Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Bimodal IT and How It Applies to the Digital Workplace (From Gartner)






Source: Gartner (April 2015)
Goal: The inherent goal of digital workplace bimodal Mode 2 is to boost employee agility and efficiency, and to boost employee engagement levels by empowering them and giving them a sense of ownership over technology strategies.
Value: The value shifts from investment protection (in Mode 1) to workforce optimization and empowerment in the digital workplace (Mode 2).
Approach: The Mode 2 approach is to deliver a more consumerized work environment that emphasizes mobility, integration of social networking services and self-service access to analytics. Allowances for personal choice and departmental choice of services (where such choices make sense) are important. A more iterative style of development is adopted.
Governance: Governance is more flexible in Mode 2, with greater allowance for exceptions and a willingness to rethink Mode 1 practices that may have been in place for decades.
Sourcing: By nature, the digital workplace will be more expansive in its sourcing strategies since it allows for employee- and business-unit-led procurement, which may result in consumer-oriented applications and an emphasis on cloud services.
Talent: IT employees that are close to digital workplace initiatives are typically more business-focused and in tune with employee technology requirements. They typically favor an iterative approach to problem resolution and are comfortable with a fail-fast project strategy, and therefore are more accepting of uncertainty.
Culture: This is perhaps the greatest change from bimodal Mode 1. Mode 2 culture focuses on employee needs, and stresses the role that technology can play in boosting employee engagement levels. This emphasis on employees requires the IT organization to foster a continuous dialogue with the employee community to ensure that it has a loud voice in technology investments.
Cycle Times: Mode 2 emphasizes the ability to rapidly exploit business opportunities and react quickly to changing business requirements. This results in an agile and iterative approach to development, faster procurement, a preference for cloud services, and fast and effective support.

Mode 1, of course, still plays a huge role in the digital workplace. Many digital workplace services sit on top of Mode 1 infrastructure, and many projects started under Mode 2 — such as enterprise file sync and share services, enterprise social networks and app stores — will become part of the Mode 1 operating responsibility as they mature.

(Gartner, April 2015)