What is Smart Office? 


Smart Offices improve real estate allocation, workplace experiences, and overall productivity.


At InnerSpace we think of a Smart Office as a function within a Smart Building that uses the same types of technologies to improve the workplace environment as well as the overall company operations. The difference between it, and a Smart Building is that its applications are designed to improve operations, inform strategies, and enhance the employee experience. 


A Smart Office uses a variety of sensors and data sources to understand and measure how people and objects behave in the office. This data is then used to improve productivity, help employees make decisions about their workday, and inform business leaders developing strategies using mobile apps, dashboards, analytics and just-in-time alerts.


Improve Food and Beverage Sales with Indoor Location


Smart retail improves conversion, engagement and sales.


In a retail environment, understanding the flow of traffic through a space, how often customers return to an area, and how long people wait in line, paints the picture of their journey and how effectively a company can sell.


For example, one of our clients discovered that if their wait times approached 6 minutes, their bounce rate dramatically increased resulting in lost sales and a poor customer experience. Another client measured the impact of moving one of their food stations and redeploying staff during high traffic times. 


Measuring these behaviors empowers retailers to create and test new strategies to improve the customer experience that directly impact sales performance.


What is indoor location intelligence?


Indoor location data helps drive Smart Building and Smart Office experiences to improve operations and workplace experiences.


Indoor location intelligence is the data captured through sensors and smart devices (like your smartphone, watch, or other internet-connected device), that captures the movement of people and things within a space. By measuring the presence of WiFi signals from devices, we can look at how populations of people move through a building. Where they go, how long they are there, and how often they come back. This information can be used to drive incredible experiences such helping employees find a meeting room when they need it, managing building utilities for more efficiency, or providing useful information to people in a retail store, or at a sports stadium like where the shortest lineup is!