Articles
Without the use of asynchronous channels of communications (other than email), technical exhaustion will escalate to impact an even larger proportion of staff.
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The complex set of tools that got us through the last two years of remote work is evolving into a digital workplace infrastructure. What does this mean for ROI?
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To paraphrase Mark Twain: reports of excessive meeting attendance are greatly exaggerated.
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Digital communication use is like one large dating app. And the workplace is being forced to find perfect matches everywhere.
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A profile of Swoop analytics co-founder and chief scientist, Laurence Lock Lee, one of CMSWire's contributors of 2021.
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You would be forgiven for thinking that Yammer had gone underground given the focus on Microsoft Teams and Viva. But Yammer is still very much in play.
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Given appropriate controls, is there still a case for post on behalf of on an enterprise social networking platform?
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The articles on workplace burnout suggest most of us are suffering from overload, leading to potential burnout. But practicing self-care isn't the solution.
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The good news is our email usage is going down. The bad news? Chat is going up.
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As well as our human biases, “system noise” can create as much, if not more errors in our decision-making. Remote work may have mitigated some of those effects.
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Chat is designed for short, sharp communications. It is ephemeral, with no guarantee that it can be easily rediscovered in the context in which it was posted.
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Highly effective teams work "in the flow," interacting and reciprocating at a high-level of intensity with their colleagues.
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If collaboration is the foundation for employee experience, how do we know if it’s working or not?
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A recent cleaning spree unearthed advice on how to use collaborative technologies — from 1999. And you know what? It still holds true.
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