eBooks & Guides

The Occupancy Tracking Maturity Model

Issue link: https://resources.tangoanalytics.com/i/1539621

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 5 of 12

© Tango. All rights reserved. www.tangoanalytics.com The Occupancy Tracking Maturity Model Occupancy sensors generally provide the greatest accuracy, but it depends on the specific types and models of sensors that you use, as the underlying technology uses different methods to detect and track an occupant's presence. With greater data accuracy, an organization may find that their average or peak occupancy rates for reservable spaces are lower than what their reservation data suggested, due to no-show cancellations. Or they may find that their occupancy levels in a building are much higher than their badge data shows, as employees regularly hold the door for colleagues, or the prevalence of badge malfunctions makes the data less reliable. These accuracy issues can cause employers with an immature implementation of occupancy tracking to believe they've optimized their workplace around their people, only to discover new problems, which make them hesitant to trust and utilize occupancy data in the future. 5 Data accuracy Organizations with high occupancy tracking maturity have data they can trust to inform decisions about individual spaces within a workplace. Less accurate data sources are good enough for basic use cases like real estate, but more accurate data increases the value of these use cases and opens the door to new opportunities. Badge scanning data can have several accuracy issues: Some systems allow multiple occupants to enter or exit at a time with a single badge swipe. Badges can malfunction and require someone to be let in without a scan. Not all systems track exits, making it difficult to know how many people are in the building (especially if employees engage in "coffee badging"). Desk booking software can have issues as well: someone can reserve a space and then not show up, so the space appears to be occupied when it's vacant. (Tango Reserve has a feature for addressing "no-show cancellations" like this, but it's not the norm for this category of solutions.) Network-based occupancy monitoring uses signal strength to triangulate a network user's position, or the location of an ethernet port they're connected to. Some systems may not be sophisticated enough to recognize "duplicate" users when a single occupant is connected with multiple devices (Tango Occupancy de-duplicates this data), but more importantly, signal strength can only provide an approximate location. It works well for tracking large spaces or specific workstations, but may not always recognize when occupants move into rooms that are connected to larger spaces.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of eBooks & Guides - The Occupancy Tracking Maturity Model