Why you should treat the tech you use at work like a colleague Nadjia Yousif

So, imagine a company hires
a new employee,

best in the business,

who’s on a multimillion-dollar contract.

Now imagine that whenever this employee
went to go meet with her team members,

the appointments
were ignored or dismissed,

and in the meetings that did happen,

she was yelled at or kicked out
after a few minutes.

So after a while, she just
went quietly back to her desk,

sat there with none of her skills
being put to use,

of course, being ignored by most people,

and of course, still getting paid
millions of dollars.

This hotshot employee
who can’t seem to catch a break

is that company’s technology.

This scenario is not an exaggeration.

In my job as a technology advisor,

I’ve seen so many companies
make the well-meaning decisions

to put huge investments into technology,

only to have the benefits
fail to live up to the expectation.

In fact, in one study I read,

25 percent of technology projects

are canceled or deliver things
that are never used.

That’s like billions of dollars
just being wasted each year.

So why is this?

Well, from what I’ve seen,

the expectation from the top management
is high but not unreasonable

about the benefits from the technology.

They expect people will use them,

it will create time savings,

and people will become
genuinely better at their jobs.

But the reality is that
the people on the front line,

who are supposed to be using
these softwares and tools,

they’re skeptical or even afraid.

We postpone the online trainings,

we don’t bother to learn the shortcuts,

and we get frustrated
at the number of tools

we have to remember
how to log into and use.

Right?

And that frustration,
that guilt – it’s racking up,

the more that technology is inserting
itself into our daily working lives,

which is a lot.

Brookings says that 70 percent
of jobs today in the US

require at least mid-level digital skills.

So basically, to work these days,

you need to be able
to work with technology.

But from what I’ve seen,

we are not approaching this
with the right mindset.

So here’s the idea
that I’ve been toying with:

What if we treated technology
like a team member?

I’ve been writing my own
personal experiment about this.

I’ve spoken to people
from all different industries

about how they can treat
their core technologies like colleagues.

I’ve met with people
from the restaurant industry,

medical professionals, teachers, bankers,

people from many other sectors,

and the first step with anybody
that I would meet with

was to draw out
the structure of their teams

in an organization chart.

Now, I’m a total geek
when it comes to organization charts.

Org charts are really cool
because, if they are drawn well,

you can quickly get a sense
of what individual roles are

and also how a team works well together.

But if you look at a typical org chart,

it only includes the boxes and lines
that represent people.

None of the technology
team members are there.

They’re all invisible.

So for each of the organizations
that I met with for my experiment,

I had to draw a new type of org chart,

one that also included the technology.

And when I did this, people I spoke to

could actually visualize
their technologies as coworkers,

and they could ask things like:

“Is this software reporting
to the right person?”

“Does this man and machine team
work well together?”

“Is that technology
actually the team member

that everybody’s awkwardly avoiding?”

So I will walk you through an example
of a small catering company

to bring this experiment to life.

This is the top layer of people
who work at Bovingdons Catering Company.

There’s a sales director, who manages
all of the customer interactions,

and there’s an operations director,
who manages all the internal activities.

And here’s the people who report
to the sales and operations directors.

And finally, here’s the view

where we’ve overlaid
the software and the hardware

that’s used by the Bovingdons staff.

Using this amazing org chart,
we can now explore

how the human team members
and the technology team members

are interacting.

So the first thing
that I’m going to look for

is where there’s a human
and machine relationship

that’s extra critical.

Usually, it’s somebody using a technology

on a day-to-day basis
to do his or her job.

At Bovingdons,

the finance director with
the accounting platform would be one.

Next, I would check on the status
of their collaboration.

Are they working well together?

Getting along?

In this case, it turned out to be
a tenuous relationship.

So, what to do?

Well, if the accounting platform
were actually a person,

the finance director would feel
responsible for managing it

and taking care of it.

Well, in the same way,

my first suggestion was to think
about a team-building activity,

maybe getting together
on a specialist course.

My second suggestion was to think about
scheduling regular performance reviews

for the accounting platform,

where the finance director
would literally give feedback

to the company who sold it.

Now, there will be several of these
really important human and machine teams

in every organization.

So if you’re in one,
it’s worth taking the time

to think about ways to make
those relationships truly collaborative.

Next, I’ll look on the chart
for any human role

which might be overloaded by technology,

let’s say, interacting with four
or more types of applications.

