We’ve talked about Delve before. Making use of the Office Graph, a constantly evolving database of user relationships, behavior and preferences, Delve offers a very personalized window into your work. New features are being introduced to Delve as time progresses:
- Our first peek at Delve revealed a means of bubbling up files and experts relevant to the work we do. It also offered a powerful personalized search across Office 365 based on context derived from the Graph (with some configuration, it can search other cloud-based applications and on-premise installations)
- The next addition to Delve included an elegant internal blogging platform and enhanced personal profiles with the capability to share praise
- Most recently First-release tenants were given access to Delve Organizational Analytics (although you have to kick off a lengthy 6-week provisioning process before you can actually get your hands on it)
All three have a bearing on productivity, but it’s this third addition that I want to highlight here.
How it boosts productivity
Delve Organizational Analytics offers insights to both regular employees about how they spend their day and to managers who want to understand how effectively their team functions.
The employee view (My Analytics) breaks down how much time is spent in meetings – and highlights the type of meeting. Is it a weekly scheduled meeting that perhaps has perhaps become more comfortable than productive? The view also tallies hours spent with email – is your day a day of constant interruptions or focused effort?
The manager view (My Team Analytics) looks at relationships between people and workplace health. Are communications flowing effectively or have silos emerged? Are certain members of the team experiencing long hours… working long into their personal time?
In his TED talk, “Why work doesn't happen at work,” Jason Fried of 37signals drew parallels between knowledge/creative work and sleep cycles. He explained that work, like sleep is phase-based; you must progress through the early phases to get to the deepest, most fulfilling sleep. Interrupting this process means that the sleeper must start over. Our most productive, most creative working time, he argues, comes after the initial phases have run their course and frequent workplace interruptions ultimately do us no good.
6. SharePoint Line of Business Applications – Addressing the business’ need for speed
A few months ago, I reported a declining shift in demand for SharePoint. This has fortunately been counterbalanced by a massive surge of interest in Office 365. The best of SharePoint has been pulled apart… forming the foundation of many of Office 365’s most purposeful applications. These next-generation Office 365 apps can be rapidly deployed and enable instant collaboration.
SharePoint still exists, of course, but Office 365 has encroached on so many of the use cases that our customers once relied upon it to fulfill. This is perhaps for the best. SharePoint can do so much: the temptation is to build massive solutions that cover the widest possible set of needs. Who can resist? As feature after feature get tacked on, the user experience buckles and breaks… leaving no-one satisfied. The timing of the project to construct this behemoth can also drag on for years.
Shifting the bulk of the attention from SharePoint leaves it to fulfill a purpose that it actually handles really well – Line of Business Applications. These are laser-focused solutions that are rapidly assembled and deployed. In some cases, these applications can be built by savvy members of a line of business team (rather than waiting on an overtaxed IT department.)
How it boosts productivity
Over the last two years or so, Gartner has been championing the concept of Bimodal IT. They’ve tweaked to the fact that business has a massive appetite for speed when it comes to technology. Frustrated with IT’s capacity to keep pace, they look at other ways of getting the job done. In many cases, they turn to unsanctioned solutions – giving rise to “Shadow IT”.
In a Bimodal organization, IT solutions are delivered on two tracks – one that serves up solutions that are fast and fluid; the other is more conservative, focusing more on security and scalability. The speed-oriented track may be assisted by citizen developers. SharePoint is an ideal platform for empowering these citizen developers to create tools of immediate use to their working teams.