This sounds stupid, but some of this stuff seems useful to focus trainings.
One of my pet peeves is when someone takes a onedrive doc, downloads it, edits it, and sends the off cloud copy back by email. Office sucks at merging documents so this is more work for all the other “cloudies” or whatever you call people who know how to edit online.
I’ve found this is because some users just never used cloud document tools and don’t know how and there’s no easy culturural norm now that everyone is teleworking to teach them.
But this should be used to find zero or very low users and then thrown away. I think that trying to see the number or make a metric out of “number of opens” is so phenomenally dumb. It would be like comparing two git commit history grids and thinking one person is better than another.
One of my pet peeves is when someone takes a onedrive doc, downloads it, edits it, and sends the off cloud copy back by email. Office sucks at merging documents so this is more work for all the other “cloudies” or whatever you call people who know how to edit online.
I’ve found this is because some users just never used cloud document tools and don’t know how and there’s no easy culturural norm now that everyone is teleworking to teach them.
But this should be used to find zero or very low users and then thrown away. I think that trying to see the number or make a metric out of “number of opens” is so phenomenally dumb. It would be like comparing two git commit history grids and thinking one person is better than another.