Optimize the workplace for outstanding employee experience

Designed for productivity and automated for efficiency, the intelligent workplace works for employees and customers alike. It’s also flexible enough to accommodate changes in the work we do, the work machines do, and how we cooperate and collaborate in the era of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

The rise of the modern collaboration estate

Employee experience takes center stage as organizations look to bring collaboration and productivity tools together on one platform.

While we still talk about work–life balance, there’s an increasing blend of the two as work becomes more closely linked to our individual purpose, achievement and even wellbeing. Today’s employees want to be measured on their contribution and outcomes, not the hours they clock up. They expect the organizations they work for to give them the freedom, flexibility and tools to do what they love, and do it well.

But there’s been a disconnect between the powerful, user-friendly tools people use in their personal lives – smartphones, messaging and file-sharing applications like WhatsApp and Dropbox – and the somewhat limited, mostly unintegrated, tools available ‘at the office’.

As organizations compete to attract the right talent through the company’s sustainability message and modern collaboration systems, it’s HR rather than IT that’s driving digital workplace initiatives.

Accelerate your move to a single collaboration platform

The modern collaboration estate bridges these gaps by bringing together unified communications and productivity systems in the same estate. With telephony, messaging, videoconferencing, Office365 and GSuite on the same platform, it’s easier to deliver the experience employees expect.

54% of participants recognize the high importance of transforming the employee experience, and the ways people perform their jobs, through digital initiatives.

'Moving to cloud requires a communications platform that is agile, flexible and dependable enough to be the foundation for employee workstyles and customer journeys that the enterprise needs to develop, adapt and continuously improve.'


Mark Alexander, Executive Vice President, Cloud Communications division, NTT Ltd.


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agilewaysofwork

The growing spotlight on agile ways of working

There’s a shift from individual to team productivity as digital, software-based solutions have a big impact on how people work.
It’s a sign of the times that both Cisco and Microsoft have an application called ‘Teams’, where everything relating to a work project – messaging, chats, file sharing, document editing – is done on a virtual site.

Digital applications and software-based everything are making a significant impact on how people work. As organizations seek to enable cross-functional, project-based teams from around the world, there’s a greater focus on productivity and collaboration solutions that offer flexibility and support a more agile way of working.

Artificial intelligence is accelerating this trend by making collaboration processes far more efficient. Virtual assistants can book venues, synchronize agendas, take notes, assign actions and set up follow-up meetings – making it easier for individuals to connect and work as teams, and enabling greater productivity.

Focus on enabling teams

The tools and applications your organization uses must do more than enable individual productivity: they must also empower teams. Any productivity solution must therefore fit your processes, culture and ways of working – and be flexible enough to accommodate a wide range of work styles.

70% of organizations say that one of the tangible benefits of their digital strategy is shaping new ways of working through organizational transformation.

NTT 2019 Digital Means Business Benchmarking Report


smartbuildings

The dual role of smart buildings


Smart buildings are being designed with both environmental sustainability and employee happiness in mind.

Workspace design has evolved to consider employee wellbeing and productivity alongside factors such as reducing running costs and minimizing environmental impact.

Activity-based environments are being designed with several factors in mind, first and foremost being the needs and preferences of people who use them. Think workspaces with private rooms for calls, coffee stations for recharging and connecting, and meeting rooms with interactive whiteboards.

Smart buildings will run on the Internet of Everything, where technology is used to make people more comfortable – for example, by adjusting temperatures, lighting and even aromas to suit individual preferences. Sentiment analysis can measure how employees are really feeling and assist with human capital management.

Design spaces that make employees happy

To optimize the use of space for maximum impact on positivity and productivity, get employee input into every aspect of design, from the look and feel of the spaces to the names of meeting rooms. Address any concerns about the use of data captured by IoT sensors. Such data should either be anonymized to show broad trends or used for the purposes of adapting the environment to individual preferences – not as a management tool for analysing productivity.

The top two strategies for meeting evolving workforce demands are flexible working (56.6%) and workspace environment (52.8%).

