This disconnect between tool evolution and actual user uptake results in lost value and reduced productivity.
1. Classic Communication: Why It No Longer Works
Two major reasons explain this gap. First: information overload. Users receive dozens of emails a day and only have a few minutes to spot what’s relevant. They no longer have time for long, generic communications. Their days are filled with multiple tools and shifting priorities. Mass email no longer fits their habits.
Second: lack of contextualisation. The shared information isn’t connected to how they actually use the software, making it hard to remember or apply. Eventually, users stop paying attention altogether.
2. The Impact of Non-Adoption on Performance
This has hidden costs: repeated support tickets on the same topics, lost time in retraining, and reporting issues because data from the tool doesn’t reflect new practices. On a human level, it creates frustration: the tool evolves, but users don’t see the added value.
3. How Usage Context Transforms Feature Adoption
A digital assistant like Shortways Assistant allows notifications or help bubbles to appear directly on the relevant screen, at the exact moment the new feature comes into play. This targeted, contextualised approach increases retention and supports immediate hands-on use. Users are guided without extra effort, and application managers see fewer tickets related to confusion over updates.
Conclusion
Most of the time, application owners or project teams assume users are trained regularly when new features are introduced. In reality, users are often left to figure it out on their own.
👉 Want to go futher ? Our next article will focus on: “why Your Software Training Fails to Drive HRIS Adoption