Workplace Collaboration: The Case for New Tools
"Well Marge, self-improvement has always been a passion of mine."
βHomer Simpson
I like many things about my new position as a faculty member at the ASU W. P. Carey School of Business. For starters, I enjoy interacting with smart cookies on a daily basis. I've been called worse things than professor in my life. Next, given all of the uncertainty in the world today, a steady paycheck isn't a bad thing.
Perhaps best of all, though, is the willingness of my students to experiment with different collaboration tools and technologies, especially on their capstone projects. That is, they are not already stuck in their ways. Unlike many if not most professionals of a certain age, my students do exclusively use one tool (e-mail) to accomplish all of their tasks. They are more than willing to embrace many of the tchotchkes that I recommend. What's more, sometimes they'll bring new ones to me.
New workplace collaboration tools can create exciting new opportunities and save a boatload of time.
I have fought this battle myriad times (often unsuccessfully) and I can't tell you how refreshing this is.
Myriad Benefits
As I write in Message Not Received, the benefits of powerful new collaborative tools are difficult to overstate, but don't take my word for it. As industry analyst Fran Howarth writes:
Collaboration apps can connect everyone in the organization, from the CEO to an intern or the product marketing manager to a sales representative. Increased workplace collaboration can reveal opportunities to create new efficiencies, streamline operations, and drive business growth.
You'll get no argument from me. Radical companies such as Klick Health have eliminated e-mail altogether. Progressive organizations are eschewing e-mail for truly collaborative tools such as Slack, Asana, Trello, and countless others. In the process, they largely are freeing employees from the 14 or so hours per week that they have traditionally spent on e-mail. (If you still qualify as a skeptic and think that e-mail can still do everything, click here.)
Sign up to continue reading this content.