When you’re working with your team, even across a range of locations, what’s most important is a shared state of mind. That state of mind is much more important for productivity than shared office space. What are the communications and collaboration trends of today, and how can we help our teams benefit?
The real revolution of the cloud is not the fact that data or applications are located elsewhere, but rather that the cloud can make services universally available. And that’s the revolutionary trait of cloud communications: the fact that the services comes to you via subscription, so there is no infrastructure to manage. Although many workers still love their physical spaces, and there are good reasons for why, the digitization of all work services makes work more flexible.
The term ‘mobile first’ is a popular buzzword, but the real breakthrough is going to come when we are ‘mobile only.’ Once every service is available for people on the road and those in the office, we can finally break the chain to the physical world.
The move toward remote work will not come without challenges, though, according to one prominent CEO. Not every job will be suitable for remote work. Some employees need to be physically near every aspect of their job. Others simply need that stability to feel emotionally engaged with their organizations. In any case, technology provides a unique opportunity to bring us closer together than ever before. We’ve come a long way from mandatory physical meetings. With real-time mobile connectivity, we can finally be “near” each other no matter where we are. We’ve come a long way from phones and intranets to Unified Communications.
The key to this innovation will be optimizing how people work together. If you think the last five years were filled with change, just wait for the next five .
The CEO mentioned previously offers four strategies to make better use of digital technology and bring your office into the future:
Sources: Broadsoft, Innovation Excellence (Post by Daniel Kraft), Talent Culture (Post by Daniel Kraft)