5. Use of social tools gets so far then stalls
“Only 13% of IT professionals believe their
internal social networks have been a success”
– Information Week Survey 2011
“enterprises with several years of Enterprise 2.0
efforts under their belt have failed to reach the
tipping point and cross into mainstream
adoption of social collaboration”
– Laurie Buczek “The big failure of Enterprise 2.0 Social Business”
6. Only a fraction of SharePoint gets used
80% of organisations with SharePoint continue
emailing documents back and forth
-- Usamp survey 2010
7. In some companies, the intranet is seen as the last resort
“Whenever somebody tells me that the answer is on
SharePoint my heart sinks. I know I’ll never find it”
-- Employee survey response [Anon]
8. Balance of resources given to system vs. adoption
implementation
team
technical
team
9. (it’s not just a SharePoint issue)
25% office workers bored ‘most of the time’
“...they resort to minor acts of vandalism and stealing
post-it notes for stimulation”
12. These sound like hygiene factors
If that’s all we have, SharePoint will only ever be
in the background
13. Nobody cares if SharePoint is used apart from you
Should your SharePoint be
essential?
“People spent twice as long on my intranet”
Is that good or bad?
18. The Benefits Map
Capability Benefit Outcome Strategic
Goals
Feature
Customer
satisfaction
Corp-Wide
Comms
Single identity
“One”
Organisation
All employees
see same msg.
2-way comms
channel
Employee
engagement
Less churn
Time savings Response
times faster
Fewer
outages
Better stock
control
Social media
Single CMS
ERP
Dashboard
Quicker data
access
Single place
to collaborate
Flexible project
resourcing
Best people
on a taskTeam Sites
19. Does this mean your people will care too?
Maybe ...but it’s not as simple as WIIFM
SharePoint team Employee
20. Do happy people work harder?
“we analyzed the 64,000 specific workday events
reported in the diaries: of all the events that
engage people at work, the single most important
— by far — is simply making progress in
meaningful work.”
“we asked 669 managers from companies
around the world to rank five employee
motivators in terms of importance, they ranked
“supporting progress” dead last.
Amabile & Kramer in “The Progress Principle”
43. BYOD
40% of students would accept a lower paying job if
they could choose their work device
--Cisco survey 2011
44. Freedom to choose how to collaborate
‘Friction free’ collaboration
Connecting to the right people
Access to information without barriers
45. Self-expression
“When the company imposed rules prohibiting
workers from blogging about their non-work
interests, work postings dropped. When the
company allowed workers to post freely, blogging
and reading went up and employees exchanged
more information about both work and play”
54. 4 Levels of Adoption (MARS model)
Requirement for expenses
system1. Mandated
2. Accepted
3. Rewarding
4. Stimulating
55. 4 Levels of Adoption (MARS model)
Fill in as much as possible
from other sources
Show % employees
complied
Ensure leader profiles
completed
1. Mandated
2. Accepted
3. Rewarding
4. Stimulating
56. 4 Levels of Adoption (MARS model)
Employee of the month
Feature profile with any
activity
Show % individual profile
complete
1. Mandated
2. Accepted
3. Rewarding
4. Stimulating
57. 4 Levels of Adoption (MARS model)
Connect with like-minded
people
Get involved as an expert
Place to express yourself
1. Mandated
2. Accepted
3. Rewarding
4. Stimulating
58. Can you overdo it?
People think process intrinsically good and forget
about business value (Morten Hansen ‘Collaboration’)
Silos can be powerful
‘Good’ adoption is not all employees using all tools
59. ClearBox Consulting
Intranet, SharePoint & Digital Workplace
Strategy
Governance
Implementation
Collaboration
Training
www.clearboxconsulting.co.uk
@sammarshall
There seems to be a lot of talk about intranets, employee engagement and morale. I want to focus specifically on what it takes to get employees using an SharePoint as an intranet though much of what I cover also applies to external uses of SharePoint, such as extranets.
Psychology degree
What would it take?> money, make current state unattractive, explain why (charity fundraiser), rugby team, majority over...make future state more attractive...
What’s the impact of people not making this leap?
