| Workscapes & Organizations
The inter-disciplinary
team of social scientists of the Workscapes & Organizations
(WO) conducts research on the knowledge economy
by doing ethnographic studies of workplace
settings. Building on PARC's pioneering
work practice research and using techniques
from sociology, anthropology, linguistics,
and social psychology, WO researchers investigate
entire workscapes in organizations.

Through
formal analysis,
PARC research
develops
more effective
solutions
by closing
the
gap between
perceived
processes
and
actual work
practice.
|
Fundamental precepts of the WO approach
are that knowledge is inseparable from practice,
and that practices are fostered in work communities.
WO research has led to corporate-level learning
and knowledge-sharing strategies and the
development of technologies that support
knowledge creation in organizations.
Through formal analysis, PARC research develops
more effective solutions by closing the gap
between perceived processes and actual work
practice.
Studies of Work and Practice
In most organizations, there is a gap between
how work is presumed to get done and how
it actually gets done. WO research closes
this process/practice gap by uncovering how
people do their work in actual practice.
Using this research, WO researchers develop
solutions that improve work practices and
bring them into alignment with organizational
goals.
Researchers capture naturally occurring conduct
through participant observation, collections
of documents and other artifacts used in
the workplace, and audio-visual recordings
of people doing their work. They apply a
variety of formal tools to analyze the recordings,
drawing on their expertise in generic human
interaction and embodied conduct.
Work practice engagements range from a few
months to a few years. Engagements provide
WO researchers with an opportunity to conduct
basic research and gather ongoing data for
the evolving theoretical framework that underlies
their work. In turn, researchers provide
sponsoring organizations with customized
solutions, based on their findings.
Research at the "Customer
Front"
For the last several years, the WO team has
focused its research at the "customer
front" — the customer service
call centers and counters where the organization
interacts directly with its customers. With
an increasing recognition of the crucial
role customer service plays in their success,
companies in many industries are investing
in technology and training for customer service
providers. By sponsoring WO studies of their
customer service centers, companies can leverage
these investments.
WO researchers specialize in on-site ethnographic
studies and data analysis aimed at better
understanding the interaction with and impact
of technology used at the customer front.
The WO team then develops solutions that
enhance organizational metrics such as customer
service, workforce productivity, and employee
satisfaction and retention.
A PARC researcher records
call center activity as part of
the team's work practice
investigation.
|
 |
WO researchers have studied
customer front call centers or counter operations
at:
• 9-1-1 communications centers
• global insurance and investment firms
• document production centers
• survey research centers
• NASA mission control center
Customized Solutions
WO researchers implement customized learning
and knowledge-sharing solutions in sponsors'
organizations, studying the outcomes of their
interventions as a means of validating their
research.
These solutions may include a combination
of:
• training programs
• on-the-job learning programs
• work and workgroup reorganization
• redesign of work spaces
• technology recommendations
• design of technological tools
Although researchers analyze each operational setting for
its unique characteristics, their solutions are general and potentially scalable,
requiring minimal customization.
Phased Interactive Learning
One of the methodologies WO researchers apply in many of their solutions is
Phased Interactive Learning (PhIL). PhIL is a learning strategy that is based
on the recognition that most of what people learn at work is learned on the
job, rather than in formal training sessions.
PhIL is a scalable, organization-wide process for supporting and managing continuous,
on-the-job learning. Based on peer-to-peer and subject matter expert training
models, it uses a phased curriculum approach, providing a post-instruction
training support process that depends on interactions among novices and subject
matter experts.
PhIL was initially developed in 1996 during an engagement with Xerox Corporation.
In the pilot implementation, participants performed as well as or better than
their peers in selling supplies, servicing machines over the phone, and responding
to customers' administrative queries. Now implemented among service technicians
across Xerox, PhIL generates cost savings of 16 to 20 million dollars annually.
Based on this success, PhIL has been applied in a variety of work environments
to optimize natural learning and work practices. It has also been adapted to
a customer-training program called Phased Action Learning (PAL).
|