New Research from Nexthink Indicates IT Leaders Lack the Visibility Needed to Create a Positive Digital Employee Experience

Poor IT experiences are contributing to the Great Resignation, yet the overwhelming majority of organizations don’t have the right tools in place to measure experience

[the_ad_placement id="news-banner-top"]

LAUSANNE, Switzerland & BOSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Nexthink, the leader in Digital Employee Experience (DEX) management software, today announced findings from a new industry report in collaboration with Pulse.QA, on IT leaders’ spending priorities for 2022 and beyond. The research report titled, “Growing Pains,” reveals that 75% of IT leaders believe they can offer a consistent end-user experience for workers both in the office and offsite, yet 84% of respondents stated that they don’t have a comprehensive measurement tool to track that experience.

The report highlights a clear disconnect between how IT leaders are spending and the impact it has on the employee experience. In fact, while IT teams are planning to increase their budget and spend more in 2022, 56% of respondents will only spend 1%-10% of their budgets on employee experience tools. And research shows that unreliable IT service and equipment is playing a major role in the Great Resignation, making finding a way to track experiences valuable to overall employee retention.

To attract and retain the workforce of today, IT leaders need to find proactive ways of monitoring for digital disruptions before it impacts employee experience. To create the positive digital experiences employees expect, IT leaders need to have complete visibility across applications, systems and devices – whether at home, in the office or somewhere in between. IT leaders cannot deliver a positive digital experience without first understanding the challenges employees face and the sentiment of their experiences.

“You can’t enact change if you don’t understand the problem,” said Yassine Zaied, Chief Strategy Officer at Nexthink. “Employees have options and have set standards for themselves that organizations will need to live up to in order to retain talent. Whether they are remote, hybrid or in the office, they expect positive digital experiences. To get there, IT teams need to take a hands-on approach to monitoring and preventing digital issues from disrupting employees from getting their work done.”

Key findings from this study demonstrate:

  • Most businesses are planning to invest more in 2022 than they did in 2021.
    • 50% of business leaders plan to invest “somewhat more” and an additional 2% plan on investing substantially more in 2022.
  • The majority of business leaders surveyed felt lukewarm at best about their current employee survey tool.
    • 66% claim poor response rates is the biggest challenge they face with their current employee survey tool, while 48% report they have no one to manage the survey process.
  • Contrary to their efforts to prioritize employees’ digital experience, IT leaders do not have the proper tools or process in place to track the success of these efforts.
    • 68% of leaders polled either don’t use a DEX index or they only rely on a single metric.
    • When asked if they’ll use a DEX Calculation in 2022, 36% of leaders said they’re either unsure or not planning on it.

Leaders and IT teams should see themselves as the architects of the new digital workplace where employees are at the center. By focusing on their experience, IT teams can also drive the customers’ experience. Every software tool that is being used, every Windows update, password reset, network connection—all of it plays an important role in shaping a company’s productivity, employee and customer satisfaction, and profitability.

To read the full report, click here.

About Nexthink
Nexthink is the leader in digital employee experience management software. The company gives IT leaders unprecedented insight into employees’ daily experiences of technology at the device level – freeing IT to progress from reactive problem solving to proactive optimization. Nexthink enables its more than 1,000 customers to provide better digital experiences to more than 13 million employees. Dual headquartered in Lausanne, Switzerland and Boston, Massachusetts, Nexthink has 9 offices worldwide.

Contacts

Kelley Flynn
press@nexthink.com

Author Information

As a detail-oriented researcher, Sherril is expert at discovering, gathering and compiling industry and market data to create clear, actionable market and competitive intelligence. With deep experience in market analysis and segmentation she is a consummate collaborator with strong communication skills adept at supporting and forming relationships with cross-functional teams in all levels of organizations.

She brings more than 20 years of experience in technology research and marketing; prior to her current role, she was a Research Analyst at Omdia, authoring market and ecosystem reports on Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and User Interface technologies. Sherril was previously Manager of Market Research at Intrado Life and Safety, providing competitive analysis and intelligence, business development support, and analyst relations.

Sherril holds a Master of Business Administration in Marketing from University of Colorado, Boulder and a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from Rutgers University.

SHARE:

[the_ad_placement id="news-sidebar-ad"]

Latest Insights:

Brad Shimmin, VP and Practice Lead at The Futurum Group, examines why investors behind NVIDIA and Meta are backing Hammerspace to remove AI data bottlenecks and improve performance at scale.
Looking Beyond the Dashboard: Tableau Bets Big on AI Grounded in Semantic Data to Define Its Next Chapter
Futurum analysts Brad Shimmin and Keith Kirkpatrick cover the latest developments from Tableau Conference, focused on the new AI and data-management enhancements to the visualization platform.
Colleen Kapase, VP at Google Cloud, joins Tiffani Bova to share insights on enhancing partner opportunities and harnessing AI for growth.

Latest Research:

In our latest Research Brief, Secure Data Infrastructure in a Post-Quantum Cryptographic World, created in partnership with NetApp, The Futurum Group explores the quantum cybersecurity threat and offers a roadmap to protect enterprise infrastructure through Post-Quantum Cryptography, crypto-agility, and proactive data security strategies.
In our latest report, Unlocking the Total Economic Value of Smartsheet, completed in partnership with Smartsheet, The Futurum Group quantifies the platform’s financial and operational impact, revealing how Smartsheet helps organizations accelerate decision-making, streamline workflows, and realize a 601% ROI in just three years.
In our latest Research Report, Securing Your Software Supply Chain: A Boardroom and C-Suite Imperative, completed in partnership with Sonatype, The Futurum Group examines how the software security conversation is shifting from technical teams to the boardroom. The report provides practical guidance on compliance, risk management, and technology investments needed to secure software across modern enterprises.

Book a Demo

Thank you, we received your request, a member of our team will be in contact with you.