13%: new report by Information Week. The report, called Rebooting the Antisocial Network November 2011 interviewed 450 people in North America
When budgeting, we still tend to plan the technology in detail but allocate relatively little to adoption, even though most people agree that the people element if by far the bigger challenge.
2011 report by British Psych Soc. Of 100 UK office workersBut this isn’t a talk about general “Employee engagement”
We’ll take itas a given that the content is worth visiting.Usability is really important, but good usability alone doesn't cut it – Mac vs Windows eternal debatePeople are busy, you can’t “build it and they will come”
Essential place for maternity policy – excited yet?
“Essential” appears in plenty of SharePoint strategies,But we need to ensure the focus isn’t on SharePoint but on the outcome
Work on the right thingsWork effectivelySharePoint (or even better, digital workplace) can play a role
This is what makes SharePoint different
This showcases all the tools manufacturer makes, challenge is to SIMPLIFY and make versions that match hunter, fisherman, boy scout etc.
This is where SharePoint is a platform – your starting point is NOT what you should deliver, but a bucket from which you can select some tools, turn others off and perhaps add on something unique (like a hairdryer).
Firstly, helping people work on the right thing is important. So optimise adoption for the things that matter to your business.So we have a clear view of the business benefit, so now we just have to tell our employees and they’ll use it, right?
Not necessarily. Even if they agree good for the business, there may be other inhibiting factors...Not WIIFM at least in Narrow sense because:Implies “If > Then “ REWARD MINDSET. People are not that mercenary. As we’ll see, they can be altruistic, they do things like crosswords for fun, they find some things rewarding in themselves.People don’t always do what’s best for the organization... Random example: Leadership at banks; fear – crossing the bridgeWIIFM IS true in the wider sense, though, of thinking what would motivate people to use it.
From an employee perspective, its this that we need to be enabling.INTRANTES CAN HELP – this is what we should be aiming forTeresa Amabile, a professor at Harvard Business School, and Steven Kramer, an independent researcher, are the authors of “The Progress Principle.” To gain real-time perspective into everyday work lives, we collected nearly 12,000 electronic diary entries from 238 professionals in seven different companiesOur intranets should aim for this more than anythingLeads to a state of flow>>> but don’t expect users to thank you!we analyzed the 64,000 specific workday events reported in the diaries: of all the events that engage people at work, the single most important — by far — is simply making progress in meaningful work.we asked 669 managers from companies around the world to rank five employee motivators in terms of importance, they ranked “supporting progress” dead last. Fully 95 percent of these managers failed to recognize that progress in meaningful work is the primary motivator, well ahead of traditional incentives like raises and bonuses.
So to make sense of how to approach this, here’s ClearBox’s model.Not Maturity, but about “Depth of uptake” (how deep is your love!). Think of where the elements of your own intranet fall on thisThinking tool – not claiming to have re-invented Maslow’s hierarchy here
Good in the sense that you “sweat the asset” of SharePoint and keep costs downIf its the only way to get expenses back, people will probably use it. Is this what we aspire to with “essential SharePoint”? Sounds more like “unavoidable intranet”But hardly inspiring. Want to plan your pension? Learn how to compost? Floss your teeth? There’s an App for that...
How many of you force the intranet to be the browser homepage, and then throw away all the hits data on that page as invalid?Mandating leads to only minimal compliance.I once reviewed a project management system when working in KM. To close a project a mandatory field was: What lessons did you learn from this project?Over 80% of people answered this in 1 word: “None”
But an intranet is like a magazine not a book – how do you sustain interest, how do you keep it relevant and valuable?See lots of good launch campaigns where lots of energy goes into creating excitement around something new.
People need to know it existsExample from Yum!’s(Pizza Hut, KFC etc.) intranet called iChing and a campaign to get people to fill in their personal profiles, like My Site
Accessible as-needed = on mobile phones; British Airways 70% employees access from home.Safety – remember the picture of the rickety bridge?Even if you tell someone about the benefits to them, they won’t always do it. I know I should floss more often and drink less, but we’re not always that rational
Safe to USE – metadata and template information
“Ask me about the edge” – created floor walkers and champions
Unilever support centre*Sandpit* so people can experiment without messing up
If you know everyone else in your group has already crossed the bridge...Success stories emphasise usage elsewhere.Facebook managed rollout by snowballing campus-by-campus. For a newteam collaboration tool, activate it a business-unit at a time, not early-adopters across the board.
nGage lets you report back on adoption levels and show that “most people are across the bridge already”
HR director takes part in forums, other leaders do to as peers.Legitimises time spent on itWhen intervention needed, he has stepped in and defended people who have been outspoken – demonstrated that this is “normal” way to work.
