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Invite colleaguesA records and information management lens on workplace transformation : How to minimise risk and reap the rewards during real estate changes
Abstract
As organisations work to navigate a dynamic business environment, real estate leaders have been tasked with developing portfolio strategies that reduce costs, maximise efficiencies and meet evolving employee needs. While these strategies typically involve making changes to the workplace, real estate leaders often fail to involve key internal and external stakeholders as early and often as they should. This can be a mistake. Real estate transformation is both an opportunity and a risk and should be conducted with the full participation of everyone who is touched by the project. In this paper, real estate professionals and other stakeholders will gain insights into best practices for working effectively with stakeholders across the organisation to plan and execute real estate transformation while minimising the risk of a data breach. Key takeaways include the proper management and handling of sensitive documents and IT assets, tips for vetting external vendors, the importance of involving critical stakeholders such as records management and IT, and real-world examples of companies who have used real estate changes to reduce risk and clutter while evolving into a paperless or paper-lite workplace.
The full article is available to subscribers to the journal.
Author's Biography
Aurora Cammarata is a consultative business development professional who assists all kinds of companies in their workplace transformation journeys. As Corporate Real Estate and Facilities Advisor for Iron Mountain’s Clean Start solution, Aurora works with facility management and corporate real estate professionals to navigate business transformation when changes to the workplace present opportunities to recapture square footage for higher-value use, save money, improve resiliency and sustainability and support employee productivity and collaboration. Aurora has over 30 years’ experience in the field of corporate real estate, project management, design and construction. She has spoken at conferences and seminars for organisations such as Corenet Global New England Chapter, Architecture Boston Expo, Boston Society of Architects, Associated General Contractors of Massachusetts, Society for Marketing Professional Services and Women’s Exchange for Leadership and Living.