Nearly 90% of Organisations Say Success Depends on Empowering Frontline Employees to Make Decisions in the Moment, According to New Report

However, new research by Harvard Business Review Analytic Services, sponsored by ThoughtSpot shows only 7% of organisations are fully equipping their teams with the analytic tools and resources needed to drive decision-making and autonomy

SUNNYVALE, Calif., & LONDON--()--New research from Harvard Business Review Analytic Services sponsored by ThoughtSpot, the leader in search and AI-driven analytics, illustrates a link between empowering frontline employees, like retail merchandisers, doctors, and banking relationship managers, and organisational performance.

The report, “The New Decision Makers: Equipping Frontline Workers For Success,” analyses the sentiments of 464 business executives from 16 industry sectors in North America, Europe and Asia Pacific. The study found organisations will be more successful when frontline workers are empowered to make important decisions in the moment, but the reality is few are equipping their workers with the resources to do so. Only one-fifth of organisations say they currently have a truly empowered and digitally equipped workforce while 86% agree their frontline workers need better technology and more insight to be able to make good decisions in the moment.

Frontline employees stand to benefit the most from resources like communication and collaboration tools and self-service analytics, which top the list of technologies that survey respondents expect knowledge workers to be using over the next two years. Respondents across the board strongly believe that both work quality and productivity will increase as more data-based insights are made available to such workers. Specifically, 92% say the quality of work of frontline employees in their organisation would improve in the long term, and 73% say it would improve in the short term as well.

“Now more than ever we’re seeing a need for organisations to be able to adapt, evolve and pivot at pace in order to meet changing business demands. Frontline staff have become even more critical in enabling businesses to identify efficiencies and opportunities to navigate this new world, and most simply don’t have the tools they need,” said Sudheesh Nair, CEO of ThoughtSpot. What this research shows is what we see with our own customers: those that are empowering and equipping the frontlines are not only delivering better customer experiences, but breaking down the traditional business silos and structures needed for true agility and transformation.”

Technology and telecoms outperform all other industries for frontline empowerment

The study also found huge discrepancies between different industries in terms of their capacity for empowering frontline staff - with technology/telecoms outperforming all other industries.

Based on collected performance data, the report was able to identify certain industries as ‘Leaders’ and ‘Laggards’ when it comes to empowering employees and equipping them with digital tools to make informed business decisions.

After telecoms, ‘Leaders’ were best represented by organisations within the financial services (20%) industries, whereas ‘Laggards’ were represented by organisations in manufacturing (18%), government and education (17%) and healthcare and pharmaceuticals (15%).

‘Leaders’ who are actively empowering frontline staff are already reaping the benefits, with 72 per cent saying productivity has increased at least moderately; 69 per cent saying they’ve increased both customer and employee engagement/satisfaction, and 67 per cent saying they’ve increased the quality of their products and services.

Leaders are also more likely to have seen increased revenue over the past year: 16 per cent have grown more than 30 per cent and another third have grown between 10 and 30 per cent.

The obstacles are both culture and process-led

When looking at the differences between ‘Leaders’ and ‘Laggard’ companies, it becomes clear that part of the empowerment issue lies in part within the culture of these businesses. For example, respondents at ‘Laggard’ companies were 10 times more likely than ‘Leaders’ to say their top management does not want frontline workers making decisions (42% vs. 4%).

Further, organisations are not able to realise the benefits of a fully empowered workforce without overcoming the barriers influencing the decision-making process. Currently, the largest hurdle to frontline worker empowerment is the lack of effective change management and adoption processes (44%).

Additionally, nearly one third (31%) say a lack of skills to make appropriate use of technology-enabled insight is an obstacle. While almost all respondents (91%) say that managers and supervisors play an essential role in empowering frontline workers, over half (51% overall, 66% of ‘Laggards’) say managers and supervisors are not well equipped with the right tools, training, and knowledge to empower frontline employees appropriately.

Creating change comes from the top down

For a fully empowered and productive and frontline, organisations can learn from the ‘Leaders’. ‘Leaders’ specifically report that a shift to a data-driven culture is critical to their corporate strategy (51% compared to 23% of ‘Laggards’). As a result, ‘Leaders’ are investing more heavily than others in digital capabilities that are designed to transform frontline working: They widely expect their organisations to adopt collaboration tools (55%) and self-service analytics (54%) over the next two years.

Industries across can also invest more deeply in training employees. Today, only two-thirds invest in programmes that teach workers how to use new technology tools and only half (46%) are spending on programmes that show workers how to effectively apply the insights these technologies provide.

“Quality frontline decision-making is driving short term gains, but more drastically propelling better business in the long term,” said Alex Clemente, managing director, at Harvard Business Review Analytics Services. “The shift to an empowered workforce is causing organisations to experience significant increases in productivity and customer and employee satisfaction, however, more holistically, these efforts are also generating enhanced innovation, top-line growth, market position and profitability. To enable this growth, we expect top management to first prioritise building a culture and team that supports data-based decision-making.”

To read the full report, visit ThoughtSpot.com.

Methodology

The Harvard Business Review Analytic Services survey was based on a total of 464 respondents drawn from HBR Advisory Council and HBR e-newsletter lists.

About ThoughtSpot

The world’s most innovative enterprises use ThoughtSpot to empower every person in their organisation, from C-suite executive to front-line employee, with the ability to quickly uncover data-driven insights. With ThoughtSpot, business people can type a simple search to instantly analyse billions of rows of data, and leverage artificial intelligence to get trusted, relevant insights pushed to them as answers to thousands of questions they might not have thought to ask. ThoughtSpot is simple enough for any business person to use, yet powerful enough to handle even the largest, most complex enterprise data without sacrificing speed, security, or governance. That’s why customers like Walmart, 7-11, BT, Daimler, Exxon, Hulu, Royal Bank of Canada, Bank of the West, and Nationwide Building Society have turned to ThoughtSpot to transform their decision-making cultures and analyst firm Gartner named ThoughtSpot a Leader in the 2020 Magic Quadrant. By making insights a part of every conversation and every decision, ThoughtSpot is reimagining the role of data in creating a more fact-driven world. For more information, please visit www.thoughtspot.com.

Contacts

Ryan Mattison
press@thoughtspot.com

Contacts

Ryan Mattison
press@thoughtspot.com