How To Use Social Technologies To Boost Your Workplace Design ...

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For precisely such reasons, within an emerging discipline increasingly becoming known as “workplace strategy,” the p
How To Use Social Technologies To Boost Your Workplace Design Briefing

A FUTURE STATE FOR WORKPLACE DESIGN BRIEFING

Your organisation contains more knowledge, experience and insight than ever gets put to use. But just because the media that can capture it might be social doesn't eliminate the need to act like professional publishers if you want to maximise the return on your people’s ideas. A corporate relocation or fitout is the perfect time to get busy on this work. Here's a how-to about how to achieve it.

How will your organisation use its new workplace? When they plan to relocate, modern leaders often aspire in their use of new workplaces to introduce new technologies and ways of working. These new ways may aim to cultivate increased employee engagement, productivity and collaboration among an emerging generation of workers with new expectations of their organisations. And those leaders may wish to use this impetus to reshape their organisation’s cultures. For precisely such reasons, within an emerging discipline increasingly becoming known as “workplace strategy,” the process of workplace design briefing is becoming ever-more complex. Even on apparent post-occupancy project completion, what is introduced into the modern workplace is not a static state but one that is dynamic and necessarily in constant evolution as the nature of work itself contorts both within and around it. Against this background, organising its knowledge for maximum effect is one of the biggest challenges any internet-era business faces. This has the consequence that any project from which your organisation intends to learn needs to be documented as a platform to service that purpose.

best possible opportunities to draw fully on the infinite reserves of creativity, experience and common sense your organisation contains. This assertion is based both on first-hand experience and research Shiro Architects is conducting into workplace strategy and its implications among those who have been there before. Our research is conducted among those with responsibility for making key property decisions in many of Australia’s largest corporations. The briefing method we advocate marries eternal professional publishing practices with the same collaborative, social workplace technologies as are already in use in many of those same organisations. For the benefit of those who have not worked in a professional publishing environment, what follows describes some of the necessary steps in the process of making sense of a chaotic brew of knowledge and contribution. We apply it to communicating and managing the arc of change across the entire process of fitout and relocation. It also provides a prime opportunity to initiate a platform the organisation can deploy across all of its future workplace learning.

About this document After almost 20 years as a sub-editor on newspapers and magazines, I spent half of 2013 working on a brief to organise technical documentation on a major web-technology project in the activity based working environment of a Big Four Australian bank. As the project’s communication vehicle, the bank’s development team uses the Atlassian wiki, Confluence, a first-class team documentation tool used by technical teams around the world. I’ve been interested for many years in how social workplace technologies can be used to capture knowledge and drive organisational learning. I am extremely grateful to the bank and the lessons its limitations as a publisher gave me for understanding how this could be performed more effectively to build knowledge across a workplace.

The institution of technologies capable of providing an iterative feedback loop capable of building on the best of the brains within your enterprise, provides all the more reason to get this right. Accordingly, we wish to introduce a new form of workplacedesign briefing as a possible trigger for bringing those greater aspirations to reality across the organisation. The method we advocate is both structured and highly flexible, as a relocation or office fitout provides one of the

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A FUTURE STATE FOR WORKPLACE DESIGN BRIEFING

Use workplace-design briefing to trigger new thinking across your organisation Increasingly, while few things stress an organisation to the same degree as a relocation, among the reasons many organisations may have for moving may also be the goal of introducing more flexible, mobile styles of working. Among our interviewees, Marcus Hanlon, executive general manager, property operations, at the giant property trust ISPT, now has responsibility for $11 billion worth of commercial and industrial property. Hanlon was also a key initiator in the National Australia Bank’s move to flexible ways of working for 4800 staff at its 700 Bourke Street, Melbourne, headquarters and says adapting to new ways of working presents a “root challenge for an organisation.” He is also among those who tell us that typically when looking to relocate, companies’ decision-making processes are still too often driven by technical factors, such as looming lease expiries and needs to change location, reduce rent and bring down the number of square metres occupied. Yet, he says the transformation of the workplace, “can’t be seen as a property initiative, it’s got to be seen as an organisational and cultural initiative, in which property is just the enabler.”

