Tech Loyalty in the Workplace Threatens Productivity and IT Control

New Report Shows Professionals Are Circumventing IT to Introduce New Tools; Don’t Want Company Telling Them What to Use

SUNNYVALE, Calif.--()--As consumers build loyalty toward specific technology brands, those preferences are bleeding into the workplace, leading them to introduce technology devices, software and other tools without IT’s approval, a new report from NextPlane shows. Nearly half of professionals (46 percent) said they or their team have introduced new technology into their workplace.

As IT attempts to remain in control, workers are not standing down, and 53 percent said they or another team have pushed back on IT or management when they tried to dictate the technology they use. The report also shows that 73 percent of workers say they’ve been successful in implementing their choice of tech tools.

The result is growing tension between IT departments who want to remain in control of security and systems, and employees who want the freedom to choose the technologies they use to do their jobs, and are willing to go around IT to do it.

A new report from NextPlane examines the extent of this growing rift and its impact on collaboration and productivity. The report, “The Fight to Collaborate: A Growing Rift Between IT and Teams,” is based on a survey of 750 business professionals in a range of positions and industries.

This growing tech loyalty is leading to business professionals seeking out new tools and technology to not just do their own jobs better, but to help their teams collaborate more effectively. The majority of respondents (63 percent) expressed loyalty to the technology products they use for their job. And it doesn’t stop on an individual level — 42 percent of teams have loyalty to technology products, leading to pushback or straying from policy if the IT-mandated tools don’t mesh with established workflows.

“IT and business professionals are struggling to find common ground when it comes to the technology used at work,” said Farzin Shahidi, CEO of NextPlane. “Legions of teams and workers are introducing their preferred tools, such as team collaboration tools like Slack and Workplace, despite corporate IT policy. This increasing lack of compliance threatens not only the productivity of employees that may be working across different platforms, but the control that IT requires to manage all of a company’s technology securely and efficiently.”

Additional findings in the report:

  • More than one-third (38 percent) of respondents said they would be resistant to IT or management dictating which software or tools they use to do their jobs. This reflects the notion that individuals and teams believe they know how to do their jobs best and should have a say in the tools they use to do their work.
  • In many cases, teams prevail in pushing back on IT to allow their group to use technology of their choice, with 46 percent saying IT made an exception for their team.
    • But IT still holds a considerable amount of control, with teams complying with company mandates 42 percent of the time.
    • Over 1 in 10 people still use the technology of their choice in defiance of IT.
  • More than half (54 percent) said IT has the final say on all of the programs and technological devices used, and only 10 percent said they have full say in the technology they use.

This tug-of-war comes with mixed success for both sides, but the tension is showing no signs of stopping unless communication and collaboration strategies change to reflect the wants and needs of both IT and employees.

“While there are no one-size-fits-all options for all types of technology employees might bring into the workplace, federation is one possible solution that can allow companies to deploy a comprehensive and open collaboration strategy that allows multiple collaboration tools to be used within the same organization,” Shahidi said.

To view the complete report, click here.

About NextPlane

NextPlane, the leading provider of unified collaboration and communication services, helps companies achieve a comprehensive and open collaboration strategy, connecting disparate and independent workstream collaboration platforms, and creating a seamless communication and collaboration environment for any enterprise, its workers and its partners. NextPlane’s services allow organizations and teams to seamlessly connect different collaboration tools to each other. The company’s software breaks down the walls that exist between legacy Unified Communications tools like Skype for Business, Cisco Jabber and others as well as newer team collaboration tools like Slack, Microsoft Teams, Atlassian Stride and others.

The solution allows companies, vendors and teams to continue to use the collaboration and communication tool of their choosing, reduces the IT cost and complexity of multiple tools in one organization and increases overall productivity. NextPlane CEO Farzin Shahidi founded the company with the vision to forge truly productive communication in a modern business world by breaking down barriers to comprehensive collaboration. NextPlane provides unified collaboration and communication services to global companies such as Accenture, Dow, IBM, Merck, Nokia and others. Its platform connects over 750,000 enterprise users and 500M messages every day. The company is based in Sunnyvale, California.

Contacts

104 West for NextPlane
Laura Kubitz, 720-407-6078
laura.kubitz@104west.com

Contacts

104 West for NextPlane
Laura Kubitz, 720-407-6078
laura.kubitz@104west.com