Lotus notes is 4thWork towards making old side of the bridge increasingly unattractive but don’t suddenly cut the ropes.This is why Google Wave failed – not easy transition from normal email.
ABB increased number of SP users by 43% after it introduced Harmon.ie.
[See: Video from RSAnimate on You Tube] 3 mins
Tying activity to rewards e.g. Annual bonus or ToastersInteract DonutsGaming the system –, Hospital trolleys re-named “Beds” and hallways “wards” to meet 12 hr target. Bevan and Hood Siemens “Share Points”OK so long as OK if act is mechanical – e.g. fill in a form. CHARITY donation poss betterOK if to get initial attention e.g. Treasure hunt but not ongoing
Nationalfield copies Facebook to tap in to people’s understanding of what it does – used in Obama campaign“Nobody trains you on Facebook” <> “Its easy to use”. It’s awful to use, but people are intrinsically motivated & have time to play as a way of learning.
Promote own skills. E.g. Used as part of promotion process, at one bank a blogger found fame with senior execs by sharing tips on Blackberry use.AEPBlogger of the month gets to be “guest editor”
These are activities that will be the most enduring.These not things that Intranet managers can do alone, but more of role intranet can play in bigger shift towards employee engagement See Amabile & Kramer’s “Progress Principle” for more.
Digital workplace has big role to play in terms of flexibility for basic productivityHaving an intranet that facilitates employee needs is not exciting in itself, but is a key part in facilitating this element63% less sick leave among BT home workers than office-based counterparts99% of women return after maternity leave (national average = 47%)Need to support intranet on more platforms and more devices
Need to support intranet on more platforms and more devices
Giving people the right toolkit and then stepping back“Friction free” – no need to book, worry about costs. Remove things that stop “Flow”Having to seek permission to ask for information or involve in a project adds friction. Outsourcing can kill this e.g. Every database query has a cost.
Ghose and his colleagues followed the posting and reading behaviour over a 15-month period of 2,396 employees at a large information technology and consulting firm. One caveat: the benefits of unrestricted corporate blogging didn’t start to show up for at least seven weeks.
Intrinsic purpose: caravan enthusiasts helping on forums, lunch menus, for sale & wantedDownsides:Their purpose may not have business value Can only go so far – this is why social adoption seems to have great pilots but then stall
Finding the right person for the job – nothing more frustrating than an expert “passed over” for a role
“Employee engagement” bitNOT purpose of the intranet, but how intranets support sense of purpose in the work employees do. Seen most strongly in vocational work such as charity, healthcare, fire services. This is why nurses etc work for relatively low payCan be hard if your Org is low on purpose. Working for Unilever, optimising soap production doesn’t imdiately inspire (though actually big killer in developing countries)
CAFOD – international development aid charity
Everyone in CAFOD has publishing rights in the CMS so they can share their stories.It’s strongly driven by online communities so if you have relevant knowledge you can help, and progress data is available to allLink BHAGS to your own work – transparency across org.Early warning system of when View at top doesn’t match feeling on ground. Steve Elop at Nokia used Yammer to start a conversation with everyone about the changes they needed to make. In other organizations it might be more about feeding customer reactions back inside the firewall
Back to the bridge imageNot everyone and every scenario needs to aim for “S. People are engaged with their work, don’t look for ‘Mastery’ in a room booking system.Stand-alone social techs WILL take off if they appeal to S-level, else need to be part of workflow and take away the “over and above my job” to be accepted.Experiment, listen, adjust, repeat
Worked example: getting people to fill in a rich profile
Accepted – remove the negatives, reinforce the “normal
Final thought: can you over-engage people?Yes.5 great things about silos: http://www.clearboxconsulting.co.uk/blog