
Chris Preimesberger25

















We've 10 mins left, how about some final thoughts and perhaps some takeaways you got from this session?

Tom Randall
Key takeaways for me: ensure good security habits for end users, rationalize your collab tools around end user requirements, and keep a look out for how far 'work' is decoupled from 'place'. #eWEEkchat
(edited)

Jeff Miller
The tech is there to support remote work. I think now that so many organizations have been forced to try it, a significant portion won't go back. It's good for employers, too, after all. They don't have to limit hiring to a specific geo region.

@usmcjost
These are unprecedented times, forcing tremendous digital transformation, we need to remember that while there is a tool and a setting for every scenario, that IT complexity is what kills an organization and drowns it Tech Debt, keeping it simple wins the day.

Seth Elliott
Interesting how to e the discussion moved away quite readily from the current pandemic effects - these discussions about how robust the tools are; synchronous vs. asynchronous; adoption curves dependent on size and industry -> none of this is new

Kurt Schrader
Every team is now a remote team and from the looks of things here people are handling it quite well. Tooling still needs to improve though and this is still hard.

Peter Burris
A6. Like everything else with IT, start with the work to be done, then look for the tech to do it. Too many orgs still are trying to fit the work into the available tech. It's nice that Zoom humanizes digital, but it better do more than that soon.

Sean Broderick
Key takeaway for me is that the tech stack is so crowded there will always be a better piece of technology. Implementations need a mixture of strategy, methodology and technology to make sure that the tools implementations are a success

@usmcjost
While we didn't talk about this, we have just propelled the next generation of workers even farther forward, so being able to have the technology they will use in the coming years just ups the stakes of getting it right now.

Seth Elliott
Software often goes through aggregation phases - BI dashboards anyone? - wondering how long before companies crop up to offer Collaboration In a Box solutions that include 'everything'

Molly Presley
I suspect the companies that are agile with tools and apps will come out strongest at the end of this crisis. And those companies that are empathetic and helpful to their workers in these COVID months will be most successful in the coming years.

Sean Broderick
@plburris Love this Peter. What problem are you trying to solve

Jose Pastor
For me reading through, it strikes me that as we think about collaboration tools, it comes right back to use cases. Horizontal ones (duh!) like Message, Video, Phone, but just as important the workflow enabling tools out there that folks mentioned.

Peter Burris
A6. Another takeaway: Have we really gotten through this Crowdchat without any mention of design and UX? I saw one mention of AI-digital assistants. This space is so ready for big, huge, important change.

@usmcjost
@JosePastor yes citizen everything will be the next outcome, Developer, Automation Engineer, Analytics you name it.

Kurt Schrader
@plburris For sure. My team rejects ugly and clunky tools out of hand. Much bigger hill to climb.

Peter Burris
@sean_broderick I've been trying to generally fix the problem of experts working together to solve complex problems for 20 years. Now, I'm staying pretty narrow: Collaboration tools for evidence-based management. Still a big topic.

Mike Jumper
Collaboration and flexibility are fundamental to work, but not necessarily physical presence. The pandemic brutally highlights the need to keep this in mind, and what can happen when flexibility is viewed as a perk. Tools that help people work effectively should not be avoided.

Sean Broderick
@plburris Massive topic! No better man




