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What is a digital workspace
1. What is a digital
workspace?
Source: https://www.invotra.com/blogs/defining-digital-workspace
Authored by: Fintan Galvin
2. A definition for Digital workspaces
Noun: Digital Workspace
â Digital - Involving or relating to the use of computer technology
â Workspace - A place or environment where people work
The unified interface where users engage with people, knowledge & their
environment with the sole purpose of getting their job done.
3. Digital Workspace V Digital Workplace
One of the key areas of confusion is the difference between workplace and
workspace.
We see the key difference being that the âDigital Workspaceâ spans any part of / or
multiple workplaces and frequently will not be physically connected.
5. In the early days we found that the structured systems we used for lines of
business such as finance or booking systems could not handle the unstructured
information that flows around our organisations.
This was a hindrance to day to day operations. To solve the problem we came up
with the Intranet and it became the dumping ground of everything that did not
have a defined structured home.
Key aspects : Basic content management / Widgets to display content / Revisions
of information / Basic Search / Workflows / Navigation management / Data import /
Analytics
Intranet : All about Knowledge : 1990âs - 2000âs
6. As social networks became more prevalent and people got used to interacting
online, we began to realise the benefits of these social interactions. Leveraging
them was a popular way to drive engagement among employees within
organisations.
So began, the Social Intranet where we replicate relationships and interactions in
our private lives with those within organisations and teams. The familiarity of
these interactions are commonplace, thus proving popular with the masses.
Key aspects : Discussions / Commenting / Productivity tools / Following / Voting /
Org Charts / Profiles / Groups / Layout control
Social Intranet : All about People : 2010 - 2014
7. Suddenly we recognise that itâs not only âpeopleâ and âknowledgeâ that are relative
but also the workspace environment and everything within it. The era of
connecting all the dots was born with the arrival of the Internet of Things (IOT).
The Digital Workspace combines the IOT concept with the traditional Intranet and
Social Intranet.
Key aspects : Building Information (bim) / Location aware / Contextual / Spaces /
Sensors / Spaces / Environmental / Ambience
Digital Workspace : All about Things :2014 - 2016
8. What are the key drivers of Digital
Workspace evolution?
9. A need to instantly engage and communicate with everyone in your organisational
network has intensified over recent years with the use of multiple communication
channels.
Enabling and consolidating the channels is a key driver for the development of the
digital workspace.
There is an increasing drain on everyones attention with a constant flow of new
inputs from social and environmental sources, that is making it ever more difficult
to engage and then maintain people's engagement with organisations.
Organisational Engagement
10. Smartphones with GPS are helping people be more efficient in their travel. We
are gaining additional ways to make sure our work environments are not only
more supportive but safer and more efficient.
We can now support our employees by leveraging the âthingsâ in their environment
in countless ways.
New opportunities are available to organisations that believe in early adoption of
innovative workplace technologies. Your digital workspace is the nervous system
for your organisation.
Ambient work environments
11. The relatively recent explosion in smaller communications & notifications has
proven to be a significant driver in the way we ingest information and how we
expect to send and receive information.
The move from complex infrequently changed communications that had long life
spans to smaller more frequently updated communications has proven to be
dramatic driver of our working environments.
Micronisation of communications
12. Organisations are now being designed for a state of constant change, rather than
a steady state.
Increased complexity in existing organisational models driven by external social
and technical market forces making changing business models the norm.
We are seeing organisations rapidly change direction and doing so in timescales
that were previously not possible.
Accelerated velocity
13. Organisational resources are now more often temporal and fungible. We have
always had an element of this in organisations, with short term leases on
equipment or hiring contractors. Now we are seeing this becoming micronised in
every area of the business.
Organisations are hiring people and resources for minutes rather than days or
weeks.
As more and more things and people become connected this just becomes more
ubiquitous.
Time as a commodity
14. What are the key enablers of a digital
workplace?
15. People
At the core is the need to engage people with each other, âknowledgeâ and
âenvironmentâ at the time they need it. To this end you have to ensure that the
system provides them with the ambient support they need to find each other, as
well as comprehensive ways in which to surface âknowledgeâ in a contextually
intelligent manner based on the patterns of operation within the organisation.
To do this successfully we must leverage every opportunity to consume
knowledge into the system from all available resources and understand if that
âknowledgeâ is temporary or lasting. From this we can then apply context, patterns
and governance to orchestrate the interactions to best effect.
16. Knowledge
In order to work, the systems must understand the semantics of the information
and the context of the interaction and have an ability to surface âknowledgeâ.
Delivering to the right people at the right time is the underpinning key to success.
This necessitates the input of rich content be it as simple and comprehensive as
possible, as the volumes required is vast in the majority of cases the inputs should
be coming from other specialist systems.