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Where in most organisations knowledge is typically neither captured or applied optimally, used strategically, the process of relocation can itself be viewed as a knowledgestrengthening initiative across an enterprise. Get started: Set your workplace-design briefing’s publishing agenda However you are going to document the work to be undertaken within your relocation project, you are going to find it necessary to define its scope to break it into recognisable chunks. An index or table of contents (TOC) establishes a starting point, which might sound like common sense, but experience tells us that when publishing for knowledge capture in a social milieu, as at the bank, the reality can be very much otherwise.

How could workplace design briefing deliver a superior result? When they move to new premises and new ways of working, leaders may use workplaces in the hope they will create new knowledge flows. But what would happen if they paid attention first to learning more about the knowledge flows before they started thinking about moving offices? How would this change the relocation outcome?

There is certainly a new discipline to be built around the organisation of social content if that material’s purpose is to drive learning, and we aim to outline some of those rules here. Why publishing social content requires new rules When we describe online publishing technologies as “social”, we imply that the creation of their content can be nearinstantaneous and fluid, more like conversation.

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A FUTURE STATE FOR WORKPLACE DESIGN BRIEFING

When material is created purely for social purposes, imposing order on it might be unimportant.

world awash with information, the reader’s attention needs to be drawn to that which matters most.

What motivates companies to invest in learning from workplace strategy?

The upside, when applied to organisational knowledge is that new contributions, often shared between those who might not work together or know each other, can make quickly for great leaps in new understanding and insight.

If such simple rules of publishing are unobserved, the consequence may be that instead of capitalising on the rich and diverse perspectives of those across the organisation, the quality of your documentation suffers, is then misunderstood and left unread, or worse, over time, completely ignored.



Optimise occupancy costs and space requirements



Increase revenue by creating environments that boost propensities for innovation and collaboration

Yet, if a small number of simple rules are built in, all documentation initiatives can improve over time.



Increase employee engagement, satisfaction and retention



Attract the best available employees



Increase business agility by adapting to the most flexible and adaptive technologies



Wikis offer a first-class method of documenting and disseminating structured, shared knowledge across an organisation in a manner that is entirely consistent with the aims of managing the increasing complexity of workplace design and workplace strategy definition.

Strengthen cross-disciplinary thinking and communication



Enhance change management strategies



Their use is also entirely consonant with the goals of driving innovation and organisational learning.

Create cultures ready to adapt to the changing nature of work and the needs of the enterprise



Reduce barriers to increase speed to market for new products and services

But, clearly when called upon to perform in writing in the workplace, not everyone is well suited to becoming a reporter, an editor or a creator of high-quality social documentation. Those without a love for creating and curating content are especially unlikely to give much forethought to creating it before they start. We can also predict that without proper guidance, or checking, not all contributors will be equally diligent about the consistency with which they tag, reference and index their own contributions. For all the upsides, then, of thoughtful participation, in business, this makes for significant challenges, as effective indexing and search are really important to the collective learning experience. Success ultimately will result from the quality of rules or guidance applied to contributions at the beginning, as in a

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To organise knowledge more effectively, use a wiki Based on its research and experience, Shiro Architects advocates adapting professional publishing practices to a conversational method of workplace-design briefing using a primary workplace social technology, a wiki.

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A FUTURE STATE FOR WORKPLACE DESIGN BRIEFING

We suggest this not just because we think it’s a good idea, but because thousands of other organisations do, including some of the biggest corporate names in Australia, including the bank I worked at.

Using wikis, conversations properly seeded by appropriate questions and guided by imagery can stimulate the responses necessary to root out what managers most need to know when redesigning a workplace.



You can’t find a document you are sure you had read before.

