March 2017 |
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Productivity and Satisfaction Deployment
Neither satisfaction or productivity are easy to define and involve obtaining deep knowledge of each asset’s personal self-esteem, well-being, stress, innovation level, and contribution to corporate purpose. |
Ken Sinclair, |
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Satisfaction
and productivity of corporate assets, "their people," is an ongoing
dynamic survey of human cognition that is creating new performance
metrics from the data from our buildings. We are all struggling to
develop mushy measurement methods of cognitions of well-being,
satisfaction, stress, innovation, and contribution to corporate
purpose. Of course, comfort — both temperature and lighting — need to
be provided as basic services with expected energy efficiency.
Our five education sessions at AHRExpo this year in Vegas and the
further discussions with industry thought leaders allowed us a better
understanding of our mission to be the “Catalysis / Harbinger of The IoT Future of Building Automation.”
There is an
information storm blowing, the constant IoT rain pouring from the
cloud, the accumulating self-learning puddles on the edge and
occasional showers from the traditional building automation industry.
It is a major concern that people assets in our buildings are not
presently satisfied or as productive as they could be. To crack this
nut, I believe we need to start with the process to get the cognitions
of these assets. Neither satisfaction or productivity are easy to
define and involve obtaining deep knowledge of each asset’s personal
self-esteem, well-being, stress, innovation level, and contribution to
corporate purpose.
We have never had a direct feedback path from occupancy assets, but we
now have a start of a feedback loop woven around social media, video
analytics, and smartphone interactions.
Only a few adventurous folks have entered this new frontier. How do we
communicate in the language of satisfaction? We cannot connect these
human assets to a wire and use a protocol as we do most of our sensed
variables. Will we have these valuable people assets talk with Alexa?
Will they "Hey, Google" their wishes? Will they text us? Email us? Cut
us some slack? Yes, we will likely need to support all these methods as
they reflect individual personalities.
There are some interesting developments occurring with video analytics
tracking human emotion as an IoT telemetric value. This YouTube video, “Understanding emotions using the Google Vision API — Office and Smart Buildings,” gives you a quick insight.
This month's article, From Data to Insights: What We’re Doing, How, and Why by Stephen Dawson-Haggerty, CTO, Comfy, speaks well to this, with yes, we do have an app for that.
“Every day, billions of people move
through the thoughtfully designed and engineered spaces of their
offices. And yet, far too many workplace professionals who are tasked
with creating the best possible work environments are ‘flying blind’
with only a hazy idea of how the spaces they manage are used. Are
people using the new wellness room? Is it increasing productivity and
satisfaction or simply draining resources? And, perhaps most
importantly, are people comfortable, or are they opting out of the
office to work remotely from someplace that better meets their needs?
“All of these questions involve
people. Unfortunately, traditional building technologies primarily
focus on measuring the operational performance of individual pieces of
equipment and have a limited ability to address ever-changing human
needs. This is where Comfy really shines — we combine data about the
building with real-time data from people to reveal truly insightful
information. Over the last three years, we've proudly shared Comfy's
trends and usage patterns to drive the conversation for more
people-centered workplaces. What we kept hearing from clients over and
over again was, ‘Give me more! Tell me more about my office.’"
The future workplace will leverage advanced technology to understand, predict, and accommodate employees' preferences.
Please join our mission and help create satisfaction and productivity
as the new measured variables. Create a change in thinking and
attitudes that focuses on these new values including the budgets to
support and the resources to execute.
This article also speaks well to the changes that are rapidly falling on us: Alexa — Make My Building Run Better! All
devices installed in a building, such as boilers, chillers, generator
sets, electric sub-meters, pumps, VAV controllers, fire panels, etc.
should be smart and have their own individual cloud points-of-presence
and applications, just as consumer devices do — Varun Nagaraj,
President, CEO, Sierra Monitor Corporation.
“How do these lessons apply to the building automation and control and facility management market?
[an error occurred while processing this directive]“Firstly,
all devices installed in a building, such as boilers, chillers,
generator sets, electric sub-meters, pumps, VAV controllers, fire
panels, etc., should be smart and have their own individual cloud
points-of-presence and applications, just as consumer devices do.
Device and system manufacturers need to turn their electro-mechanical
devices into smart devices with a cloud presence. The facility manager
should insist that their vendors have this capability. Doing so, in
effect, forcing every vendor to provide an app, is good not only for
the facility manager but for all the vendors as well, because it
greatly improves the vendor’s ability to continue to add value to the
facility manager with better service and operational insights.
“For devices that are already
installed and are pre-cloud, the facility manager should implement a
common facility device cloud that automatically discovers all the
automation and control devices in the facility, for example, all the
BACnet-based devices in the building, and creates a virtual cloud
instance for each device. Once all the devices and sub-systems (and
their access and data) are represented in the cloud, the facility
manager should develop their own Alexa-inspired BMS. An integrated
point of control that is intuitive and fun to use. Will it be as easy
as the home Alexa? Maybe not, but that should be the goal.
“Sure, the naysayers will grumble
first about the lack of standard data models. I’d like to point out
that the Echo / Alexa use case does not require standard data models —
the RESTful APIs published by each device vendor — are good enough. The
naysayers will talk about security. I would argue that securing a home
with a new-born baby may be just as important as securing a facility —
so let’s accept that security is a serious issue that must always be
front and center, but it’s an issue that applies across sectors.
“Am I going out on a limb to make a
point? Of course, if that’s what it takes to get what I want for the
New Year … having our community think about reinventing the BMS.”
My job is 2B the "Catalysis / Harbinger of The IoT Future of Building
Automation." Which simply involves throwing balls in the air in
hopes someone will catch them and build our industry on them.
A foundation of rolling balls is worse than sand, but you could get buried looking for bedrock. Enjoy your IoT future.
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