Jamie Dunn
Nov 29, 20222 min
If you’ve children, other family members, or friends with kids, take a minute to watch them consume media. Almost everything they consume digitally is easy to find, on-demand, can be controlled by voice or thumb, is contextually based on their preferences, and whatever they can’t find or type ahead, carousel navigation can be cued up in seconds.
Thanks in part to how they use apps like Netflix and Spotify and school-issued Chromebooks or iPads for projects, the need for deep directories is becoming a thing of the past. Gen Z are used to having a flat, horizontal, carousel category tree ( think Netflix) to find content that can be navigated at their speed instead of digging into a vertical nested hierarchy view of (to them) endless folders and sub-directories.
And if they can’t find what they are looking for – they certainly don’t want to waste time looking for the elusive item. Instead, they’ll move on if they can’t find it quickly – unless a Google-like search can provide immediate returns. This is why content recommendations, suggestions, and guided decisions are essential to their process – for them, it works!
The younger generation may not know the massive influence they have when it comes to the overall usability design of enterprise content management – including their unique way of accessing and categorizing content on their terms. This type of workflow has influenced how next-generation Enterprise Content Management solutions are designed now for a faster, more efficient way to work.
Leveraging built-in technologies like Artificial Intelligence (AI), Machine Learning (ML), Natural Language Processing (NLP), and Process Automation are now the norm when it comes to improving productivity for knowledge workers. It’s all about having fewer clicks to make so you can get to your outcomes the most efficiently possible. And to do that, technology needs to work seamlessly to provide a personalized level of experience.