Modern workers’ expectations have changed. They want immediate, convenient, and personalized software tools. They don’t want a monolithic stack or someone telling them what to use.
They see draconian restrictions, IT sees prudent app management; they see a buffet of SaaS options, IT sees security gaps and waste.
For decades, these false dilemmas (like security vs. choice) have persisted. They erode culture and sour relationships between IT and business leaders. No wonder so few SaaS management initiatives exist. Fortunately, SaaS management is playing a role in bridging these divides and improving company culture.
Bonusly, a leading employee engagement company, notes how trust is the cornerstone of a healthy corporate culture. Rather than a logistical shift, they guide a practical one: default to transparency.
For IT, this means stepping out from obscurity and discussing software challenges and opportunities. For example: when IT rolls out an enterprise app, bring business leaders into the decision-making process. This builds cross-organizational support (e.g., your business customers don’t feel micromanaged by a new policy) and rounds out perspective (e.g., lessens the likelihood of IT being unnecessarily prohibitive).
ComputerWorld reinforces this:
"[a] key trust-building option is letting people see and understand the processes,commitments, and stakeholders involved in IT policy decisions –and inviting a genuine real-time conversation about pain points users are experiencing at home."
Employees and managers underestimate how beneficial IT can be.
IT leaders must show–and share–what a great technologist can do. For example, IT can help sales and marketing source the right tools to wrangle disparate lead data into actionable insight.
IT is also positioned to connect-the-dots on effective app usage. With a SaaS management platform, for example, IT has visibility into what tools are in use, where collaboration can happen, and where savings opportunities exist.
Sharing these successful SaaS deployment findings with business users can shift the centralized IT management conversation from one of rulemaking to productivity and cost savings.
As well, IT can reposition issues like security as beneficial to employees. Business users may not understand what the latest Apple or Google announcement about privacy and user profiles means, for example. Help them interpret it. This lets them make smarter choices about business and personal use of company hardware or applications.
The pandemic season is highlighting two distinct ways communication improves culture. IT is a key enabler of each.
The first relates to connecting. In a recent podcast on working from home and culture, HBR describes how remote work relies on employees’ abilities to forge and maintain meaningful human connections.
Gone are the impromptu lunches and coffee walks–just imagine the instability and insecurity of a new hire during this season!
Communication and collaboration tools like Zoom, Slack, and MS Teams are essential, and IT’s role to vet, deploy, manage, and support these is significant. Execs need IT to herd users of disparate tools toward a common one. Yes, for ease of communication, but also for collaboration and cost savings.
Second, communication makes IT more approachable.
One industry resource suggests a weekly newsletter containing tips and tricks for remote work. This, or any similar outreach, serves two purposes:
Mark Parr, CISO at KPMG UK, admits that IT must make strides in this area:
"I want people to feel comfortable and that if they've made a mistake, they can tell me. That's all about building trust and for my colleagues to feel that I'm actually there to support them [...]"
When IT commits to rigorous but inclusive SaaS management, they’ll hear stories of productivity breakthroughs, plugged security gaps, uncovered savings, and better alignment.
These should elevate IT collaboration – and be shared broadly to promote smarter software usage and partnership across IT, business users, and finance and operations.
According to Grame Park, head of global security operations for eCommerce retailer The Hut Group, this also serves as a Shadow IT reminder:
"People aren't bad; they're not trying to use shadow IT to deliberately circumvent company policy or company security. It's usually the case that they just want to do their job better, faster, easier [...]
"It’s a failure of IT and security; we can change from being that blocker to being an enabler to make sure that people have got the tools that they need to do their job."
This mindset shift has the power to change the company culture. But first, IT needs effective SaaS management processes in place. Being agile and accommodating users’ interests in new tools can happen, but only when operating from a place of being in control.