Bringing Trust to the Workplace
Global health crisis demands ever-changing environment, public health guidelines
- By Mark Robinton
- Feb 01, 2021
As businesses and governments enter a new era of
workplace safety, two prerequisites are preparedness
and the ability to pivot quickly. Widely adopted access
control, authentication, Internet of Things and
other trusted identity offerings have long been the
cornerstones for protecting people, places, and things, and now they
also provide the foundation for safely and confidently re-opening and
sustaining operations at workplaces during this global pandemic.
FACING THE CHALLENGES
HID Global faced the same challenges as many other organizations
in returning its employees to work. The first step was to develop
a strategy and comprehensive playbook, as well as processes for
communicating to employees in a time of rapid change. These elements
serve as a single point of truth that help guide the safety and
security of employees while ensuring operations continue to run
smoothly. Developed with inputs from multiple sources within the
organization, the Return to Workplace playbook provided clear
recommendations and reassurance for site leaders and all employees,
and support for customers in an ever-changing environment
as new information emerged and public health guidelines evolved.
Providing a “single source of truth” was particularly important,
based on and aggregating information obtained directly from
site leaders about their regional situations. These Site Readiness
Teams established minimum requirements for all sites to include
daily reporting. A site readiness tracker was established, and communication
was established with each site lead to ensure everyone
was keeping abreast ever-changing restrictions and modifications of government COVID-19 orders.
In HID Global’s case, all products and
services are deemed essential to customers
in the health, medical, food and government
sectors. It was critical that manufacturing
and fulfillment sites continue to
operate. Readiness teams also knew that
health and safety would be at the forefront
of employees’ minds. It was essential to anticipate
very real emotions and valid concerns.
Also important was looking ahead
and painting the ‘next’ normal for employees
by defining and providing reassurance
about the new behaviors that would now
occur in a familiar place. The playbook
provided this reassuring clarity.
Each site had the space and autonomy
to adjust their sites according to individual
needs, but they all concentrated on four
core areas: protection, cleaning, messaging
and distancing. For protection and distancing,
HID Global turned to its own product
and solution portfolio.
Site-specific distancing guidance was
provided related to face-to-face meetings
and the time and spacing constraints if one had to meet this way, as well as greeting
practices, dining habits and managing mail
and package deliveries. The guidelines also
covered activities related to meeting rooms,
personal offices and workstations Site leaders
also concentrating on how they could reconfigure
assembly stations and other density-
management challenges. Ongoing focus
areas include ensuring compliance in cube
arrangements, traffic flow pattern design
and management, and the use of plexiglass
and other barriers for ensuring separation.
PUTTING THE GUIDELINES IN PLACE
With these separation guidelines in place,
HID then applied its own technologies to
automate the process of compliance. Having
the scale to create a complete, identitybased
chain of trust in what people are
permitted to do, and where, has given HID
the agility to rapidly develop complete, endto-
end solutions for supporting work safety
initiatives. There are two key components:
• Dynamic Workplace Safety – Cloud-based
visitor management, remote employee and
visitor badge issuance, and fully touchless
access solutions reduce person-to-person
contact. Rule-based physical distancing
management provides immediate insights
and alerts to keep employees compliant
with safety and sanitation requirements.
• Automated Rapid Response and Compliance
– Automated visitor compliance,
contact tracing, physical distancing, and
hygiene behavior removes the burden of
tracking new health and safety procedures.
HID piloted its solutions with 200 essential
workers soon after public health
distancing guidelines went into effect. The
solutions were deployed across a diversity
of physical environments from the manufacturing
floor to cubicles, lunchrooms and
lobbies. Each employee was given a Bluetooth
Low Energy (BLE) fog on a lanyard
that, using peer-to-peer capabilities, provided
auditory behavioral feedback when it
entered the recommended six-foot physicaldistancing
range and remained for a specified
time period. Simultaneously, this data
was sent to the cloud for analysis and location
information to identify where the incident
took place within the building.
As an alternative to fobs, the same capabilities
can be delivered using a badge/
badge holder that is easily added to existing
ID cards. In either case, there is a full digital
trail of an employee’s whereabouts and historical
interactions while at work. Fobs can
be issued not only to employees but also to
visitors and contractors. Employers define
distancing policies and alert parameters for
mitigating an infection outbreak per public
health guidelines, and zones can be created
with geo-fences around high-traffic areas
(breakrooms, hallways, lobbies) to minimize
large congregations of people.
PLAYING A KEY ROLE
The solution also plays a key role when
someone tests positive. With a click of a
button, detailed reporting enables contact
tracing using historical data on movement
and interactions. This triggers safety protocols
based on reporting that includes a
chronological list of all the times two people
were in the same zone or had a distance
incident. The facility can assess the risk of
each employee exposure and minimize disruption
as it rapidly responds to cases and
activates isolation procedures as needed.
The HID Global pilot revealed much
about employee reactions to the global
health crisis. They generally wanted to be
part of something that could have a tremendous
impact on the worldwide workforce.
Their participation in the pilot also revealed
how best to implement guidelines while also
creating the optimal experience for employees.
Additionally, the pilot underscored how
an IoT ecosystem can quickly scale and
adapt to the dynamic requirements of hospitals,
manufacturing facilities and enterprise
organizations. Real-time time monitoring
and analytics capabilities can help ensure
compliance with a number of other safety
requirements, such as hand hygiene policies
and other regulations introduced as part of
the “next normal.” At the same time, organizations
can leverage their investment in these
IoT solutions beyond today’s global health
crisis, since they lay the foundation to easily
add even more IoT applications--
all of which can
be centrally managed on
a single platform.
This article originally appeared in the January / February 2021 issue of Security Today.