Despite the many recent advances in workplace collaboration tools, we're still overwhelmed with information and tasks. It's time to think differently about the way we work together. This session explores how IBM is using design thinking, and cognitive computing technologies, to reimagine the way we work with one another.
Observability Concepts EVERY Developer Should Know (DevOpsDays Seattle)
IBM @ SXSW: Giving Your Collaboration Tools a Brain
1. Laura Rodrigues, User Experience Designer, IBM
Jacques Pavlenyi, Senior Portfolio Marketing Manager, IBM
March 13, 2016
Giving your Collaboration Tools
a Brain
2. Please note:
▪ IBM’s statements regarding its plans, directions, and intent are subject to change or withdrawal without notice at IBM’s
sole discretion.
▪ Information regarding potential future products is intended to outline our general product direction and it should not be
relied on in making a purchasing decision.
▪ The information mentioned regarding potential future products is not a commitment, promise, or legal obligation to
deliver any material, code or functionality. Information about potential future products may not be incorporated into any
contract.
▪ The development, release, and timing of any future features or functionality described for our products remains at our
sole discretion.
▪ Performance is based on measurements and projections using standard IBM benchmarks in a controlled environment.
The actual throughput or performance that any user will experience will vary depending upon many factors, including
considerations such as the amount of multiprogramming in the user’s job stream, the I/O configuration, the storage
configuration, and the workload processed. Therefore, no assurance can be given that an individual user will achieve
results similar to those stated here.
3. Collaborating in the Era of Cognitive
Critical Obstacle Discussion
Designing for Cognitive Systems
From “Now” to “Wow”
Join us at the IBM Cognitive Studio
4. Competitors will continue to accelerate disruption
and blur the lines among categories
4
“The biggest threat is new competitors
that aren’t yet classified as competitors.”
—Piotr Ruszowski, chief marketing officer,
Mondial Assistance, Poland
expect more competitors from
outside their industry, while only
29 percent expect more competition
from within their industry.
54%
of CxOs
SOURCE cited in notes
6. 6
Think of all that has been
accomplished using only
a fraction of the available
data
Unlocking your imagination means you first need to
unlock the potential in all data
What answers
lie in the 88%
that is dark?1
By the year 2020, about
1.7 MB of new
information will be
created every second,
for every human being
on the planet.2
SOURCES cited in notes
Structured and active Unstructured and dark
7. 7
Cognitive systems unlock potential because they are
fundamentally different from what you have today
Adapt and make sense of all data; “read”
text, “see” images and “hear” natural
speech with context
Understand
Reason Interpret information, organize it and
offer explanations of what it means,
with rationale for the conclusions
Learn Accumulate data and derive
insight at every interaction,
perpetually
8. Cognitive collaboration enhances, scales and
accelerates human expertise to empower all people
Go beyond analysis to hypothesis,
conclusion and action—in weeks
instead of months or years
Collate decades of knowledge and
data to create an evidence-based,
virtual advisor and elevate entire
teams to the level of your best experts
Teach your system to learn and
uncover patterns and insights from
all kinds of information such as
research data, images, videos,
audio, and notes
Build workflows that can be coached
by humans to grow ever more effective,
safe or productive with each interaction
9. The Era of Cognitive will move us from
"productive" to "effective"
Communicate
and share
without being
together
Team across
geographic
boundaries
Team with
pre-defined
goals
Team across
organizational
and
geographic
boundaries
Understand
user
behavior to
guide
activities
Understand
behavior and
context to
deliver insights
and proactively
assist users
Email, Chat Groupware Workspaces Enterprise Social Analytics Cognitive
10. Artificial Intelligence = a spectrum of capabilities
User Analytics
The ability to analyze a users behavior and interactions
in order to determine optimal results.
Voice Recognition
The ability to interact directly with an application through
voice commands.
These solution combine voice recognition, natural
language processing and searching.
Siri, Cortana and Google Now have made this
capability mainstream
Personal Assistant
Systems that take actions on a user’s behalf that are
usually associated with human execution
Examples include prioritization of email inbox,
assisting in setting up meetings, returning
emails and a lot of consumer capabilities that
apply to the enterprise.
Cognitive Expertise
The ability for a system to take “human-like” cognitive
action without prior programming.
Watson answering questions that it has not
been previously “taught” to answer is an
example.
“I’ve got five minutes before I walk into a
meeting. Prioritize my world for me!”
“Text my husband about the dinner plans set
up. Now, read me my urgent emails ”
“Yes, please set up that appointment and
return the requested files to the boss”
“I’d like to see those research documents
about diabetes. Did the new medication get
FDA approval yet?”
11. Two essential new virtual team members
Expert Advisors
Understand your work
Offer answers and
insights
Personal Assistants
Prioritize work
Handle common tasks
Surface functions
based on behavior
12. Collaborating in the Era of Cognitive
Critical Obstacle Discussion
Designing for Cognitive Systems
From “Now” to “Wow”
Join us at the IBM Cognitive Studio
13. Introduce yourself to the
person next to you.
They’re going to be your
partner for this first exercise.
13
14. 1. Select a critical obstacle you both relate to.
2. Then take turns describing how you handle it today.
Break it down into a step-by-step story.
A
Woohoo! You’re
kicking off a new
project, with a new
team. To get up to
speed you…
B
Uh oh! Something
urgent came up and
the colleague with
expertise you depend
on is not responding,
so you…
C
Aw man! You’re back
from a vacation where
you completely
unplugged (or barely
did any work). To get
caught up you…
15. 15
“I’m scattered between too many places”
“I’m flooded with information”
“I feel behind and inefficient”
You’re doing a TON of manual work, huh?
“I handled it differently than my partner”
16. Collaborating in the Era of Cognitive
Critical Obstacle Discussion
Designing for Cognitive Systems
From “Now” to “Wow”
Join us at the IBM Cognitive Studio
20. Collaborating in the Era of Cognitive
Critical Obstacle Discussion
Designing for Cognitive Systems
From “Now” to “Wow”
Join us at the IBM Cognitive Studio
22. 22
But now envision how that could be
different with cognitive…
• How is the system adapting to you, as an individual?
• How is the system anticipating your needs?
• What repetitive, menial tasks are you handing over?
• What kind of commands or questions are you giving it?
24. 24
Let us know what you want
from your future work tools!
Post your cognitive ideas to Twitter using:
#NowToWow
25. Collaborating in the Era of Cognitive
Critical Obstacle Discussion
Designing for Cognitive Systems
From “Now” to “Wow”
Join us at the IBM Cognitive Studio