Ask a Baby Boomer currently working in an office setting whether they are working in a high-tech, futuristic environment and they will probably say yes.
Ask a Millennial working in the same space the same question and you will most likely get a different answer. Forty-four percent of Millennials believe their workplace isn’t smart enough and 82 percent say the level of technology available in an office influences their decision about whether or not to take a job.
While the modern workplace is more flexible, collaborative and interconnected than ever before, few organizations have the tools and expertise to fully maximize technologies such as artificial intelligence, voice command and facial recognition, and seamless interoperability between spaces and devices, but the office of tomorrow is well within reach.
Here are three key characteristics of the office of tomorrow and how technology can get you there:
As technology changes, the way companies adopt and apply that technology has to change too. According to Brad Sousa, Chief Technology Officer at AVI Systems, office technology adoption has traditionally been product-driven—companies focused on specific manufacturers or single platform solution such as an integrated video conferencing system. To maximize the impact of today’s technology solutions, IT professionals need to change their frame of reference, Sousa said, and focus on consumption instead.
"It's not going to be a single platform, it's going to be a series of ecosystems that have what we call a 'unified workflow.'"
- Brad Sousa, CTO
“I would encourage us to consider how to roadmap a series of user expectations and then based upon the user expectations, which are going to define how a user wants to consume this, then we architect what that solution looks like," Sousa said. "It's not going to be a single platform, it's going to be a series of ecosystems that have what we call a 'unified workflow.'"
For example, instead of investing in a large conferencing system that tethers employees to your conference room, deploy a more agile system that incorporates cloud capabilities such as Zoom or Skype so anyone can join from anywhere and at a moment’s notice if necessary.
“How people align themselves with the technology will be the same irrespective of what ecosystem they're using,” Sousa said. “But the ecosystems need to be flexible enough that if they're on the phone or on an iPad or on a Windows device or a Mac device or in a room or wherever they are, they can all achieve the expectations and outcomes that they're trying to achieve.”