Dimension Data 2019 Global Customer Experience Benchmarking Report

'In enterprise communications, one size does not fit all. Organizations need tools to empower the way their employees want and need to work, enabling their workforce to communicate with the market in ways their clients want to be engaged.'


Dr Fiona Lodge, Product & Strategy Officer, Cloud Communications division, NTT Ltd.


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customerloyalty

The impact of split-second customer loyalty

Customer stickiness is vital in a digital world. When you have only a few seconds to prove yourself, you need every touchpoint on the customer journey to have maximum impact.
Because it’s now so easy for customers to switch providers, organizations must get the customer journey right to reduce churn and improve customer experience (CX) for the individual.

Unless the business is digitally born, the data needed to fuel CX lies in different systems across the organization – customer relationship management, enterprise resource management, sales, invoicing ­– all of which need to be brought together to create a single, connected customer journey.

Make the single source of data a strategic priority

For most organizations, it’s not technology systems but internal business silos that hold them back from connecting the data that connects their customers. The solution to a unified customer platform therefore lies in strategic focus and execution rather than technology implementation alone. Set the right key performance indicators for the right person, at an executive level, so there’s one point of accountability for driving this in the organization.

Of the 56.3% of organizations that have a single person accountable for CX in the organization, 69.6% say there is no CX representation at board level.

Dimension Data 2019 Global Customer Experience Benchmarking Report


datadrivenorganization

The effectiveness of the data-driven organization

With humans working alongside machines, the way organizations visualize and use data will be key to successful outcomes.

In the Fourth Industrial Revolution, anything that can be automated, will be. Humans will get involved only when machines can’t understand the context of a situation well enough to answer a query or resolve a customer problem.

Natural-language processing will be used in the first steps of a client interaction, while machine learning will analyse sentiments and preferences and direct customers appropriately. Robotic process automation will identify issues and either address them directly or alert a human to intervene.

Creating the ideal combination between what a machine does and what a human does will be critical. And the foundation of all of this is how you use the data you have throughout the customer journey.

Implement artificial intelligence and machine learning to accelerate opportunities

To become an effective, data-driven organization, start with the business problem then work down to the technology: where can artificial intelligence and machine learning automate processes, improve the customer experience and make life easier for employees?

Automation will replace between 11% and 25% of CX-led activity currently performed by agents by 2020, say 32.7% of organizations.

Dimension Data 2019 Global Customer Experience Benchmarking Report

'There’s been a disconnect between the powerful, user-friendly tools people use in their personal lives and the somewhat limited, mostly unintegrated, tools available "at the office".'


Nemo Verbist, Senior Vice President, Intelligent Business and Intelligent Workplace, NTT Ltd.


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technologiestowatch

Disruptive technologies to watch

Embedding technologies into physical spaces to create immersive, responsive ‘phygital’ spaces, where the physical world blends with the digital.

NTT’s Cokoon Project aims to take any physical space – a meeting room, office, shop, VIP box in a stadium – and plug in a limited series of technologies to transform it into a virtual environment that can create any range of experiences.


Five-sense immersion


Real-time response


With digital technologies, we can create any experience

which plays with the senses – including digital smells that

make an environment more relaxing.


Technologies not only detect but also respond to what is

happening in the space, in real time – for example, by

figuring out when people in a room are tired and anxious,

then changing the music or suggesting a break.

Digital spaces can be created in any industry where real estate needs some kind of disruption to move from being a static, analog environment to more dynamic, responsive environment.

We’re building the first Cokoons for NTT itself and are exploring other uses for this concept, for example:

  • Retail: To reclaim some traffic from online shopping, the new frontier for retail outlets is to create such an amazing experience in-store that it’s incomparable to the online experience.
  • Healthcare: Embedding this immersive, responsive solution in children’s hospitals can transform a long, complex and often distressing experience into a friendly, relaxed and interactive one.
Nemo Verbist

Nemo Verbist

Senior Vice President, Intelligent Business and Intelligent Workplace, NTT Ltd.

Nemo Verbist is the Senior Vice President for Intelligent Business and Intelligent Workplace. In this role he’s responsible for delivering the vision, strategy, and go-to-market execution for these two practices.

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