{"id":8110,"date":"2024-10-18T09:00:37","date_gmt":"2024-10-18T16:00:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/insidetrack\/blog\/?p=8110"},"modified":"2024-10-26T15:05:00","modified_gmt":"2024-10-26T22:05:00","slug":"microsofts-upgraded-transportation-experience-arrives-in-puget-sound","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/insidetrack\/blog\/microsofts-upgraded-transportation-experience-arrives-in-puget-sound\/","title":{"rendered":"Microsoft\u2019s upgraded transportation experience arrives in Puget Sound"},"content":{"rendered":"
There\u2019s no doubt\u2014hybrid work is the new norm. To adapt to the new world of hybrid work and achieve its vision of a truly modern employee experience, Microsoft is prioritizing the improvement of employees\u2019 daily commutes. For a while now, Microsoft\u2019s Puget Sound campus has provided workers with a system of shuttles and buses to travel between home, work, and other office buildings sprawled across multiple cities. Yet providing transportation alone hasn\u2019t been enough. The transportation system needed a boost in user-friendliness to encourage new ridership and enhance the user experience.<\/p>\n
To tackle this challenge head-on, Microsoft engineers in Puget Sound developed the Global Commute Service. The software comes in the form of a web and mobile app and has ever-improving features that streamline the commuting experience for employees.<\/p>\n
One of these features is an upgraded user interface (UI) that is visually consistent with other Microsoft workplace applications. The familiar design and layout make the software more readily understandable and usable for employees. Riders are also empowered by the modern mobility platform with a trip-planning function, push notifications, real-time ETAs, and live vehicle map tracking for shuttle and Connector bus services.<\/p>\n
Trip planner allows employees to plan for their multimodal trips and take the hassle of planning away. This allows employees to plan their end-to-end trips using Connector or shuttle, or on foot up to two weeks in advance.<\/p>\n
At the same time as the UI upgrade, the entire backend of the experience was also updated. The updates gave Microsoft a scalable and extensible system that powers real-time updates and can be deployed globally. These improvements benefit the drivers and operators who manage these transportation services, giving them visibility into route usage, rider traffic, and automated vehicle dispatch.<\/p>\n
[<\/em>Find out what Microsoft is doing to create a digital workplace<\/em><\/a>.<\/em> Discover how Microsoft is reinventing the employee experience for a hybrid world<\/em><\/a>.<\/em>]<\/em><\/p>\n For a long time, the booking platform known to the Puget Sound campus as MERGE (Manage Explore Reserve Go Anywhere) served as the main method for riders to get a seat on one of Microsoft\u2019s buses or shuttles. It was the go-to for reserving a ride on a Connector shuttle, the fixed route shuttles that run on a loop around campus, and the on-demand shuttles that move people between offices.<\/p>\n The legacy booking platform served Puget Sound well but had a different interface than other services available to Microsoft employees, making for an inconsistent user experience. To further complicate matters, MERGE was closely tied to the local transportation services found exclusively in Puget Sound, meaning the app could not be easily replicated to other Microsoft campuses. It was also difficult to extract important and accurate data from the transportation system for operational insights.<\/p>\n The first thing we think about is the rider experience. We start with the physical world, the environment that we live and work in, then we think about the digital world. We want to deliver an experience that is centered around ease, flexibility, and choice.<\/p>\n \u2014Esther Christoffersen, senior services manager, Real Estate and Facilities<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n All of this added up to one key takeaway\u2014it was time to transform Merge into Global Commute Service, a new mobility experience that offers a consistent interface, modern features, scalability, and visibility.<\/p>\n Two teams worked in tandem to help upgrade transportation systems: Microsoft Digital Employee Experience, the organization that powers, protects, and transforms the company, and Microsoft\u2019s real estate team who are responsible for managing and operating the company\u2019s global facilities and services.<\/p>\n \u201cThe first thing we think about is the rider experience,\u201d says Esther Christoffersen, a senior services manager with Real Estate and Facilities. \u201cWe start with the physical world, the environment that we live and work in, then we think about the digital world. We want to deliver an experience that is centered around ease, flexibility, and choice.\u201d<\/p>\n The team knew that building a strong bridge between the physical and digital would empower riders with an improved transportation experience.<\/p>\n \u201cWe had to think about what really matters,\u201d says Garima Gaurav, a senior product manager with Microsoft Digital Employee Experience. \u201cThat meant building something modern, real-time, and fast for riders. But we also wanted operational agility for the Real Estate and Facilities team.\u201d<\/p>\n The two organizations started brainstorming new rider experiences in 2019, but a few months into the project, the Puget Sound campus shifted to primarily remote with only essential employees working onsite.<\/p>\n \u201cThis was an opportunity to pause and really dive into the feedback to see what we could do better,\u201d Christoffersen says.<\/p>\n We built a service that is robust, reliable, and scalable.<\/p>\n \u2014Ram Kuppaswamy, principal software engineering manager, Microsoft Digital Employee Experience<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n With campus services pausing, Microsoft could disassemble the front-end (the web and app interface riders engage with) and the back-end (the operational workhorses that manage transportation services) without creating disruption.<\/p>\n Work started by decoupling Global Commute Service from the Puget Sound\u2019s established back end. This allowed Microsoft\u2019s new service to integrate with any transportation system. If, for example, a campus uses a new transportation system, Global Commute Service will connect seamlessly, offering riders a consistent experience no matter which Microsoft campus they were on.<\/p>\n \u201cWe built a service that is robust, reliable, and scalable,\u201d says Ram Kuppaswamy, a principal software engineering manager with Microsoft Digital Employee Experience. \u201cNow we can launch similar experiences for the rest of Microsoft\u2019s campuses globally.\u201d<\/p>\n Vehicles used to be dispatched manually. By selecting this partner, technology is driving everything from booking, managing dispatch, and assigning vehicles. It has also empowered us to provide features like real-time updates and communications with drivers. We can do it now.<\/p>\n \u2014 Garima Gaurav, a senior product manager with Microsoft Digital Employee Experience<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n Having separated the booking interface, Microsoft could transform the back-end management of its transportation system. This would give much needed visibility and ownership of operating data, the kind that enables real-time status updates and introduce new efficiencies, like automated vehicle dispatch and data-driven service scaling.<\/p>\nSwitching up routes to deliver a new experience<\/strong><\/h2>\n
Improving mobility at Microsoft<\/strong><\/h2>\n