Your guide to Facebook Workplace
Steve Cassidy finds out why shifting company communications onto Facebook could be a smart move

We've tried Facebook before. It was hard to keep coming up with new content to post, and it didn't seem to benefit us much.
You're echoing the experience of many organisations who have tried using Facebook as a marketing tool. The fact is, while Facebook's potential for promotion and relationship-building can be formidable, it's not right for everyone. "Workplace by Facebook" is something quite different: simply put, it's a custom version of the Facebook environment for messaging between co-workers.
This sounds like a terrible idea - won't people be distracted by chit-chat and memes when they're supposed to be working?
It must be admitted, the Workplace vision of what people get up to at work isn't universal. I certainly wouldn't suggest that a company of forestry workers or a brass band try to use Facebook on the job.
Yet, the evangelical slogans about embracing social media aren't entirely off base. If you trial Workplace and get nothing more from it than a chance to remind your staff to get on with their jobs, that's still better than souring the working environment with glowering intrusions to check up on what they're doing online.
It sounds like my employee communications will be running inside someone else's cloud. What about security and privacy?
At the time of writing, Workplace offers a fairly simple framework providing virtual private meeting places for people who work in different businesses. The idea is to allow discussion of mutual projects without exposing other information and resources.
Get the ITPro daily newsletter
Sign up today and you will receive a free copy of our Future Focus 2025 report - the leading guidance on AI, cybersecurity and other IT challenges as per 700+ senior executives
To be sure, it's hard to overlook Facebook's historic habit of eagerly rolling out new features and letting users do the field-testing. But there are good opportunities here. You can create and tear down a collaborative group more or less on a whim. It might exist for only an afternoon; it might also be that it has only one external member, advising a whole internal team (think legal matters, or health and safety). Adapting your mindset beyond the email model is a key part of getting the most from these consumer crossover platforms.
At the end of the day, isn't this just another online chat system?
Facebook's communications credentials certainly started with simple chat, but have blossomed to include both audio and video connections. This means you can substitute Workplace for services such as Skype, WhatsApp and dedicated VoIP systems. Yes, there are some notable gaps in the feature set, like the absence of a POTS (analogue phone service) gateway such as Skype Out, or true multi-feed video conferencing for virtual meeting room creation. Still, Facebook brings other advantages - for example, Facebook Live sessions, which are not only streamed but stored for future reference.
What's more, like it or not, Facebook has tremendous member loyalty. For some people it's the first place they go in the morning, and the last at night. Harnessing that feel-good factor to foster both collaborative and productive relationships isn't a silly thing to be doing. If you can get employees to feel more positively about work, you've achieved something.
That sounds good, but I'm still concerned about oversight. We have to own our own business-critical systems.
That's not an issue on Workplace. There are at least two defined classes of super-user, namely administrators, and "IT Teams". Administrators can define the entire environment, in terms of how existing Facebook accounts are allowed into the Workplace separate playpen, and how the Workplace system handles things such as single sign-on with mature Windows networks. What's more, Facebook provides one-on-one help for admins, so you can always get a guided support session and ask as many questions as you need. In short, whatever arrangement works for you ought to be attainable.
And how do we handle things such as oversight and legal compliance?
This is where that second group comes in. They're referred to in terms of IT, but they really act as compliance officers: these are the guys who make sure you're not breaking any laws or conditions of service, and keeping paper trails as required. Over the years, we've seen many collaboration platforms created by brilliant but inexperienced youths, which entirely lack the oversight features a business needs. Consequently, the fact that Workplace by Facebook doesn't fall into that trap is itself a definite recommendation.
-
Bigger salaries, more burnout: Is the CISO role in crisis?
In-depth CISOs are more stressed than ever before – but why is this and what can be done?
By Kate O'Flaherty Published
-
Cheap cyber crime kits can be bought on the dark web for less than $25
News Research from NordVPN shows phishing kits are now widely available on the dark web and via messaging apps like Telegram, and are often selling for less than $25.
By Emma Woollacott Published
-
'Digital hide-and-seek': Workers are wasting hundreds of hours a year sourcing the information they need to carry out their role
News Knowledge workers globally are wasting a quarter of their working week tracking down information, new research from Atlassian has revealed.
By George Fitzmaurice Published
-
Untethered: How CIOs and CISOs are paving the way for the new hybrid workforce
Whitepaper Effective techniques to transition from exposed legacy infrastructure to an effective zero trust strategy
By ITPro Published
-
Unlocking the power of your digital services
Sponsored Businesses have invested significant cash into technology since COVID-19, but are they really getting their money's worth?
By ITPro Published
-
Delivering fast and secure digital experiences for the modern hybrid workforce
Whitepaper A new approach to digital experience monitoring that can monitor the health of all systems
By ITPro Published
-
Collaboration is the glue that holds your business together
SPONSORED A combination of productivity tools and cloud telephony can enable the best from your workforce
By ITPro Published
-
The future of work and the forgotten workforce
whitepaper How to deploy a mobile-first strategy so no one gets left behind
By ITPro Published
-
The case for an accelerated device refresh cycle
Whitepaper Achieving a more cost-effective device lifecycle overall
By ITPro Published
-
Employees are choosing how they work
Whitepaper And with the right secure digital strategy, this could be a great thing for your business: today and far into the future
By ITPro Published