Experience in the Workplace is a Team Sport: Coordinating HR, CRE, IT, and Facilities

Experience in the Workplace: How Cross-Functional Teams Unlock Real ROI

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Experience in the Workplace is a Team Sport: Coordinating HR, CRE, IT, and Facilities
CollaborationInsights

Published: September 22, 2025

Rebekah Carter - Writer

Rebekah Carter

You can feel it when experience in the workplace is something that everyone cares about, not just your HR leader or the person responsible for buying furniture. Spaces previously abandoned by hybrid workers start filling up again. Teams flow in and out without friction, and tech “just works” without constant helpdesk calls. Unfortunately, that’s not the norm.

Hybrid work gave people more freedom. No one is denying that. But it didn’t magically solve the office problem. Managers are still trying to figure out how to get people back without it feeling forced. You walk into some offices now and see entire rows of empty desks. Meeting rooms booked but never used.

Part of the problem is structural: HR owns engagement, Corporate Real Estate (CRE) owns space, IT owns systems, and facilities manage operations. Each optimizes for its own metrics, often buying its own tools, gathering its own data, and setting its own priorities.

When coordinating workplace experience becomes a shared responsibility, the story changes. Companies start protecting budgets, reducing turnover, and actually aligning spaces with the needs of real team members.

The Key Players Shaping Experience in the Workplace

Optimizing experience in the workplace shouldn’t be the job of a single person or team. That’s exactly why it so often goes sideways. Even if you’re one of the many companies hiring for the “workplace experience manager” role, that person still needs to connect with various teams.

HR & Employee Experience

HR and Employee Experience teams carry the weight of culture, onboarding, well-being, and keeping people around. They’ve got Microsoft Viva, Qualtrics, Medallia, and similar tools to measure how people feel. Booking solutions like Envoy are helpful too, making hybrid schedules less of a daily puzzle.

When Braze’s HR and IT teams rolled out Envoy together, new hires started walking into a workplace that felt ready for them immediately. The team leaders could make smarter decisions faster, and employee productivity skyrocketed.

Corporate Real Estate (CRE)

The guardians of space and design. They think in terms of utilization rates, lease efficiency, and layout optimisation. Platforms like Robin and Skedda provide the data to redesign spaces for actual working patterns, not just floorplan aesthetics.

One company, Quantum Health, gave its CRE team insights into how spaces were actually being used before a redesign, and managed to save $13.5 million on renovations that would have been unnecessary.

IT / Digital Workplace

The integrators. IT teams ensure that all these systems—booking, signage, and IoT sensors—actually talk to each other. They also handle data governance and security and address service ticket requests when issues emerge.

With the right insights, IT teams can now stay one step ahead of issues that would otherwise harm workplace experience, using predictive analytics to track potential outages or space problems.

Facilities & Workplace Services

They are the day-to-day operators of the environment. They deal with air quality, temperature, cleaning, and maintenance, all of which influence workplace experience more than most employees realize. With access to IoT sensors and alerts, these teams can make decisions that improve staff comfort.

They can also ensure that employees aren’t wasting energy, with automated solutions that shut down systems or adjust HVAC settings based on occupancy.

Coordinating Experience in the Workplace

Without a structure to force alignment, most cross-department workplace projects drift back into silos. HR goes back to chasing engagement scores. CRE focuses on lease renewals. IT moves on to the next software rollout. Facilities worry about this quarter’s energy bills.

One effective model is to build a Workplace Experience Council, a standing group with leaders from HR, CRE, IT, and Facilities and a clear charter. They meet monthly, own shared KPIs, and approve cross-functional budgets. The point isn’t to create another layer of bureaucracy; it’s to have one room where all the relevant levers of space, tech, people, and operations can be pulled together.

Shared KPIs make the difference:

  • Space utilisation percentage by zone or building.
  • Employee satisfaction score from quarterly pulse surveys.
  • Average energy cost per occupied seat.
  • Onboarding NPS for new hires in hybrid environments.

This kind of cross-functional governance shifts decision-making from reactive to strategic. Instead of departments asking, “What’s best for us?” the council asks, “What’s best for the workplace experience?” That mindset keeps investment aligned and outcomes measurable.

Frameworks for Cross-Functional Workplace Experience

Getting the right mix of people together is just step one. Without a plan, even the best group slips into small talk and vague promises. The kind of meeting where everyone nods, agrees… and then nothing actually happens.

