The other day I was explaining to a customer about the different types of Information Worker. Doing a web search afterwards I found very little information available about a bunch of terms we tend to bandy about quite freely without ever really explaining: Information Worker, Knowledge Worker, Structured Task Worker and Data Entry Worker. I don't think I have ever seen a concrete definition of these terms myself, so here's the way I understand them. Feel free to shoot me down if you think I have any of this stuff wrong…
When we use the term Information Worker, this isn't simply another name for Knowledge Worker. Information Worker is the superset of 3 classes of worker with different information and technology usage characteristics.
Why is this stuff important? Most custom-built solutions to date are aimed at the KW category, yet ~80% of the typical user population falls into the STW category. If you are working in a large organisation and are looking for productivity gains in your business why not go figure out who the STWs in your organisation are and look at what they do on a daily basis. It's very common to find these people still doing lots of work with paper: filling in paper forms, using post-it notes, sending faxes. Go look at how you can use SharePoint, InfoPath, Word and the other Office products to build solutions that will improve their productivity and your organisation's agility and data quality.