How a US-based consumer goods company reduced ticket count related to performance issues on macOS devices using Chrome as part of their digital collaboration platform. Thanks to digital collaboration tools, the world continues to evolve and accept new hybrid working styles. Today, reliance on these instant messaging, video calls, and conferencing tools has turned collaboration solutions into the lifeblood of modern business productivity and collaboration.
If you talk to any Service Desk agent, they will agree there has been an explosion in IT tickets since the transition to remote and hybrid work. Even now, there are growing challenges preventing them from being able to reduce IT incidents. In the last year, average ticket volume has risen by 16% since the pandemic, stressing already overtaxed help desk agents. This increase in tickets has led to wasted resources, poor IT service delivery and frustrated employees.
Healthcare providers are under more pressure than ever to provide better care and improve patient outcomes despite clinical resource scarcity, high turnover, and burn-out. Staffing shortages of physicians and nurses, growing populations in need of care, and rising costs create real barriers to exceptional care.
If an IT ticket is submitted, then it’s already too late. But what if you could get ahead of the pile up, reduce IT tickets, and solve issues before the tickets ever appear? Digital workplace technology is evolving fast, fueled by the post-pandemic realization that IT is vitally responsible for the productivity and satisfaction of modern organizations. But it’s not all going to plan.
Let’s start with a concept you’re probably familiar with: how it feels to get into a flow state at work. Maybe you were creating a new graphics package for a client deliverable. Maybe you were building a new website, or working on a coding sprint for the next product release. Maybe you were digging into some script automations for common technical issues. It doesn’t really matter what you were doing; what’s really important is how you felt while you were doing it.
In November 2021, a record 4.5 million workers switched jobs, topping the previous record set in September 2021. If there’s a side story to the global pandemic, it’s The Great Resignation. This phenomenon has companies spending more than ever to retain their human capital, with less and less to show for it.
At Microsoft’s 2022 Build Conference, which took place on May 24 through May 26, the tech juggernaut revealed a number of new technologies and iterations that are poised to impact the workplace and the world at large. One announcement in particular has already sparked major conversation among the developer community: the new Microsoft Dev Box.
We’ve been talking about it for more than a year now, but the last few months have only affirmed the fact: hybrid work is here to stay. The myriad research that’s been conducted so far proves that not only do employees want the flexibility of hybrid work, but also that hybrid work has a huge potential to drive better business results.