At Bovingdons, the operations director
was interacting with five technologies.

Now, he told me that he’d always felt
overwhelmed by his job,

but it wasn’t until our conversation

that he thought it might be because
of the technologies he was overseeing.

And we were talking that,

if the operations director had actually
had a lot of people reporting to him,

he probably would have done
something about it,

because it was stretching him too thin,

like, move some of them
to report to somebody else.

So in the same way, we talked about
moving some of the technologies

to report to someone else,

like the food inventory to go to the chef.

The last thing that I’ll look for
is any technology

that seems to be on the org chart
without a real home.

Sometimes they’re floating around
without an owner.

Sometimes they’re reporting
to so many different areas

that you can’t tell
who’s actually using it.

Now, at Bovingdons,

nobody appeared to be looking after
the marketing software.

It was like someone had hired it
and then didn’t give it a desk

or any instructions on what to do.

So clearly, it needed a job description,

maybe someone to manage it.

But in other companies,

you might find that a technology
has been sidelined for a reason,

like it’s time for it
to leave or be retired.

Now, retiring applications
is something that all companies do.

But maybe taking the mindset that those
applications are actually coworkers

could help them to decide when and how
to retire those applications

in the way that would be least destructive
to the rest of the team.

I did this experiment
with 15 different professionals,

and each time it sparked an idea.

Sometimes, a bit more.

You remember that hotshot employee
I was telling you about,

that everybody was ignoring?

That was a real story
told to me by Christopher,

a very energetic human resources manager
at a big consumer goods company.

Technology was a new HR platform,

and it had been installed
for 14 months at great expense,

but nobody was using it.

So we were talking about how,

if this had really been such a hotshot
employee with amazing credentials,

you would go out of your way
to get to know it,

maybe invite them for coffee,

get to know their background.

So in the spirit of experimentation,

Christopher set up one-hour appointments,

coffee optional,

for his team members to have no agenda
but to get to know their HR system.

Some people, they clicked around
menu item by menu item.

Other people, they searched online
for things that they weren’t clear about.

A couple of them got together,
gossiped about the new software in town.

And a few weeks later,
Christopher called to tell me

that people were using
the system in new ways,

and he thought it was going to save them
weeks of effort in the future.

And they also reported feeling
less intimidated by the software.

I found that pretty amazing,

that taking this mindset
helped Christopher’s team

and others that I spoke to
these past few months

actually feel happier
about working with technology.

And I later found out
this is backed up by research.

Studies have shown that people
who work in organizations

that encourage them to talk about
and learn about the technologies

in the workplace

have 20 percent lower stress levels

than those in organizations that don’t.

I also found it really cool
that when I started to do this experiment,

I started with what was happening
between a person

and an individual technology,

but then it ultimately led to ideas
about how to manage tech

across entire companies.

Like, when I did this
for my own job and extended it,

I thought about how
our data analysis tools

should go on the equivalent
of a job rotation program,

where different parts of the company
could get to know it.

And I also thought about suggesting
to our recruiting team

that some of the technologies
we work with every day

should come with us
on our big recruiting events.

If you were a university student,

how cool would it be to not
only get to know the people

you might be working with,

but also the technologies?

Now, all of this begs the question:

What have we been missing

by keeping the technologies
that we work with day to day invisible,

and what, beyond those
billions of dollars in value,

might we be leaving on the table?

The good news is,

you don’t need to be
an org chart geek like me

to take this experiment forward.

It will take a matter
of minutes for most people

to draw out a structure
of who they work with,

a little bit longer
to add in the technologies

to get a view of the entire team,

and then you can have fun
asking questions like,

“Which are the technologies
that I’ll be taking out for coffee?”

Now, I didn’t do this experiment for kicks

or for the coffee.

I did it because the critical skill
in the 21st-century workplace

is going to be to collaborate
with the technologies

that are becoming such a big and costly
part of our daily working lives.

And from what I was seeing,
we are struggling to cope with that.

So it might sound counterintuitive,

but by embracing the idea that these
machines are actually valuable colleagues,

we as people will perform better

and be happier.

So let’s all share a bit of humanity

towards the technologies
and the softwares and the algorithms

and the robots who we work with,

because we will all be the better for it.

Thank you.

