The days of face-to-face meetings and group emails may soon be coming to an end. From texting job candidates and using Slack for project management, to building artificially intelligent chatbots that answer questions about human resources, communication technology in the workplace is evolving. All of this is a good thing, said Sharon OâDea, a digital and social media consultant based in the U.K. These tools enable faster, more efficient communication, via the devices employees have in their hands all the time, she said. âWe all use instant messaging in our personal lives. It is natural to see that shift into the workplace.â
Younger workers are far more likely to choose text or Slack over email or phone calls, which they view as cumbersome and outdated, said Adam Ochstein, CEO of StratEx, an HR technology and consulting firm based in Chicago. Email can also be tricky for contract workers and frontline staff, who may rarely check their emails but always have their phones. âThey want to communicate in real time with their fingers, not their voices.â
The use of instant and automated technology to support communication isnât going away, so managers need to get on board or risk creating information gaps in the workplace. A 2017 report from Dynamic Signal found that only 17 percent of companies had recently invested in technology for internal communication, even though 73 percent said communicating company information to employees was a âserious challenge.â
While chatbots wonât be taking over the way we engage any time soon, the tools we use are evolving, and skeptical managers need to get on board, Ochstein said. âIf you want to be an employer of choice for this generation, youâve got to adapt.
Conversation Bots
Along with changing how employees communicate, new technologies are also changing what information they can share, said Rob High, chief technology officer for IBM Watson, IBMâs cognitive computing system. âArtificial intelligence tools, at their most basic, improve the likelihood that employees can find and share information as they communicate.â This enables faster problem-solving and ensures they can make decisions based on data, not gut instinct. High envisions a day where AI conversation agents will be the third party in a conversation, automatically searching for information and providing context.
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Highâs team has also created the AI-driven IBM tone analyzer, which uses linguistic analysis to examine the emotion in text messages. The goal is to help employees vet the âtoneâ of texts and emails, just as you might spell-check before hitting send. âItâs an efficient way to reduce misunderstandings,â he said. High believes AI technology will change the way we communicate at work and at home.
OâDea agreed. âChatbots offer huge potential for employee communication. They can take over the tasks that are needlessly complicated.â She believes early applications will focus on things like filling out employment forms, requesting days off and accessing personal data. âChatbots can provide employees with instant access to this information through an app, which is where they spend more of their time anyway,â she said. For those who think chatbots are too inhuman for workplace communication, OâDea believes itâs the opposite. Many employee communication platforms and corporate emails are âgeneric and impersonal, but chatbots can have human conversations,â she said.
In an era of social sharing, the casual nature of texts in the workplace can put companies at risk.
The Trouble With Text
The adoption of instant communication in the workplace isnât all good news. In an era of social sharing, the casual nature of texts in the workplace can put companies at risk. Weâve all read the stories of managers cursing out employees for some minor infraction or flirting in a way that makes someone uncomfortable, only to have those conversations go viral and result in someone getting fired.
âThere is a fine line between casual conversations and inappropriate content, and instant messaging makes that line very easy to cross,â StratExâs Ochstein said. Itâs rarely intentional. He recalls a recent day at his own company when employees were using Slack to discuss whether the companyâs âno-shorts policyâ should be abandoned when temperatures rise above 90 degrees. That evolved into a conversation about why female employees were lucky because they can wear skirts, which led to a âguys vs. girls in the workplaceâ battle. âThatâs when the HR team had to get involved and shut it down,â he said. âIt was innocent banter, but all of [the] sudden it was going in a direction no one wanted.â
Such scenarios are all too common, particularly when teams work long hours together or are out celebrating a project success. âOne person may think a text is funny, where the other thinks itâs inappropriate,â he said. âBut once you send it, you canât get it back.â
The instant nature of these tools also creates legal issues with hourly gig workers. If a manager sends an email at night, it is assumed a contractor will respond the next day, but if they send an instant message the implication is that they expect an instant response. âDoes that mean you have to pay them for that time?â Ochstein pondered. âOnce you cross that chasm, the legal stuff can get bad.â
That doesnât mean companies shouldnât use instant messaging apps to interact with employees, but they should define clear policies for their use. Ochstein advised âover-communicatingâ to employees about texting protocol and reminding them that anything they say on text is as admissible as any other document. He also urged HR leaders to promote a culture of caution. âEncourage them to pause and think about whether a message could be construed as not respectful,â he said. âIf there is any chance it could be construed as rude or not respectful, donât send it.â
