{"id":7903,"date":"2022-03-09T14:02:25","date_gmt":"2022-03-09T22:02:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/insidetrack\/blog\/?p=7903"},"modified":"2023-06-20T15:28:51","modified_gmt":"2023-06-20T22:28:51","slug":"transforming-how-microsoft-tracks-its-moveable-assets","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/insidetrack\/blog\/transforming-how-microsoft-tracks-its-moveable-assets\/","title":{"rendered":"Transforming how Microsoft tracks its moveable assets"},"content":{"rendered":"
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This content has been archived, and while it was correct at time of publication, it may no longer be accurate or reflect the current situation at Microsoft.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
Microsoft Global Workplace Services (GWS) manages millions of dollars of office furniture, but because those assets were not physically tracked, the company couldn\u2019t always say with certainty where all those desks, whiteboards, and monitors were at any given time.<\/p>\n
Because they\u2019re on wheels, office chairs were an even bigger challenge. Whenever anyone went to a meeting and there weren\u2019t enough chairs, someone would go hunting for extra chairs in nearby conference rooms (and chances were they wouldn\u2019t return them when they were done).<\/p>\n
Once a PO was written for furniture items and they were procured, there was never any location-specific tracking of that furniture\u2014ever.<\/p>\n
\u2014Timothy Ikehara-Martin, software engineer, Microsoft Digital Employee Experience<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n
And while this was irritating to the employee who had to go find a chair, it was even more so for the people in charge of tracking the furniture; something the pandemic made more challenging because chairs that once just moved from one office to the next were now moving across town to an employee\u2019s home office.<\/p>\n
\u201cOnce a PO was written for furniture items and they were procured, there was never any location-specific tracking of that furniture\u2014ever,\u201d says Timothy Ikehara-Martin, a software engineer with the Microsoft Digital Employee Experience team.<\/p>\n
If chairs are like cats, and who says they\u2019re not, this amusing but frustrating situation was a challenge for facility managers who had no way of knowing where the indifferent chairs that they were herding from room to room lived.<\/p>\n