(Applause)

所以,想象一家公司雇佣
了一个新员工

,他是业内最优秀的,

他签订了一份价值数百万美元的合同。

现在想象一下,每当这位员工
去与她的团队成员会面时

,约会
都被忽略或解雇,

而在确实发生的会议中,几分钟后

她就被大喊大叫或踢出局

所以过了一会,她
就静静的回到自己的办公桌前,

坐在那里,什么技能
都没有施展

,当然,被大多数人忽视

,当然,还拿了
几百万的薪水。

这位似乎无法休息的热门员工

是该公司的技术。

这种情景并不夸张。

在我作为技术顾问的工作中,

我看到很多公司
做出了善意的决定

,将巨额投资投入技术,结果


未能达到预期。

事实上,在我阅读的一项研究中,

25% 的技术项目

被取消或交付
了从未使用过的东西。


就像每年浪费了数十亿美元。

那么这是为什么呢?

嗯,据我所见,

高层管理人员的期望
很高,但

对技术带来的好处并非不合理。

他们希望人们会使用它们,

它会节省时间

,人们会
真正地在工作中变得更好。

但现实是,

应该使用
这些软件和工具的前线人员,

他们持怀疑态度,甚至害怕。

我们推迟了在线培训,

我们不费心去学习捷径,

而且

我们对必须记住
如何登录和使用的工具数量感到沮丧。

对?

那种
挫败感,那种内疚感——

越来越多,技术
越是融入我们的日常工作生活,

这就是很多。

布鲁金斯说,
当今美国 70% 的工作

至少需要中级数字技能。

所以基本上,要在这些天工作,

你需要
能够使用技术。

但据我所见,

我们并没有
以正确的心态来解决这个问题。

所以这
就是我一直在玩弄的想法:

如果我们将技术
视为团队成员会怎样?

我一直在写我自己的
个人实验。

我与
来自不同行业的人们

谈过他们如何
像对待同事一样对待他们的核心技术。

我见过
餐饮业的人、

医疗专业人士、教师、银行家、

许多其他行业的

人,我会见的任何人的第一步都是

在组织结构图中画出他们的团队结构。

现在,当谈到组织结构图时,我完全是个极客

组织结构图真的很酷,
因为如果绘制得好,

您可以快速
了解个人角色是什么

,以及团队如何协同工作。

但是如果你看一个典型的组织结构图,

它只包括代表人的方框和线条

没有一个技术
团队成员在那里。

他们都是隐形的。

因此
,对于我在实验中遇到的每个组织,

我都必须绘制一种新型的组织结构图,

其中还包括技术。

当我这样做时,与我交谈的

人实际上可以将
他们的技术想象成同事

,他们可以问这样的问题:

“这个软件是否
向正确的人报告?”

“这个人和机器团队
合作得好吗?”

“这项技术
真的

是每个人都尴尬地回避的团队成员吗?”

因此,我将带您通过
一个小型餐饮公司的示例,

将这个实验变为现实。

这是
在 Bovingdons 餐饮公司工作的最高层人员。

有一个销售总监,负责管理
所有的客户互动,

还有一个运营总监,
负责管理所有的内部活动。

这是
向销售和运营总监报告的人。

最后,这

是我们覆盖

了 Bovingdons 员工使用的软件和硬件的视图。

使用这个惊人的组织结构图,
我们现在可以

探索人类团队成员
和技术团队成员

是如何交互的。

所以我要寻找的第一件事

是人
与机器的关系在哪里

是非常关键的。

通常情况下,有人

每天都在使用某种技术
来完成他或她的工作。

在 Bovingdons

,会计平台的财务总监
就是其中之一。

接下来,我将检查
他们的合作状态。

他们合作得好吗?

相处?

在这种情况下,事实证明这是
一种脆弱的关系。

那么该怎么办?

