For years, organizations have poured money into collaboration tools, intranets, devices, workflow platforms, and automation – all under the banner of “improving the digital employee experience.” Yet employee frustration with digital friction remains.

This isn’t a technology problem. It’s an operational one.

Ownership of the digital employee experience (DEX) has lived everywhere and nowhere: spread across IT, HR, operations, communications, and business teams with no unified approach. DEX operations are typically fragmented, inconsistent, and difficult to scale.

Forrester’s Digital Workplace and Employee Technology Survey, 2025 shows the challenge clearly: 54% of business and IT leaders say DEX lives inside IT, only 20% say they have a dedicated DEX team, and the rest is scattered across HR, communications, and workplace groups. When everyone owns DEX, no one really owns it.

It’s time to align on what we mean when we talk about the digital workplace and digital employee experience, and to introduce a new concept that will bind the two together to help organizations operationalize DEX in a measurable, scalable way.

Defining the Digital Workplace (and why it matters)

Forrester defines the digital workplace as:
The personalized and customizable set of apps, content, and devices that make up an individual’s productivity experience according to their workplace persona.

This definition is intentionally employee centric. The digital workplace is not a static tech stack. It’s the digital tools, capabilities, and workspaces that each employee relies on to do their job – shaped by their role, location, and context.

A retail worker on a mobile device. A developer with a cloud-native toolchain. A call center employee on a locked-down workstation.

Different realities. Different pain points. Different needs.

But understanding the ‘what’ is only half the story.

And what exactly is DEX?

Forrester defines digital employee experience (DEX) as:
The sum of all perceptions that employees have about working with the technology to complete their daily work and manage their relationship with their employer across the lifecycle of their employment.

If the digital workplace is what employees use, DEX is how it feels and the outcomes that experience enables or inhibits.

A mistake organizations tend to make is treating the digital workplace and DEX as interchangeable.

They’re not.

Digital workplace = the ecosystem.
DEX = the outcomes.

And outcomes are what matter most.

Three shifts are reshaping the DEX landscape

We’re entering a new era of DEX – and three forces are accelerating it:

  1. Modern DEX measurement finally gives leaders real visibility. End-User Experience Management Solutions (EUEM) for DEX monitoring and management combine telemetry with sentiment, giving an end-to-end view of experiences. Business and IT Leaders see value in better visibility of DEX, with 26% indicating that implementing a digital experience monitoring strategy is a top priority this year.
  2. AI is turning experience signals into real-time action. Generative AI can interpret signals, recommend fixes, automate workflows, and execute proactive remediation. Organizations can finally sense and respond to digital friction instantly, at scale. Improving DEX is no longer reactive – it’s responsive.
  3. Experience data is expanding to the frontline. Unified endpoint visibility is expanding to shared devices, wearables, operational technology, and customer-facing workflows. DEX isn’t just a knowledge-worker focus anymore but extends to the frontline where outcomes tie directly to revenue, service quality, and brand outcomes.

Together, these shifts make something possible that has eluded organizations for years:  A measurable, operational connection between employee experience and customer experience.

To achieve this, organizations must operationalize DEX beyond isolated IT teams and fragmented initiatives.

DEXOps: The Operating Framework DEX Has Been Missing

As measurement, AI, and frontline visibility mature, a new term has started to emerge and is gaining fast traction – enter DEXOps.

DEXOps is the operating framework for continuously managing and improving the digital experience across the entire digital workplace ecosystem. It unifies experience data, automation, workflow orchestration, and governance to align technology, process, and culture with workforce effectiveness and business outcomes.

Or put even more simply: DEXOps turns “improving DEX” from one-time projects into an operational discipline – predictable, measurable, and scalable.

Like DevOps transformed software delivery, DEXOps will transform experience operations by:

  • Breaking down silos among IT, HR, operations, and business teams
  • Connecting experience signals to employee and frontline value streams
  • Embedding consistent governance across the digital experience
  • Making DEX something organizations can tune in real time
  • Turning DEX into a driver of business agility, efficiency, and customer impact

Organizations adopting a DEXOps mindset can:

  • Eliminate friction before it becomes a support ticket
  • Reduce overhead, duplication, and churn
  • Accelerate delivery and frontline enablement
  • Build repeatable, scalable change practices
  • Improve customer experience by improving DEX
  • Give leaders real-time visibility into experience health
  • Quantify ROI and build confidence in digital workplace investments

This is the “how” behind the challenge we’ve been stuck in for years – tying DEX outcomes to business outcomes. In today’s economic landscape, IT leaders face increasing pressure to demonstrate the business value of digital workplace investments. This urgency is highlighted in Forrester’s Modern Tech Operations Survey, 2025, where 37% of digital and IT professionals identified aligning IT investments and operations with strategic business objectives as their organization’s top IT priority for the coming year.

In summary:  The Digital Workplace defines the ecosystem. DEX defines the experience. DEXOps is the cross-organizational connective tissue to operationalize both.

Image of ideation sketch on a napkin of how DEXOps connects the digital workplace to customer experience.
From digital workplace tools to customer impact

Coming Soon – Forrester’s DEXOps Framework

In my practitioner life, I spent more hours than I can count stitching together data sets that wouldn’t talk to each other, navigating misaligned teams with competing priorities, and building the business case for experience improvements. When the numbers weren’t available, I leaned heavily on qualitative evidence (and plenty of storytelling).

Today, modern DEX measurement tools, unified experience data, and AI-enabled orchestration have closed those gaps. Enterprises finally have what I wished for through most of my career:

  • DEX as an outcome, not a vanity metric.
  • An operational imperative, not a project.
  • A strategic business lever, not a cost center.

I’m actively developing Forrester’s DEXOps framework, which will define the principles, operating motions, and value pathways for bringing DEXOps to life. My goal is to help business and IT leaders future-proof their tech ecosystems, mature their experience operations, and create a future where DEX becomes a business differentiator.

If you want to help shape this research, I’d love to hear what’s working (or not) as you operationalize DEX in your organization. Let’s build this together.

Reach out to me on LinkedIn, or if you’re a Forrester client you can set up an inquiry or guidance session.