Exploring Digital Experience Score​

  • Versão de lançamento: Australia
  • Atualizado 12 de mar. de 2026
  • 2 min. de leitura
  • Learn more about Digital Experience Score​ (DEX Score) and review the benefits it can provide for different users in your organization.

    Digital Experience Score​ overview

    Digital Experience Score​ provides comprehensive insight into the digital experience of your employees by analyzing the following three key data sources:
    • Monitored metrics from end-user devices
    • User sentiment
    • Service desk experience

    Digital Experience Score​ users

    Tabela 1. Users
    User Description
    Digital workplace leader Digital workplace leader can analyze data on the Digital Experience Score​ dashboard.

    They can enable users to use the Digital Experience Score​ dashboard. They can also configure the metric definition, DEX Score system properties, qualitative mapping for the metric scores, and survey configuration.

    Dashboard User Dashboard user can view the Digital Experience Score​ dashboard.

    Digital Experience Score​ benefits

    Tabela 2. Digital Experience Score​ benefits
    Benefit Feature Users
    Analyze both quantitative and qualitative data to get a comprehensive view of the employees' digital experience across your organization. Digital Experience Score​ dashboard
    • Digital workplace leader
    • Dashboard User

    Key terms

    DEX-monitored applications and devices
    DEX-monitored apps and devices are the ones that are tracked and measured using Digital Experience (DEX) metrics. These metrics are then used to compute scores. These scores can be individual normalized metric scores, weighted averages of metric scores, or averages of all scores for each metric.
    Qualitative metrics
    The qualitative metrics are descriptive and subjective, such as the user sentiment metrics. They provide insights into the quality of the subject, such as service feedback and application and device experiences. These metrics are collected through surveys.
    Quantitative metrics
    The Quantitative metrics represent numerical data, such as application health metrics or device health metrics. They provide measurable data that can be analyzed to provide insights to make informed decisions. For application health, you might look at things like crashes and load time. For device health, you'd look at battery health and memory. These metrics are collected through data collection methods from monitored applications and devices.
    Normalized metric scores
    The normalized metric scores represent the adjusted scores of each metric. Metric scores are adjusted to a common scale of 100 so that they can be compared with each other.
    Weighted average
    The weighted average is calculated by using the different weights of each metric to determine an overall average score.