the digital tiger

Modern business is engaged in massive transformation as it responds to the digital opportunity, according to the Orange Business Services report, "Taming the Digital Tiger". Mark McCallum, director & head of global services Africa, Orange Business Services explores how customer and employee expectations are changing as connected technologies enable flexibility across every business process.

There are many benefits – from customer engagement to employee loyalty, but managing these changes is changing the role of management – and in some cases, management hasn't yet moved fast enough to control the digital beast.

The CIO must balance constant pressure from the business for flexible working (for example, decentralised workforce, no regular hours) and new devices on the one hand, and the need for cautious, planned adoption of mobility on the other, to ensure that business value is delivered at the right cost and with minimal risk.

Transition point

The promise of flexibility includes higher employee satisfaction and productivity levels, but these new practices shouldn't be confined to executive and sales teams. Employees across organisations expect the same kind of flexible control over when and where they work.
Look at Cisco, for example. It has moved to goal-based management and doesn't mandate where its staff members are located. Instead it assembles teams with the right skills for each need, using unified communications and task-based collaboration to support them. That's not to say every enterprise has mastered these transformations; around 58% of HR professionals say their company has embraced flexible working, but almost half of these have no time and attendance system in place to manage these arrangements.

There's no one-size-fits-all model. According to the report, each company has slightly different requirements. The process should be continuous, and those businesses that innovate with the new digital models will find solutions that enable them to reach business objectives faster and more efficiently than those that do not seize the opportunities afforded by new ways of working.

CIOs of African businesses, or those with operations in Africa, should look at the best international practice and then choose a service provider that can enable its implementation across its footprint. Considerations should include optimal performance in all regions, readiness for new ways of working and new cloud applications, cost efficiency, built-in security and standardisation across the board.

Orange Business Services sets itself apart from the competition by helping enterprise customers in Africa deploy their own hybrid networks using network, security, and performance management components. Based on experience working with 500 top multinational companies in Africa, Orange has built up a thorough understanding of use cases in Africa. This has assisted Orange to recognise a need to replace the individual design and management of all components with a set of standard services.

Structural change

Implementing these changes requires that enterprises break down existing silos between departments, empower end users to participate in the change management process and extend the role of IT provision. The obvious challenges (security, policy, mobile device management) are matched with less predictable issues (some companies have identified feelings of isolation among remotely based employees, others find the sheer number of flexible working solutions providers to be a challenge in itself).

A change of this magnitude demands companies take input from every stakeholder, including employees. Best practice suggests management of flexible working deployments is best served by appointing groups of executives and end users from every part of the organisation to manage these changes – with the added proviso that existing division-based silos and hierarchies also need to change. Some companies already encourage collaboration between teams in order to break down the silos and boost innovation and agility.

Empowering employees isn't skin deep

It's important to note that the evolution of flexible workspaces requires an equivalent transformation in the way people work, and this has consequences beyond the workplace in domestic arrangements and relationships with colleagues. No wonder end users need to be involved in managing these changes.
The role of the CIO is evolving to support business operations, not to tightly control all aspects of IT delivery but more in a governance model. This means CIOs must work closely with business leaders and other stakeholders to reach strategic decisions that transform working life at the company.

Policy is essential

Change management also means developing supporting policy to ensure end users change their habits and adopt the new tools. Microsoft requires people who work flexibly to gain permission from management and sign a charter of good practice. SNCF created a collaboration policy including training, meetings and video resources while the company CEO put transparent walls in his office in recognition of the need to abandon silo-based business thinking.

Unfortunately not every company embracing flexible working practices has thought it through. In a recent sub-Saharan Africa Employee Engagement Survey conducted by AON Hewitt and Emergence Growth, 88% of respondents stated that it was very/extremely important that their companies gave them more freedom and autonomy to do their job. Further to this, 72% of respondents state that flexi-time was very/extremely important to them.

Flexibility is everything. Even the technology solutions that are adopted need to be interoperable, reliable and secure. Technology is evolving faster than industry standards.

Seven tips to help transform the workspace:
1. Don't expect to change overnight: roll changes out slowly
2. Employees need training in use of new work tools/workspace
3. There is an essential requirement for company policy guiding use of time and BYOD
4. Leaders need guidance on managing remote staff
5. Move to results-based management practices
6. Don't skip the details, try to predict unpredictable problems
7. Remember that change management is a continuous process

* Mark McCallum, director and head of global services Africa

 

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