{"id":15049,"date":"2023-04-05T16:34:34","date_gmt":"2023-04-05T16:34:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/education.telefony-taksi.ru\/?p=15049"},"modified":"2023-04-24T17:29:55","modified_gmt":"2023-04-24T17:29:55","slug":"why-user-experience-matters-more-than-pure-it","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/education.telefony-taksi.ru\/why-user-experience-matters-more-than-pure-it.html","title":{"rendered":"Why user experience matters more than pure it metrics"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"Why<\/p>\n

If the IT infrastructure is working properly, it doesn’t mean that users are satisfied and productive. Whether they are, and to what extent, can now be technically measured and, above all, bindingly agreed – in Experience Level Agreements, or XLAs for short. <\/p>\n

Traditionally, Service Level Agreements (SLAs) are the benchmark for quality criteria of IT services and support. These agreements define the parameters and metrics that are used to measure the quality of an agreed IT service. But the question remains unanswered: Are employees in the digital workplace satisfied with the service they receive?? Is he productive or is he just annoyed and slowed down? A question that is becoming increasingly important for companies, as also shown by a recent Nexthink study conducted by Vanson Bourne.<\/p>\n

XLAs change the view of how good IT services are defined.<\/p>\n

Because well-functioning IT infrastructures (from the IT point of view) do not automatically mean that trouble-free and efficient work is guaranteed for end users. This is similar to the weather with the measured and perceived temperature: a supposedly pleasant 17 degrees can be quite uncomfortable with wind and drizzle. In terms of the workplace, this would mean, for example, that a network connection can be good enough for office work or viewing videos over the Internet, but at the same time not good enough for moderating a webinar.<\/p>\n

How user satisfaction can be tracked?<\/h2>\n

In order to be able to understand how an IT service or the use of applications and end devices is actually perceived, it is necessary to have systematically collected measurements from the end user as well as the context of the activity currently being performed. Only this information provides IT with tangible starting points for action.<\/p>\n

That is, objective measurements of the work environment need to be promptly related to the subjective IT experience from the user’s perspective (called sentiment analyses). Digital experience platforms (DEX) provide these metrics. Capture performance metrics on endpoints at the hardware, application and network levels, ideally combined with dedicated user feedback. From this data, metrics can be derived that are essential for assessing a productive work environment. Recorded not in SLAs, but in XLAs – experience level agreements.<\/p>\n

Which XLAs are critical for a company can best be defined based on concrete use cases. From Nexthink’s project experience, it can be said that a changed view of what constitutes successful IT in relation to the digital workplace can simplify this process. This changed view can sometimes be gained by taking the following steps:<\/p>\n

1. Clarify the “why” of one’s XLA strategy<\/h2>\n

On the one hand, this step raises awareness of the problem regarding the difference between technical and perceived quality of digital workplaces. Second, it helps align digital workplace optimization with business goals. A signal of the need for a new XLA strategy is, for example, when the number of tickets in IT support is high, although hardly any anomalies are recorded in the IT backend. The amount of shadow IT and unofficial workarounds in digital workplaces also shows that end users have to deal with too many compromises or. Act on homegrown solutions.<\/p>\n

For example, the following objectives can be listed as possible starting points for manifesting the need for a new XLA:
\u2192 Include employee requirements to the maximum extent possible in digitization initiatives.
\u2192 Better consider the impact on digital work environments in cloud-first strategies.
\u2192 Optimize the transition to hybrid working.
\u2192 Improve evaluation and customization of business-critical software.<\/p>\n

2. Set concrete goals<\/h2>\n

This step ensures that XLA measurements will also lead to concrete, demonstrable improvements for end users. That is, deriving and implementing the right measures from XLA and sentiment analyses in correlation with SLAs. This can address requirements such as:
\u2192 Reduce the number and duration of IT disruptions.
\u2192 Reduce the number of IT disruptions caused by end users themselves.
\u2192 Avoiding an increased ticket volume when introducing new software solutions.
\u2192 Align IT support with different levels of IT skills so that employees with lots or little IT experience receive the appropriate support.
\u2192 Implement strict IT security and compliance policies without compromising productivity and ensuring a positive IT experience.<\/p>\n

3. Translating goals into correlated SLA-XLA measures and measurements<\/h2>\n

The more clearly goals are stated, the better they translate into measurable SLA and XLA metrics – three examples:<\/p>\n