It may feel like ancient history, but it was only a few years ago that, in response to the pandemic, organizations made a wholesale shift to support hybrid work models—and did so literally overnight, in many cases.
While some time has passed, this is a shift to which many IT organizations are still struggling to fully adapt.
Hybrid work models of today typically feature a mix of work arrangements, such as occasional work days in corporate offices, home offices, shared workspaces, satellite offices, and so on.
For IT teams, it is often work-from-home models that can be particularly vexing, and have a negative impact on staff efficiency and productivity.
The key challenge is that when a user works from home, it brings Wi-Fi, home networks, and external ISPs into the picture. Clearly, IT teams don’t “own” these services, and many teams fundamentally lack any visibility into these different areas.
As a result, when end users encounter issues, it can be difficult and time consuming to help with troubleshooting. IT staff may ultimately have to dedicate the time and effort to remotely connect to the end-user device to do diagnostics. Teams may have to spend inordinate amounts of time to prove the “innocence” of their internal networks, only to find out the issue stems from an outage at a third party, such as a last-mile ISP or carrier.
Another complicating factor is home network variability. A user working on a home Wi-Fi may experience very different levels of performance depending on whether they’re on the back deck, in the kitchen, or in their office, and whether they’re alone in the house or an entire family is home and streaming videos and playing games on their own devices.
To contend with today’s hybrid work realities, it is essential to implement active monitoring from the end-user perspective. For IT teams looking to establish effective active testing in order to support work-from-home users, here are a few key suggestions:
To learn more, be sure to watch our Small Bytes presentation, How do I efficiently troubleshoot issues with end users that work from home? This session looks at the persistent challenges associated with troubleshooting issues for work-from-home users, and it shows how teams can employ AppNeta to boost visibility and staff efficiency.