Understanding of the patterns which necessitates its exposure and then having
the ability to deliver this knowledge in the right way to enhance the user
experience is the basis for success.
17. Environment
The evolution of the working environment is becoming truly ambient in its ability to
support your operational activities and as such a rich source of âknowledgeâ and
context that you can surface. Building information passed from BIM sources
through to âthingsâ with sensors and âthingsâ that have been enabled with the likes
of RFID stickers. You now have a vast array of information that you need to
surface to your users in useful contextually sensitive ways.
This enables organisations to become responsive to people's needs in ways that
previously were impossible or to expensive.
18. Messages
Messages come in a huge variety of shapes and sizes, from emails to notifications
from devices, which in the main are becoming micronised. Your systems have to
recognise and handle this evolution.
The volume is growing at an exponential rate and it's critical that your digital
workspace allows for both organisational and personal control over these. Not
only the quantity and type, but the knowledge needs to be contextually
controllable.
Digital workspace must focus on only delivering what it needs and interface to
existing messaging systems, where it can to ensure that the organisation and
people don't get overloaded with messages in different systems.
19. Time
In the way that ambient environments recognise time, the digital workspace must
have a knowledge of time and react accordingly.
This goes from basic scheduling or publishing through to surfacing âknowledgeâ
differently based time contexts for example historic knowledge should not be
displayed in the same manner as current.
Context is heavily time based at its core, so for the system to be truly contextually
reactive it must have an inbuilt concept of time through every layer of the system.
20. Relationships
Everything within the system needs to relate to something else in order for the
system to make sense. If they don't have any relationships then they don't belong
in the same system. The digital workspace needs to overlay a layer of
relationships over different systems. Sometimes these relationships can be
obvious, like a user is the author of a policy or responsible for a fire extinguisher or
manager of a building. Other relationships can be more nebulous like sender or
receiver. It's critical that the workspace understands and handles this broad set of
relationship types and reacts accordingly.
21. Governance
Enabling rapid evolution and application of governance models sits at the core of
the concept of the digital workspace. The application of governance is critical to
operational success and ensures risk reduction during ever evolving
organisational structures.
You must ensure implementation of governance across a wide range of areas
including : Legal / Standards / policies / rights / commercial obligations /
Auditability / regulatory / transparency.
These can be implemented in a variety of ways and frequently will need to be a
combination of areas where relationships are a major factor.
22. Patterns
The necessity to leverage all an organisation's resources means understanding
what's happening all the time across the entire organisation, its connected
resources is absolutely critical to overall success. The full meaning of an
interaction in its totality (context) can only be achieved through extensive use of
analytics.
Feedback loops driven by statistical analysis should be used to develop the overall
mechanical surfacing of interactions. These patterns become the lifeblood of the
organisation and rapidly identifying them and reacting accordingly is critical to
attaining the levels of velocity needed by modern organisations.
23. Establishing the full meaning of an interaction in its totality in order to deliver back
the right interaction is key to making the system truly efficient and usable.
Targeting responses based on context in a personalised manner is at the core of
the digital workspace concept. Statistical interactions can also be used to drive
contextual reactions in order to become truly responsive to the greater
organisational context.
Context should take as many inputs as is feasible, but as an absolute minimum
you should consider time, relationship, interaction model, location and personal
attributes.
Context
24. Orchestration
Organisations need to be able to orchestrate what's happening, when and by who
with significant velocity . This orchestration of all available resources needs to be
fluid and responsive while adhering to the governance set out. Both centralised
and decentralised orchestration are necessary to allow your organisation to
respond to the individual user needs.
Centralised orchestration allows you to rapidly evolve by deploying new major
resources, while decentralised orchestration allows you to respond at a local or
user level to their personal context.
25. Polymorphism
Facilitating interactions between âpeopleâ, âknowledgeâ and âenvironmentâ enable
your organisation to be contextually optimised. From simplistic messages telling
you a plant needs water to complex knowledge based reactions, like changing a
organisational alert status based on inputs from internal and external systems, all
need to be handled.
Fundamentally you need to have a system that recognises and handles different
multiway actions based on a variety of inputs from different sources, probably the
most important of these being actions based on knowledge based variable
analysis combined with contextual filters. With this volume of actions it's critical
that you have established patterns that can be leveraged.
26. User Experience
In order for the digital workspace to work its must allow you to react to your
organisational user needs. As organisations evolve the system must support this
from simply changing the branding to restructuring the IA / UI.
What really matters is that this control is in the hands of the organisation rather
than being dictated to by an agent.
To be truly useful the system must give a unified user experience over disunified
disparate systems, always giving the user a sense of the overall organisational
context.