Employees Expect Transparent Communication. Are You Leveraging Your Intranet?
Debra Shannon
Technology Executive | CIO | CPA CIA CISA | Audit | Complex Problems | Practical Solutions | Business Transformation | Process Improvements | IT Modernization | Project Management | Mentor | Transforming Chaos to Calm
When your office workforce pivoted from onsite to remote was it difficult to make sure employees received the same detailed communication? Did employees realize that all of the information they had when they were onsite wasn’t readily available when they were remote? Did your new employee receive a laptop, but there was little to no training documentation for him/her?
If your organization relies on share drives, hard copy documents, and copious emails, then you’re not taking advantage of your intranet. An intranet is a great one-stop-shopping tool to improve internal communication and collaboration (and potentially build a more transparent and positive culture). Relevant information can be posted on the intranet providing numerous benefits such as making announcements timely, centralized storage of data, and sharing best practices with others. For example, have a CEO/president's blog where they can post every 1-2 weeks with informative and engaging content.
7 Things to Consider When Building Your Company Intranet
When building or upgrading your intranet, you’ll have a site map but don’t forget to define the processes and practices. Seven (7) key considerations are:
1. SharePoint is one tool—especially if employees are already using and are familiar with the Microsoft toolset; there are specific widgets for calendars, picture galleries, real-time feeds, social media links, etc.
2. Design and customize the intranet to appeal to all employees (from baby boomers to Generation Z). Ask the employees what type of widgets would make it more relevant and meaningful for them—maybe a blog, podcast, Craig's List, and/or Wiki. Employee engagement will lead to better adoption!
3. Create naming conventions for documents, forms, etc. (such as using a department prefix). Encourage unique document names that are intuitive for employees to find them. Using a date stamp in the footer and turning on versioning will identify which is the current version.
4. Create online forms (if possible) and automate workflows (if possible). Online forms with a workflow (such as a PTO request) will automate processing including approval/rejection, and escalation if the supervisor is out of the office.
5. Don’t make security overly complicated. Start off by giving everyone read-only access, and then restrict access for specific sites, pages, libraries, etc. as needed.
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6. If you have shared drives and want to eliminate them:
7. And last but not least...
An intranet that is well-designed will be well-adopted and benefit the entire organization—specifically improving communication and collaboration. Employees will appreciate the organization having more transparent communication which will promote a more positive culture.
For more information on using your intranet to improve communication and collaboration,?follow me on LinkedIn!
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Originally published on Work It Daily - https://www.workitdaily.com/building-company-intranet
I build people, products, and profits for health tech and care management companies. My passion is creating solutions that help patients, providers, and payers succeed.
2 年Good points here Debra Shannon . Key is streamlined processes for workflow and employee engagement. What have you done to fuel employee engagement?
Agreed, successful adoption of an intranet within an organisation requires engaging content, tools and communication.