{"id":10670,"date":"2019-07-11T15:42:10","date_gmt":"2019-07-11T22:42:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/insidetrack\/blog\/?p=10670"},"modified":"2023-06-14T16:17:29","modified_gmt":"2023-06-14T23:17:29","slug":"microsoft-teams-adoption-strategy-prepares-employees-for-a-new-culture-of-work","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/insidetrack\/blog\/microsoft-teams-adoption-strategy-prepares-employees-for-a-new-culture-of-work\/","title":{"rendered":"Microsoft Teams adoption strategy prepares employees for a new culture of work"},"content":{"rendered":"
\n
\n
<\/div>\n

This content has been archived, and while it was correct at time of publication, it may no longer be accurate or reflect the current situation at Microsoft.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n

A cultural change is taking place at Microsoft with the implementation of Microsoft Teams as the new hub for collaboration and communication. Learn how Microsoft Digital systematically drove the adoption of Teams across the company by implementing a change-management plan that actively engaged executive sponsors as well as end users, creating training and evangelism programs, and promoting the transition to Teams through a comprehensive channel strategy\u2014all supported by metrics-driven analytical tools.<\/p>\n

As Microsoft considered the internal rollout of Microsoft Teams, the Microsoft Digital organization knew that it would have to be different. Even though Teams would be replacing the messaging and communications functionality that employees had relied on Skype for Business to provide, Teams is much more than a revised, rebranded version of Skype for Business. It\u2019s a modern communications and collaboration hub enabling channel- and team-based threaded conversations (both public and private), support for live and streamed events, external application integration, file-sharing, and real-time collaboration. And it\u2019s all done through a single integrated user interface that operates consistently across devices.<\/p>\n

Teams is inclusive and open, designed for a world in which five generations of workers are teaming up to work together and as much as 80 percent of an individual\u2019s time is spent engaging in some form of collaboration. It\u2019s also designed for a fluid, modern workplace in which more than 70 percent of workers will, by 2020, be working remotely.<\/p>\n

Despite the clear benefits of using Teams in this new reality, Microsoft Digital knew the upgrade would be a heavy lift. Microsoft was deprecating a key tool that employees depended upon\u2014Skype for Business\u2014and asking them to embrace a tool that would change the way they interacted and engaged with each other and the world.<\/p>\n

How did Microsoft manage what was fundamentally a cultural transformation?<\/p>\n

At the same time the technical upgrade was occurring, Microsoft Digital leaders asked individuals from different areas within its End User Engineering Services group to come together as a virtual team to focus on change management and adoption. This adoption team, whose size and composition swelled and shrank in response to evolving demands, developed and executed a multipronged transformation program focused on:<\/p>\n