13 ago 2025
What is flow? And how can technology and strong digital employee experience support it?
Can you remember the last time you were at your peak?
Not just getting by, but truly thriving. When you were trying something hard and rose to the occasion. When time blurred, your focus narrowed, and you moved through complexity with clarity and ease. Maybe it was in the final mile of a marathon, the moment a big idea landed during a client pitch, or when you finally nailed that difficult passage on the piano. Maybe it was building a new product from scratch, solving a tough bug, or giving a presentation that felt less like advancing PowerPoint slides and more like giving a performance on Broadway.
That feeling when you’re totally absorbed in the task at hand, where everything feels effortless, where doubt has no place—that’s peak performance. It’s when our tools, our environment, and our mindset align in just the right way to unlock something more than productivity. We feel powerful, grounded, and in sync with our purpose.
I remember the last time I hit that zone.
It was late last winter at Arapahoe Basin, a legendary ski mountain in Colorado. A foot of fresh powder had just dropped overnight. My legs were strong from the season, the sun was out, making visibility high, and I found myself floating effortlessly through the untracked snow (see photo). Lap after lap after lap—no hesitation, no wasted movement, no second guessing. Just me, A-Basin, and my favorite ski album playing in my ears: Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland. Skiers refer to days like these as “hero conditions” because of the way they make you feel—like a hero in one of those ski movies. Like anything is possible.
That’s the feeling we should strive to cultivate in today’s digital workplace.
While every workplace is now digital, that’s just the baseline. To stay competitive, organizations must unlock peak performance—for both employees and IT. For employees, it means fewer distractions and more time to focus on meaningful work. For IT, it means moving from reactive fixes to AI-driven automation that enables smarter, more strategic digital workplace management. But how?
It starts with a mindset shift: we need to stop seeing the digital workplace as just a set of static tools, and start managing it like a constantly evolving product designed to unlock peak performance. In short, we need a product-centric mindset.
Before we talk about what it means to embrace a product-mindset approach to the digital workplace, let’s first define some key terms.
The term "digital workplace" has been around for years, but its definition has matured. At TeamViewer, we define the digital workplace as “the ecosystem of technologies employees use to do their jobs.” That includes everything from physical devices and virtual desktops to collaboration tools, service desk systems, software-as-a-service (SaaS) apps, AI assistants, and more.
Historically, that ecosystem was fractured. Different teams owned different aspects of the digital workplace. Endpoint management sat in one silo, service desk in another, intranet and apps in yet another. Much of it was on-premises, poorly integrated, and definitely not built with peak performance in mind.
Today, that’s changing. Digital workplace organizations are evolving to encompass:
Nowadays, it’s increasingly common to see these three formerly siloed groups sit under one unified digital workplace organization. The term “digital workplace management” refers specifically to the work of this team to govern, secure, and improve all the technologies within the digital workplace.
The push toward unified digital workplace management isn’t happening in a vacuum. It’s being driven by three clear trends across the industry:
1. Employee experience is taking center stage
Employee experience is now a must-have. With hybrid and remote work the norm, employees expect seamless, reliable tools. In response, organizations are applying product thinking internally, starting with empathy, tracking experience metrics, and continuously improving. In fact, 84% of leaders in our recent Bloomberg study say they’re actively collecting data to improve the digital workplace.
2. Organizational siloes are collapsing
As tech stacks unify, so do the teams behind them. Leading organizations are merging EUC, service desk, and app ownership into one digital workplace team—focused on designing employee-facing products and accountable for experience. And collaboration is even expanding outside of IT: 83% say IT and OT teams now work together to drive digital innovation.
3. Cloud, SaaS, and AI are making tech integration easier
Cloud and SaaS are now standard, unlocking greater observability, automation, and AI. Modern DEX and ITSM tools support proactive fixes, smart workflows, and AI-driven insights—enabling teams to unify both orgs and tech stacks. It’s no surprise 80% of business leaders say they’re increasing their budge tfor improving operations.
To truly deliver peak performance, IT organizations need to treat the digital workplace not as a collection of systems to manage, but as a product to be designed, delivered, and continually improved.
At TeamViewer, this product-centric philosophy is embedded directly into TeamViewer ONE—our unified platform designed to help IT teams deliver, observe, and improve the digital workplace experience. Here’s how we help businesses drive peak performance through a product-centric approach to digital workplace management:
1. Deliver the digital workplace efficiently and securely with cloud-based endpoint management
You can’t enable peak performance without a solid foundation. TeamViewer ONE delivers comprehensive remote monitoring and management (RMM) capabilities that empowers IT to:
Together, these capabilities create the foundation for productivity. Without them, employees can’t work remotely, they can’t access their apps, and they sure aren’t achieving peak performance.
2. Observe the health of your digital workplace with real-time insights
Once the digital workplace is delivered, you need a feedback loop—just like any good product team. TeamViewer ONE gives you the tools with our industry-leading DEX solution. TeamViewer DEX enables IT to:
This isn’t just monitoring. It’s product analytics for IT. You’re not guessing what needs attention; you're basing decisions on real-time data and actual employee feedback. See my DEX Decoded post for what makes our DEX solution unique.
3. Improve the digital workplace experience through AI-enabled remediation
Even the best products encounter issues. What matters is how you respond and how quickly you can learn from them. TeamViewer ONE enables IT to:
The result? A platform that doesn’t just fix issues—but learns from them, feeding insight back into the loop to proactively prevent them in the future.
Something tells me I may never have a day at work quite like a peak performance powder day at Arapahoe Basin—legs strong, snow deep, Voodoo Child on repeat, everything just flowing. But with the right approach to digital workplace management, we can at least aim for that feeling: effortless execution, total focus, and alignment with purpose.
That’s what TeamViewer ONE is built to deliver.
By unifying remote support, endpoint management, observability, automation, and AI into a single digital workplace management platform, TeamViewer ONE empowers IT to operate with a product mindset—designing, delivering, and continuously improving the digital workplace:
Because in today’s world, managing your digital workplace like a product isn’t just a best practice, it’s a business imperative. And with TeamViewer ONE, you’ve got the platform to make it happen.
Sounds almost as good as that ski day…
Andrew