Why big organisations use wikis

This dialogue can be monitored to probe for sense, and edited to generate detailed reports.



Quality insights properly documented can give architects and workspace designers new and invaluable material to work with, beyond the superficial and readily visible.

You can’t understand what you are reading because it is either poorly constructed or badly written, with little attention paid to the needs of the reader.



And curated, digestible reports for use by managers and teams can become ready tools to assist understanding and decision making, and to precipitate further reflection, learning and intelligent contribution.

What you are reading lacks context and you don’t know what its background is, or even if what you are consuming is the most recent version.



Detail is included without any introduction that guides readers as to what follows, and absent of any summary or explanation as to its appropriateness for purpose.



You can’t validate what you are reading because the author has omitted key references as to the sources of its content.



No one has declared it complete, a draft or an initial scoping of a work in progress.

Wikis are a bit like the software equivalent of loose-leaf document binders. They comprise shared pages that may be endlessly reordered and relinked, and that anyone can create and edit, making them excellent vehicles for building on the knowledge of others. They are cheap to construct and maintain and can be utilised via the cloud, making them easy to access via any web browser. Wikis create a platform for enquiry, and they build project history by recording who contributed what and when. They slip neatly and unobtrusively into the workflow as questions asked of an organisation's people by email can be linked to the specific wiki page in which they submit their responses. In the managed process we champion, those responses are then read by an editor, and where necessary checked for sense.

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You know your project documentation regime is failing when...

They create a space, where necessary, such as the closeout of a project, in which to reflect on lessons learned. More importantly, they are especially well equipped to the purposes of change management, as they allow for consistent and dependable, centralised communication about all manners of concern to stakeholders before, across and beyond any relocation project’s physical implementation. Most importantly, they can be adapted to any learning a business must undertake if it is to remain competitive.

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A FUTURE STATE FOR WORKPLACE DESIGN BRIEFING

Adopt a process for commissioning the new written material required In any medium, good publishing process typically involves an “editor” in conceiving and developing an idea, deciding what is important to the reader and planning the ways in which that idea might best be explained. Specifying what needs to be included in any document then prioritises what gets written, how this relates to other documentation and how and when the work is to be completed, and by whom. The story brief might also specify who at subsequent production stages will verify the information’s accuracy and completeness. A system of labelling might also indicate a document’s degree of completeness (draft, complete, on hold, and so on), and another might suggest future dates at which content might be reviewed again for its accuracy and currency if it is to remain on the system. The consequence is that if you want order, you need someone to play the role of commissioning editor to determine what is to be produced, and what is to be culled.

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Make what you need to publish explicit Your publishing mechanisms need an overarching plan, and probably the number one message all future knowledgesystem builders must learn is that if you don’t know or don’t express what you want, you can’t expect to get great documentation as a result. Moreover, when you don’t specify what you want, you can’t expect someone else to guess how to turn what gets produced into what you want. Like anything else, effective publishing follows rules, and one of, if not the first, may be to answer, what is the goal of the documentation? If you can’t do this for yourself, you need to find someone with appropriate knowledge and experience to help you. If you can define the rules determining the priorities of content creation, you can offer guidance to writers and set expectations for quality and consistency which can feed back into improved system design, and hence, that of a better workspace and better executed strategy.

To ensure it meets need and expectation, every word that is written must be reviewed If you aim to create quality written material, the process of review by appropriate experts is every bit as important as that of commissioning and creation. Not least, it is the check that everything that should have been included has been, to the levels of quality expected. If the knowledge a document contains is highly specialised, this process of review might almost certainly include oversight by an appropriately qualified technical expert to validate its accuracy. Then, the review for editorial quality should ensure that aims for readability, accuracy and user comprehensibility aren’t corrupted by poor spelling and grammar, or presentational sloppiness. You cannot assume that someone will produce something you haven’t asked them to write If you are a specialist in a discipline, even if it seems blindingly obvious that a specific document needs to be created, you can never assume that others see things the same way.

