It is always exciting to start brainstorming with a customer on how to get their employees to use new tools for internal communications and modern work. The participants arrive to the first workshop slightly confused; often, they don’t even know what the fuss is all about or they think it’s just another tool training session.
The confusion only gets worse when I ask, ‘What is it exactly that you want to achieve with this renewal?’ At this point, some participants hide behind their laptop, whereas the Project Manager shows a PowerPoint that specifies the objectives of the deployment. The most common ones are:
Customers with a little more background knowledge want to:
Those wishing to be at the cutting edge of information work proudly state that they want to take The Digital Leap.
But this answer falls short. I claim that the project could eventually bring tangible benefits to the table as well, even return on investment.
The deployment of modern tools is far too often overshadowed by the intranet itself. The intranet is seen as a waste of time or even as an investment that generates costs but does not improve the bottom line.
Decision-makers are still burdened by obsolete ideas of an intranet. An intranet is simply seen as a top-down information channel, a place where employees can read important news, travel rules or the principles of the quality system. Fortunately, different approaches are starting to emerge. One reason is software suites like Office 365 that draw all communication and work together into a coherent whole. Little by little, the intranet itself ceases to be the most important objective.
No intranet project should be launched without a clear business benefit in sight. Without an articulated benefit, you cannot expect the management to allocate resources for the project, actively act as an example or guarantee that the employees can genuinely spend time for trainings.
It is also naïve to think that the staff would start learning a new tool among continuous overload and uncertainty, and would expose their own imperfections on a discussion forum – unless it provides clear benefits.
The adoption of new things in an organization follows a familiar pattern. A small fraction of people are immediately enthusiastic, try out the new gadgets and change their ways of working without any bigger problems.
An equal proportion of people occupy the other end of the spectrum: they will not embrace the change unless forced to, unless it is a precondition for their salary.
The rest of the staff will adopt the new tools, but it requires an effort from your part. A few training sessions and a quick guide are not enough.
The change requires long-term commitment and effort from the entire organization. When the users understand how the new tools will help them, the team and the entire company, they are willing to step out of their comfort zone to learn new things.
Initially, people view the benefits from the perspective of their own job. The benefits might include
The new way of working can also benefit the entire team
The management can perceive the change as
Does this sound like consulting fluff? It certainly does, if you are renewing your intranet platform without aspiring for a bigger change. But if you wish to find out how you could gain more than just the license and server savings, it pays to listen to the consultant who goes on and on about goals, even after the first coffee break.
Or, can you already tell me, what generates the return on investment in your intranet project?