XLAs Archives - Compucom https://www.compucom.com/tag/xlas/ Technology Driven. People Powered. Fri, 05 Apr 2024 15:12:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.compucom.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/cropped-compucom-ico-32x32.png XLAs Archives - Compucom https://www.compucom.com/tag/xlas/ 32 32 In the Battle for Talent, Better Tech Wins https://www.compucom.com/in-the-battle-for-talent-better-tech-wins/ Wed, 25 Jan 2023 08:30:00 +0000 https://recomp.5oclock.io/?p=3364 Compucom Blog - In the Battle for Talent, Better Tech WinsIn the battle for talent in the hybrid workplace there is one thing that can set your company apart – the digital employee experience. Attracting and retaining employees isn’t just an HR thing — IT plays a significant role, too.

The post In the Battle for Talent, Better Tech Wins appeared first on Compucom.

]]>
Compucom Editorial Team

{{dc:author:display_name}}

In the battle for talent in the hybrid workplace there is one thing that can set your company apart – the digital employee experience. Attracting and retaining employees isn’t just an HR thing — IT plays a significant role, too.

In the fight for loyal and productive employees, companies that provide a better digital employee experience are going to win.

Getting those elements right supports a distributed workforce and results in improved productivity and operational efficiency. People can work faster, collaborate seamlessly and stay connected wherever the job requires.

Therefore, he says, managing and “enhancing EX has become the most sought-after approach” for enterprises, especially those with hybrid work models.

What the EX Research Says About Tech and Retention

Tech also significantly impacts how employees feel about their jobs. An outstanding technology experience is really important to today’s employees – it’s now a need to have, not a nice to have.

That means the pressure is on for leaders and IT teams to adapt and deliver the tech experience employees want and need.

Enhancing the Employee Experience

What’s the next step? Measuring and enhancing the experience.

“As enterprise IT leaders frame strategies to enable remote and hybrid working, there is a huge opportunity to measure [employee experience] with workplace technology using telemetry-based data,” says Rai.

“Quantifying employees’ experience with technology and leveraging it to improve the same is the most sought-after service today,” says Rai.

At Compucom, we know that experience matters. With that in mind, we equip our customers with the right technology, solutions and support to make great tech happen, at scale.

The post In the Battle for Talent, Better Tech Wins appeared first on Compucom.

]]>
Experience Level Agreements (XLA) Explained https://www.compucom.com/experience-level-agreements-explained/ Tue, 05 Jul 2022 08:39:00 +0000 https://recomp.5oclock.io/?p=3245 Compucom Blog - Experience Level Agreements (XLA) ExplainedThe way we interact with tech can make or break a workplace experience. Just like consumer shopping, today we want instant gratification and personalized, automated experiences that make day-to-day life easier.

The post Experience Level Agreements (XLA) Explained appeared first on Compucom.

]]>
Compucom Editorial Team

{{dc:author:display_name}}

Moving beyond the SLA

The way we interact with tech can make or break a workplace experience. Just like consumer shopping, today we want instant gratification and personalized, automated experiences that make day-to-day life easier.

New hires need connected, secure, and ready-to-go devices on day one. Employees want seamless experiences that make things easy whether at home, in the office, or on the road. They also want to know that if something goes wrong, someone is already there to help.

In today’s market, anything less is unacceptable.

That’s why experience level agreements (XLAs) are the future of IT service.

More of a concept than a contract, XLAs bring people to the center of your IT strategy by measuring their perceived quality of technology experiences across your business.

What are XLAs? Do They Replace SLAs?

Service Level Agreements (SLAs) used to be the standard way to map out metrics for measuring the success of managed IT services. SLAs hold service providers accountable for the agreed-upon standard transactions of a contract—for example, ticket volume or average response time.

But SLAs don’t ask one important question: are people actually satisfied with the service?

By comparison, Experience Level Agreements (XLAs) measure indicators of the user experience—for example, ensuring that every new hire is equipped with the right devices, software, and access on day one.

This new approach to IT metrics rates success by how technology improves or impedes the overall employee experience. By focusing on employee satisfaction and customer experience, XLA metrics help organizations understand whether their managed IT services are delivering hassle-free experiences…or whether they’re falling short.

XLAs don’t replace traditional SLAs. You can (and should) use both.

SLAs have great value in measuring technical performance, and they’re familiar and comfortable to IT veterans, but efficiency doesn’t always equate to user experience. Calculating XLA performance is less a matter of aggregating metrics than of finding the metrics that count.

XLA vs SLA: Distinct Purposes, Valuable Insights

Measuring response time is important, but it won’t tell you what your employee’s experience was like before, during, and after the technician responded. In today’s workplace, measuring the impact on the employee is what matters most.

While tracking things like response times is valuable, companies hitting all their SLAs may still fall short in some crucial aspects of user experience. Meeting all SLAs may even mask an uncomfortable truth: measuring success based on ticket volume could be misleading—if a help service desk is useless, employees will not bother raising tickets.

By focusing on employee satisfaction and customer experience, [XLAs] help organizations understand whether their managed IT services are delivering…or falling short.

With an XLA, you measure quality, not quantity

For example, when employees need to bring up a client’s record quickly, an XLA would track how long it takes to search for a customer’s account, which shouldn’t exceed an agreed limit, say 8.5 seconds.

It would also go beyond to track other relevant aspects: is the experience reliable? Is it easy to complete? Is it meeting users’ expectations? Is the overall experience good or bad?

XLAs aren’t cookie-cutter, either. They should be tailored to an organization’s needs and IT concerns, as well as the outcomes they want to see. Measurements and targets can change over time, leading to continuous improvement.

Why Should Employers Care About XLAs? 

This is forcing companies to create a more human-centric approach to everything—from systems and processes to the entire technology experience.

Imagine a talented, driven professional who has just landed her dream job. The company’s mission aligns with her own, and she faces her first day with an energizing sense of purpose.

But the headaches start with the onboarding process: she struggles to get her laptop and mobile device set up with needed applications. She is tech-savvy and jumps at opportunities to resolve her own IT issues, but the company’s self-help knowledge base is abysmal—outdated and clunky—and she ends up just searching for answers online. She reaches out to tech support, but it takes a while to get a response, and they don’t follow up to see if the issue is resolved.

Over the next few months, her daily frustration with her work experience grows. Regretfully, she realizes the friction of her bad user experience keeps her from the more creative and engaging parts of her job and erodes her work-life balance.

How could her company have fixed this? An XLA that ensures a high-quality employee experience not just once, but every step of the way.

Better Employee Experiences = Better Business Performance

The Great Resignation shows no signs of stopping, fueled in part because people want better.

Like our example, talented workers have options and are not willing to stay in a job if their needs go unmet. When XLAs are thoughtfully designed and implemented, they can help the IT department provide next-level service and unlock elevated employee performance across the entire organization. 

  • Work organization: Do I have the resources I need to be successful in my role? 
  • Work control and flexibility: Do I complete my work efficiently, with flexibility and positive integration in my life?
  • Technology: Does my company’s technology enable me to work efficiently and without friction? 

Successful companies differentiate themselves in the market by understanding their customers’ needs and structuring solutions to meet those needs.  

Leading companies apply that same approach to understand and improve their employees’ journey, too. 


Curious about XLAs and how we approach experience management? Book a call with our experts to learn more. 

The post Experience Level Agreements (XLA) Explained appeared first on Compucom.

]]>