好吧,如果会计
平台真的是一个人

,财务总监会觉得有
责任管理它

和照顾它。

嗯,同样地,

我的第一个建议是
考虑一个团队建设活动,

也许是一起
参加专业课程。

我的第二个建议是考虑为会计平台
安排定期绩效评估

,财务总监

向出售它的公司提供反馈。

现在,每个组织中都会有几个这样
非常重要的人力和机器

团队。

因此,如果您是合一的,
那么值得花

时间思考如何让
这些关系真正协作。

接下来,我将在图表
上查看

可能被技术超载的任何人类角色,

比如与四种
或更多类型的应用程序交互。

在 Bovingdons,运营总监
正在与五种技术进行交互。

现在,他告诉我,他一直对
自己的工作感到不知所措,

但直到我们的谈话

,他才认为这可能是因为
他正在监督的技术。

我们说的是,

如果运营总监实际上
有很多人向他报告,

他可能会对此采取
一些措施,

因为这让他太瘦了,

比如,让他们中的一些人
向其他人报告。

所以同样地,我们谈到了
将一些

技术转移给其他人,

比如把食物库存交给厨师。

我要寻找的最后一件事
是任何

似乎在组织结构图中
没有真正家的技术。

有时他们在
没有主人的情况下四处漂泊。

有时他们会
向许多不同的领域报告,

以至于您无法分辨出
谁在实际使用它。

现在,在 Bovingdons,

似乎没有人在
照看营销软件。

就像有人雇佣了它
,然后没有给它一张桌子

或任何关于做什么的指示。

很明显,它需要一份工作描述,

也许有人来管理它。

但是在其他公司中,

您可能会发现一项技术
因某种原因而被搁置,

例如
该离开或退休的时候了。

现在,淘汰应用
程序是所有公司都会做的事情。

但也许采取这些
应用程序实际上是同事的心态

可以帮助他们决定何时以及如何

以对团队其他成员破坏最小的方式停用这些应用程序。


和 15 位不同的专业人士一起做了这个实验

,每次都激发了一个想法。

有时,多一点。

你还记得
我告诉过你的

那个人人都忽视的热门员工吗?

那是
克里斯托弗告诉我的一个真实故事,他是

一家大型消费品公司的一位精力充沛的人力资源
经理。

技术是一个新的人力资源平台

,它已经安装
了 14 个月,花费巨大,

但没有人使用它。

所以我们讨论的是,

如果这真的是一个如此
出色的员工,拥有惊人的资历,

你会不遗余力地了解它,

也许会邀请他们喝咖啡,

了解他们的背景。

因此,本着实验精神,

Christopher 安排了一小时的约会,

可以选择喝咖啡,

让他的团队成员没有议程,
只需要了解他们的人力资源系统。

有些人,他们一个接一个地点击
菜单项。

其他人,他们在网上
搜索他们不清楚的事情。

他们中的几个人聚在一起,
谈论镇上的新软件。

几周后,
克里斯托弗打电话告诉我

,人们正在
以新的方式使用该系统

,他认为这可以为他们节省
未来数周的工作量。

他们还报告说
,对软件的恐惧感降低了。

我发现这很神奇

,采用这种思维方式
帮助 Christopher 的团队

和我过去几个月与之交谈的其他人实际上

对使用技术感到更快乐。

后来我发现
这是有研究支持的。

研究表明,

鼓励他们在工作场所谈论
和学习技术的组织

中工作的

人的压力水平

比在不鼓励他们的组织中的人低 20%。

我还
发现,当我开始做这个实验时,

我从个人和个人技术之间发生的事情开始,这真的很酷

但它最终导致了
关于如何管理

整个公司的技术的想法。

就像,当我
为自己的工作做这个并扩展它时,

我想
我们的数据分析工具

应该如何进行
相当于工作轮换计划,

公司的不同部门
可以了解它。

我还考虑
向我们的招聘团队建议,我们

每天使用的一些技术

应该与我们
一起参加我们的大型招聘活动。

如果你是一名大学生,

不仅要了解

可能与你共事的人,

还要了解技术,那该有多酷?

现在,所有这些都引出了一个问题:

通过
让我们日常使用的技术不可见

,我们错过了什么,除了那些
数十亿美元的价值之外,

我们还会留下什么?

好消息是,

你不需要
像我这样的组织结构图极客

来推进这个实验。

大多数人需要
几分钟的时间

来勾勒出
他们与谁一起工作的结构

,再花一点时间
来添加技术

以了解整个团队,

然后你就可以提出一些有趣的
问题,例如,


我会用哪些技术来喝咖啡?”

现在,我做这个实验不是为了踢球

或喝咖啡。

我这样做是因为
21 世纪工作场所

的关键技能将是与

正在成为我们日常工作生活中如此重要且成本高昂的
一部分的技术协作。

从我所看到的情况来看,
我们正在努力应对这一问题。

所以这听起来可能违反直觉,

但通过接受这些
机器实际上是有价值的同事的想法,

我们作为人们会表现得更好

,更快乐。

因此,让我们都

对与我们合作的技术
、软件、算法

和机器人分享一点人性,

因为我们都会因此变得更好。

谢谢你。

(掌声)