That’s one of the reasons why the “Workspace Experience Manager” role is becoming so compelling. This is the person who can sit between HR’s engagement targets, CRE’s space strategies, IT’s tech stack, and Facilities’ maintenance schedules, and somehow keep everyone moving in the same direction. This manager can help maintain alignment with:

  • Shared goals and KPIs. Teams need a real conversation about what matters. Maybe CRE’s chasing 80 percent meeting room utilisation, HR’s worried about onboarding drop-off, and IT’s sick of supporting three different booking apps. All of that gets on one list.
  • Aligned technology: If your air quality sensors, booking system, and engagement surveys are all living in different worlds, then alignment becomes impossible. A shared dashboard, or all-in-one workplace management platform, keeps the data flowing across teams.
  • Regular communication: These teams need to check in with each other regularly. A workspace experience manager can coordinate that, getting everyone to sit down, look at the numbers, and figure out what to do next.

At Verizon, its Workplace Experience Manager rolled out YaRooms as the one-stop for booking, utilisation analytics, and even climate control. Suddenly, HR, CRE, IT, and Facilities weren’t debating whose numbers to trust; they were looking at the same screen, talking about the same reality.

Benefits of Coordinated Workplace Experience

When you get experience in the workplace right, the impact shows up everywhere.

Start with space. Dr. Martens pulled CRE, Facilities, and IT into the same room, looked at their meeting room analytics in YaRooms, and realised a quarter of their spaces were basically ghost towns. After a few layout changes and booking tweaks, those rooms were back in play with no extra leases and no capital spend.

Then there’s the cost side. Energy is a big one. In multi-site pilots, IoT-driven HVAC and lighting controls have cut energy bills by up to 30 percent. Facilities hit sustainability targets, and finance sees a direct bottom-line win from coordinating workplace experience.

Engagement? Deloitte found that cross-functional teams are 73 percent more likely to perform well and 60 percent more likely to innovate. Makes sense. When HR’s data on burnout feeds into CRE’s space design, you get quieter zones and better flow. When IT’s feedback on meeting room tech lands with Facilities, you fix the rooms people actually avoid using.

Operational speed jumps, too. Quantum Health shared occupancy and service ticket data across Facilities, CRE, and HR, which shaved days off resolving temperature complaints. It sounds minor, but when you’re trying to convince people to come in three days a week, comfort matters.

Action Plan for Aligned Experience in the Workplace

Big change doesn’t have to mean a two-year transformation program. You can start fixing experience in the workplace in three months if you keep it focused.

Month 1: Audit and Align

Pull HR, CRE, IT, and Facilities into a single workshop. Map every tool, data source, and KPI currently in play. You’ll be amazed at how many duplicates you find; two booking systems here, overlapping sensor data there. Then agree on the three to five shared metrics you’ll track. Keep them simple: space utilisation, onboarding NPS, average energy cost per seat, employee satisfaction score, service ticket resolution time.

Month 2: Pilot in One Location

Pick a single building or floor where you can integrate quickly. Use the tools you already have, but connect them. That might mean feeding occupancy data from Facilities into CRE’s dashboard, or pulling HR’s survey results into IT’s meeting room upgrade plan.

Month 3: Review and Scale

Run a joint review. Look at the numbers, but also listen to the teams using the space. Are meetings easier to book? Is onboarding smoother? Did the temperature complaints drop?

Brown Bag Films did exactly this with HR, IT, and Facilities piloting Skedda for studio bookings. In 90 days, they had fewer scheduling conflicts, higher space utilisation, and, maybe most telling, no one wanted to go back to the old system.

Turning Coordination Into a Competitive Edge

It’s easy to talk about experience in the workplace as something you only deal with when problems start emerging. But the truth is, in competitive sectors like big tech, finance, healthcare, and higher education, it’s now a core advantage.

When you strip away the silos, you improve employee engagement, sure. But you also make smarter investments, run leaner operations, and create spaces people want to be in. You keep top performers from drifting to companies that “get it.” You squeeze more value out of every square metre and every kilowatt-hour.

If you’re still working in silos, the gap between your intent and your outcomes will only grow. If you’re ready to close it, start with the 90-day action plan. Then, make coordination part of your operation, not just a one-off initiative.

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