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Operation Golden Phoenix
This week, Dataline is participating in Operation Golden Phoenix. Operation Golden Phoenix is a four-day multi-agency collaborative training event designed to assist federal, state and local agencies with large and…
DISA Reaches out to Industry on Cloud Computing
In an interview with Computerworld , published in the New York Times, John Garing expanded on his goals for the DISA cloud computing initiative. Garing said that, “… he and…
Cloud Computing is $160B Market
According to the Financial Post, a Merrill Lynch Note estimates that cloud computing could be a $160B market by 2011. The companies that they see in the marketplace are shown…
SOA-R Educational Series: What is Cloud Computing
On July 16th, SOA-R held it’s first of six educational sessions on cloud computing for national security missions. Presenters during this first event were: Steven L Armentrout, PhDPresident & CEOParabon…
Gartner: Cloud Computing Fraught with Security Risks
Cloud computing is fraught with security risks, according to analyst firm Gartner. Smart customers will ask tough questions, and consider getting a security assessment from a neutral third party before…
The Definition of “Net-centric”
Last week, the Google Cloud Computing Group debated the definition of net-centric. The key thought was that net-centric was nothing more than internet-centric or basically “online” and therefore it really…
Cloud Computing Journal Launched
“The world’s first journal devoted to the delivery of massively scalable IT resources as a service using Internet technologies has been launched by SYS-CON Media. The all-new “Cloud Computing Journal”…
SOA-R First Session Presentations Announced
The presentations for the first session of the SOA-R Educational Series sesion have just been announced: Steven L Armentrout, PhDPresident & CEOParabon Grids, Clouds and Computation: Getting to Ground Truth…
Cloud Storage as a Service
In SAN vs cloud storage – a gray or silver lining? , Joseph Hunkins review last December’s observations of cloud storage by Chris Mellor of Techworld: “Google does not use…
Google: Model for the Systems Architecture of the Future
In December of 2005, Prof. Paul A. Strassmann of George Mason University, provided an excellent outline for cloud computing success in a netcentric environment: Network-Centric Requirements (2010)• Downtime ( 1…
Workplace productivity is hurt every day by the very technology developed and purchased to improve it. Forrester announced this surprising conclusion in their latest “How To Wake Up From The Nightmare Of Workplace Technology Distraction†study. The Forrester Analytics Global Business Technographics® Workforce Benchmark Recontact Survey included 6,508 respondents in Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, the UK, and the US. The study also noted that technology vendors now control the future of workplace distraction citing:
- Apple’s move to make iPhones less addicting by adding the screen time features in iOS 12.35;
- Google’s establishment of a dedicated Digital Wellbeing team to research how to design Android apps that deliver value in context without introducing distractions; and
- Intel’s Project Athena, which aims to create next-generation experiences by inspiring technology to help employees maintain their focus.
This report provided essential practical steps for improving workplace productivity. The primary recommendation was establishing a balance between worker connectivity and focus. The business productivity tools highlighted by this study were email, telephones, and the computer.
One surprising fact discovered during the study was that employees open 70% of all emails within 6 seconds of receipt and that every one of these actions led to a 64-second loss in productivity while the employee tried to resume the interrupted task. While that amount of time may seem trivial, the average 84 emails received every day accumulates to 1.5 hours of lost productivity daily from a single method of communication. Smartphones are also a significant source of distraction. The mere presence of that connectivity device lying dormant on an employee’s desk introduces a distracting cognitive load that can weaken problem-solving skills and working memory. A growing societal bias toward connection is one of the main reasons why employees only spend 44% of their time fulfilling their primary job duties. The results highlighted that 90% of Americans have their phones within reach 24×7, and 36% say they never turn them off.
Cognitive specialists say that the constant stream of notifications rewires the brain’s dopamine response pathways, which make it more difficult for employees to curb smartphone distractions while at work. A secondary issue? Given the finite level of cognitive resources humans possess, employees who use their smartphones after work rob their stores of mental energy that could otherwise be made available for the next workday. Modern workplace computers themselves are also significant cognitive distractions. Windows 10’s frequent in-place upgrade program also has the potential to disrupt employees’ productivity significantly. Things like preventing interaction between business and personal apps, requiring separate logins for individual apps, or requiring password changes, are major culprits.
An organizational remedy for technological theft of employee cognitive resources is a strategic plan built around designing and building technology environments that limit distractions and enable employee focus. This path will also improve employees’ productivity, collaboration, and connection to customers. An essential component of such a strategic endeavor would be an enterprise commitment to purchase and maintain the vast majority of employee technology. This commitment also includes establishing policies that shape employee technology experience by monitoring and remediating technology related events that impact the employee experience. Monitoring tools can gather critical data on this experience. An example of this is the use of workforce analytics solutions to collect, measure, characterize and organize employee digital exhaust, which is the trail of data left by a user’s online activity.
People-centric tools from Citrix can help in this strategy by:
- Conducting an inventory of all technology that affects employees’ daily productivity; and
- Identifying the sources of workplace distraction
Citrix Digital Workplace, for example, can uncover productivity anomalies by analyzing user behavior, and use predictive analytics, machine learning, and artificial intelligence to detect threats and provide actionable information. It can also protect data and IP by basing security controls on user context, regardless of app, data, device, or network. A digital workspace delivers secure, easy access to apps and data from a single interface, and users benefit from intelligent search capabilities, task automation, and a consistent experience across devices. These tools will also enable important cultural changes with technology implementation that helps create a holistic workplace distraction strategy.
When companies take the advice offered in the study, they should also embrace the four pillars that enable the focused worker, namely:
- Strive to deliver an exceptional end user experience
- Implement effective policy governance
- Implement continuous monitoring of the employee workplace experience; and
- Encourage collaboration among business peers to drive awareness and avoidance of workplace distractions
In a recent blog post by Citrix CMO Tim Minahan, he notes that ‘technology overload and complexity can hinder the employee experience and have a negative impact on employee engagement. With a rising war for talent and a largely disengaged workforce, leaders must use innovation as an enabler that helps their organizations get the best out of their people while removing noise and distractions.’ These insights were based on a recent collaboration with the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) to investigate the role technology plays in employee experience (“The Experience of Work: The Role of Technology in Productivity and Engagementâ€).
Citrix provides a unified, secure, and intelligent workspace that empowers people to do their best work, saving them time, reducing frustration, and delivering excellent user experience. Citrix Workspace offers a comprehensive set of workspace service offerings including single sign-on with multi-factor authentication, endpoint management, file sync and share, content collaboration, secure SaaS delivery, end-to-end analytics, intelligent guided feeds, web security and more. Learn more about the importance of establishing a corporate employee experience strategy by downloading the Forrester study or visiting Citrix at https://www.citrix.com/lp/digital-workspace-business.html.
This post sponsored by Citrix.
Cloud Computing
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