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The AI-Infused Workplace: IT, Facilities, HR... It's ComingThe AI-Infused Workplace: IT, Facilities, HR... It's Coming

The workplace is about to get smarter across the board. Are you prepared?

Ryan Daily

December 29, 2021

3 Min Read
The AI-Infused Workplace: IT, Facilities, HR... It's Coming

When we talk about the future of work, I can?t help but reminisce about old sci-fi films and cartoons and how they depicted the workplace of the future. Most famously, the workplace in The Jetsons featured automation, personal robots, videoconferencing technology (literally in the cloud), and the kicker ? you only needed to work two hours a day. While we are still lightyears away from that extremely short workday, the workplace already has access to one futuristic technology (cloud video), and AI in its various forms is making more possible.

 

Over at No Jitter, WorkSpace Connect?s sister site, I?ve taken a deep dive on how AI is revolutionizing cloud video, sharing insights from two leading communications experts as well as an enterprise IT professional responsible for implementing collaboration technologies for his company. At this point, with a year-plus of video meetings for everybody, many AI-based features used to boost the experience are well-known to many: noise cancellation, transcription, translation, and more capabilities that simply need a click of the button to work.

 

While in that article I focused on AI in cloud video services, AI?s workplace value is much broader. For example, many technology vendors are providing AI tools aimed at enabling a safe return to the office. Cisco, with AI-based room occupancy capabilities for its Webex desktop and meeting room collaboration devices, is one, as detailed in this No Jitter article. Additionally, many employees use AI-based voice assistants like Amazon Alexa, Apple Siri, or Microsoft Cortana, which for work purposes can be used to do things like schedule meetings.

 

But it would be a mistake to see AI?s role ? and its potential ? solely through the lens of collaboration and communications. On the HR side of things, AI-based HR software is already used to streamline the employee recruitment, interview, and onboarding process. For a few examples, Talmundo provides onboarding software that features an AI-based, multilingual chatbot for new hires, as shared in this ?Academy to Innovate HR? article. Another example is the AI-based video interviewing platform Talocity, which provides behavioral insights on applicants (positive, neutral, or negative language used), the article shared.

 

While we certainly have a lot of AI already at our disposal, AI in the workplace is just getting started, and workplace leaders need to be ready. When strategizing for the future, you should consider what AI brings to the table and how you might leverage AI to accomplish your own departmental goals, as well as the goals of the workplace at large. And if your top executives aren?t yet strategizing about AI and how it fits into business plans moving forward, get them involved.

 

Over time, the workplace will get smarter with AI, so workplace leaders need to be ready to take full advantage of that moment. And maybe, just maybe, AI can then finally get us down to that two hours a day as promised in The Jetsons.

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Learn more about preparing your workplace for the future in the "Workplace Strategies" track at Enterprise Connect, which takes place Sept. 27-29, in Orlando, Fla. Register today with promo code WSCNEWS and receive $200 off your registration!

 

About the Author

Ryan Daily

Ryan Daily is an associate editor and blogger for No Jitter, Informa Tech's online community for news and analysis of the enterprise convergence/unified communications industry, and program coordinator for Enterprise Connect. In her editorial role, Ryan is responsible for creating and editing content, engaging social media audiences, and leading the brand's diversity and inclusion initiative. In addition to this role, Ryan assists with the programming and planning of the Enterprise Connect event.

 

Before coming to Informa, Ryan worked as an editor for Perfumer & Flavorist magazine, where she regularly contributed in-depth feature articles for the flavor and fragrance industry and played a crucial role in two industry-related events: World Perfumery Congress and Flavorcon. Before this, she worked at Hallmark Data Systems and developed landing and web pages for various B2B publications.

 

She earned her bachelor’s degree in English from Northern Illinois University and a master’s in writing and publishing from DePaul University. In her free time, Ryan enjoys going to live music events, running with her dog Iris, drawing, and watching movies.