The modern office is overflowing with information - emails, instant messages, newsletters, bulletins, and meetings. With so much data and advanced technology at our fingertips, you’d expect employees to be well-informed about each other’s work. But ironically, the opposite is true.
One major pitfall of excessive workplace information is the assumption that others already know what we know. As a result, we work in silos, believing other teams are aware of what’s happening within each group. This leads to minimal communication at best. It’s a paradox, too much general information from senior management often results in too little detailed information at the working level.
The Problem: Information Silos
This creates an environment where each team becomes its own isolated store. Outsiders can only see what’s inside through the front glass window, but they’re not allowed in. The only ones with full access are the employees who work there. No one else truly understands what’s happening beyond what they can glimpse from the outside. Other teams may want to understand, but the lack of access prevents them from making meaningful connections.
Clients, too, may have a general idea of what your team does, but without clear insight, they struggle to see how your work connects to theirs or how you can help them. This is where targeted, specific information becomes essential, and plenty of it.
The Solution: Open the Store
To break down silos, teams must actively share their work with others. Instead of keeping information locked inside, they need to let people in, giving them a behind-the-scenes look at what they do and how they do it.
This can be achieved by:
- Making project progress visible to everyone.
- Providing targeted updates to those directly affected (e.g., clients, senior management).
- Encouraging cross-team collaboration by allowing others to explore ongoing work.
When teams publicly track their progress, it reduces the flood of one-off questions from managers and clients. Instead of constantly responding to update requests, employees can direct people to a shared progress tracker, making the information easily accessible.
Why More Information Means Less Work
Without a centralized progress tracker, teams must repeatedly meet with supervisors to review completed milestones, discuss challenges, and explain how they were overcome. This takes a lot more time than simply updating a tracker for all to see.
When updates are hidden, the workplace becomes chaotic, with managers constantly chasing information. Employees feel overwhelmed by the need to provide frequent status reports, leading to inefficiency, confusion, and even misinformation due to inconsistencies in communication.
The simple solution? Create a transparent tracking system. It relieves employees from the burden of answering repetitive questions and ensures that managers have easy access to real-time updates. While it may seem like more work upfront, it significantly reduces stress and workload over time.
Final Thoughts
Before starting a project, develop a solid communication plan for tracking progress and sharing updates. A well-structured system will not only reduce unnecessary messages but also eliminate the stress of last-minute update requests.
By providing more information, and ensuring that information is well-organized and accessible, you create less work in the long run.
Take care.