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Virtual is the new reality: Aadesh Goyal, CHRO, TATA Communications

• By Bhavna Sarin
Virtual is the new reality: Aadesh Goyal, CHRO, TATA Communications

The global community of people and work was occupied in finding ways to adapt to the disruption brought on by digital all through 2019, and were all excited to embrace 2020 with a lot of curiosity and plans to take their digital journey to the next level. But the universe, let’s say it had another plan. A plan that was determined to take digital from conversation to adoption in the blink of an eye. 

COVID-19 sure has caused the biggest remote working experiment, and from what it appears, this experiment is here to stay, becoming work-as-usual, or as they say, the new normal. What does that mean for workflow though? Are leaders and employees ready to tap into the potential of remote working? Are they equipped with the tools and skillset to sustain this working model in the long run?

Helping us find answers to these questions and more, in his keynote session on “Workplace post-COVID-19: Engagement and Effectiveness” at SAP HR Connect 2020 Virtual Conference, Aadesh Goyal, CHRO, TATA Communications discusses about adapting to the virtual workplace, five essential elements constituting the digital strategy for a virtual workplace, and the relevance of trust in the new virtual reality.

Read on for highlights from the session.

Virtual is the new reality

Nearly two or three months into working from home, we have found but not yet accepted the new reality, given we are still chasing the idea of a new normal.

Putting all speculations to rest, in his keynote session, Aadesh emphasizes that virtual is in fact the new reality. This sentiment was echoed by an audience poll during the session where 83% of over 500 attendees admitted that COVID-19 has significantly accelerated digitization.

What does this essentially mean? Simplifying the ongoing disruption, Aadesh highlighted the following evident changes:

“There will be much more digital in the next few months and quarters, than we have had so far,” said Aadesh, leading to his next thought that when the workplace becomes virtual, we need to have a strong digital strategy.

Elements of a digital strategy for a virtual workplace

Digitization is no longer an upgrade. In the virtual workplace, it is in fact a survival instinct. However, with the extensive need for organizations to cut costs, as they struggle to stay afloat amid the economic slump, investment in technology is synonymous with additional cost and while organizations cut down on all non-essential costs, the question arises - is adapting to the virtual reality and creating a digital workplace a cost or an investment? 

The answer doesn’t lie in a yes or no, the answer lies in looking at the situation before you with an open mindset and with an intent to keep employees safe and the business going in times of COVID as well as Post-Covid, or at least post-lockdown. There is a need to shift the cost mindset associated with digitization and understand the plethora of benefits and experience technology brings, especially relevant in the backdrop of the unprecedented work environment that we continue to exist in. 

So how do you go about deciding what your digital strategy for a virtual workplace needs to constitute? Here are 5 elements to keep in mind as you plan your digital strategy for the new normal, or for the new (virtual) workplace:

An advantage Aadesh identifies here is the potential of extending intensive learning programs to all employees through one platform. “HiPo learning programmes can be a pull strategy for everyone having access to virtual learning,” suggests Aadesh.

Acknowledge that employees aren’t just working from home, but as the Canadian Federal Government says, “You are at your home, during a crisis, trying to work.”

With all the discussions surrounding the future of work over the last few years, no one could have imagined the future to be what it is today, no one could have imagined a way of working that is taking place today. While some individuals might still be of the opinion that the future of work will be different, many would agree to Aadesh’s closing line, “The future of work has already arrived.”

The argument around how remote working would never see the light of the day for some companies, where the percentage of remote workers was 0%, such companies, among others today witness a remote workforce constituting somewhere between 90-95% of their total employee base. 

The need of the hour is not to contemplate what working model works best, and whether technology is a cost or investment, neither does it warrant hopping on to the bandwagon of having a remote workforce. What the current situation does warrant is a need to reflect on - What does your organization stand for? Do you trust your employees? Can you do something to enable them to keep their jobs and at the same time keep your business operational? Once you find answers to these questions, you will become the answer for your business and for your people.