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A FUTURE STATE FOR WORKPLACE DESIGN BRIEFING

It is also unsafe to assume anyone will magically document what you can see as obvious without you first making a request and finding the experts to make it happen. Create a process for retiring aged project content A key lesson in creating a body of useful content is that before you produce more pages, order should be given to content that already exists, or decisions made about what must be retired before adding to its sprawl. The longer this job is left undone, the harder what is of value and what isn’t becomes to unpick. The more quickly you can impose order on existing documentation, the more quickly will emerge its proper production processes, taxonomies, indexation, relationship to all other previous and future documentation and usefulness to its consumers. Thus, as the rules for creating better documentation become clearer, the simpler becomes the process for commissioning new content, and the more effective becomes the review of everything produced against its specification. It is easy to overlook how documentation ages in a living system, but experience confirms how problems can be

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compounded by large numbers of new content producers coming onstream at the same time. Experience also tells us that even when the development of high-quality documentation is a declared project goal, attention to the detail of delivering it can be the last thing on project leaders’ minds as they continue to give shape to their baby.

Moreover, as an inclusive tool, the risks of alienation from the disruptive process of relocation are also minimised, providing change-management cover across the project, including post-occupancy. For the real upsides of this approach to be felt, it is necessary to factor in the longer term workplace benefits of cultivating the knowledge flows of a smarter learning organisation.

Then common among new users’ complaints can be that the platform materials they need to understand what they are expected to do is missing, especially if it has never been commissioned or committed to documentation by the leaders responsible.

Such workplaces can create a more engaging experience for those who come to work wishing to contribute and learn.

Find the benefits of a platform for shared learning

As an employer, knowledge of who your most willing contributors are will help you understand better how to find and attract new employees meeting the profile of those you value most highly.

It sounds obvious, but organisations with a plan to learn are likely to do so much faster than their competitors, getting better at planning what they need to learn next, and knowing how and from whom to get it. In the same way, by adjusting your briefing process to capture early the insights of those who will occupy your new work space, the likelihood of protecting the returns originally aimed for in your investment in it are substantially magnified.

As a corollary, those who come to work wishing to learn will find their participation motivating, as it makes them feel they are part of the answer, and part of their company’s future.

Understanding how to learn across an organisation will create focused, agile, adaptable and truly distinctive business units built exclusively to fit the knowledge they contain. And the effect on that space in which your organisation can learn to create its future really can be felt directly on its bottom line.

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A FUTURE STATE FOR WORKPLACE DESIGN BRIEFING

I outline some questions beneath about how you might like to think differently about future workplace-design briefing.



As an opportunity to rethink the way in which you construct the brief itself?

Ten critical questions for those about to undertake next-generation workplace-design briefing



To get better use out of the minds you employ?



To introduce the minds who will actually occupy the space into the way you brief for it?



To factor in post-occupancy data collection about the performance of the space itself in supporting the organisation’s goals and augmenting its unique body of competitive “data capital”?



As an opportunity to pull this information into a professionally produced body for reference and enquiry capable of changing fundamentally the way the organisation learns?

How have you considered using your relocation/fitout and its briefing process: •

To change the ways in which your organisation addresses its higher goals, such as in directing its strategy or shaping its culture?



As the catalyst for introducing new ways of working, such as in flexible modes of engagement, more working off-site or in attempting to enlist new kinds of worker?



To factor in other non-building goals for the exercise, and how you would measure their success?



To introduce changes in way the organisation uses technology?



To make your workplace a more attractive place through which to compete in securing the best available new staff?



To inspire increased innovation and collaboration across the business?

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Want to know more? We are dedicated to researching, understanding and contributing to the body of knowledge about modern workplace strategy and state of the art workplace design briefing. Whether or not you decide to use Shiro Architects for your actual workplace design, I’d like to offer to apply the publishing processes described here to enhancing your briefing process. Graham Lauren [email protected] 0416 171724

© shiroarchitects.com 2016