Tagged Posts: social-computing
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
Deploying, measuring and succeeding with Social Software
Ian McNairn, IBM SWG
What does success mean - critical mass? application use? customer delight? increased profit? in other words be clear what you want.
Know what to measure - communities and social networks are different things - determine the business outcome (look for linked indicators) - get clear about the changes you want to get - think about cause and effect. Just because it’s easy to measure, doesn’t mean it means anything…
Measure impact and usage - based on the business outcome. examples, Knowledge Currency, tagging, polls, linking, availability vs. time-to-complain
Pitfalls to avoid - don’t decide on metrics without thinking about context, don’t measure the past, beware “build it and they will come”, don’t try to boil the ocean, don’t expect all users to have equal understanding.
Deployment tricks to increase success - pre-populate with content, engage the members in interaction, on-demand in-context help, make enrollment easy, reward contributions by example.
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
Who’s Afraid of Identity?
Tom Ilube, Garlik
Garlik aiming at the “mainstream digital consumer”
Explosion of personal data on the web in last 18 months. Equivalent huge rise in ID theft.
Consumers don’t understand identity management…
But people make decisions about us based on our web status…
And then the talk ended - mostly a “here we are” pitch for Garlik without actually saying anything about what they do…
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business
The Power of Film - Adding video podcasts to the communications mix
Joyce Lewis, University of Southampton
First video podcasting news service in any UK university (March 2006)
“People don’t care about cold facts. They care about pictures or stories” - Nancy Green, Donovan and Green.
ECS website has 827,000 pages(!). Video podcasting backs up a lot of the messages .
Inclusion and empowerment - for example, use of videos to support staff through a major upheaval after a key building was destroyed, adding emotional depth.
JE thought - how is this “Web 2.0″? - feels just like broadcasting to me…
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
Social Media in Action
Adrian Moss - BOTTLE PR and Focus Business Communications
Poundland Case Study - using social media to support a retail operation.
Number 1 single price discount retailer in Europe. IT driven retail distribution. Lots of short-run and end-of-line product.
Blog experiment to promote Xmas lines - aiming for <£1 cost per visitor
12k visitors in 10 weeks. <50p CPV. Lots of links from blog to company website. 100 active subscribers / Facebook friends. Typically each Facebook friend has 50-100 other friends. Echo chamber effect - 360% increase in referrals to website. Blog probably worth £0.5M already. Extrapolate to a full year, turnover ~ £1.5M <=> 0.5 of a store.
Key was planning. Audience, tone/style/format. Core objectives: engage with key targets, regular posts (3-7/wk), note new product lines.
Lessons: listen to feedback, adjust and adapt go with the flow and the rules, if you make a mistake, acknowledge
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
KM Goes Social: From KM 1.0 to KM 2.0
David Gurteen
Impact of social tools on Knowledge Management - growth of “KM 2.0″
Techno-centric KM (tools) vs People-Centric KM (attitudes, soft tools)
KM in the doldrums - over-promised, under-delivered in business terms
Social tools are fundamentally about sharing knowledge - personal/social KM! (but not usually coming from the KM community or tool vendors)
Everything is 2.0 now - i.e. participatory. Can be seen as disruptive and subversive.
Combine people-centric KM and social tools to form KM 2.0
Managing tacit knowledge
KM as part of everyday work (thinking out loud) rather than extra work.
Floor comment from Ian Hughes - the importance of allowing lurking as a way of building comfort.
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
Business in Virtual Worlds, How we got here with Web 2.0
Ian Hughes, Metaverse Evangelist IBM
- What are metaverses and virtual worlds and why are they at a social media conf?
- And why do IBM care?
It’s all about people… In virtual worlds the visible presence and (e.g.) body language provides strong social signals.
Fundamentally no different from blogs, IM etc - still about people and conversations
About user-created content - just like blogs / wikis / flickr
Real-life sensitivities - e.g. the tribute band U2 in SL… except that U2 and the record company seem to have worked out that this doesn’t hurt the U2 brand.
But online reputation counts… identity is important, but some protection in people recognising imposters through inconsistent behaviour.
Intraverses - virtual worlds inside the firewall
Virtual World Guidelines - treat it as a new country, learn and observe, connect and talk with fellow (insert company name), act with integrity, it’s the internet - beware and be broad-minded…
“Web 2.0 is Web Do”
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
Technology Brings Power to the People
Crispin O’Brien KPMG
Recent survey published - Enterprise 2.0 The Benefits and Challenges of Adoptions
John Chambers CEO Cisco - Cisco moving into enterprise Web 2.0 because old space they compete in is becoming too crowded…
So what has all this stuff got to do with business? And what do you let through the firewall?
Internal benefits - find stuff, keep track of what we know, share who and what we know
External benefits - get really close to customers, harness ideas (LOTS of ideas), find and nurture partners / suppliers
The human dynamics of encouraging people to share and contribute - possibly tie in some part of reward to sharing behaviours?
Email and intranet is bilateral, sequential, run centrally and DULL
To find stuff we use Google - why not use those sort of tools in business
Corporate blogs - ideally uncensored…
Controlled collaboration - walled gardens
The power of tagging.
Innovation and sharing - successful companies of the future need to take heed of all their stakeholders.
There are risks of course, but need to update the controls and risk management.
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business
Facilitating Open Innovation in A Distributed Community Using Free Social Software Tools
Claire Reddington, iShed & Ed Mitchell, Ed Mitchell Consulting
iShed is spin off from Watershed media centre in Bristol, to bring together media and R&D - investing in 6 SMEs to research into media blue sky stuff - including Aardman Animations.
Have used project blogs etc. for years. This time wanted to do something different.
Media Sandbox - looking at pervasive media - want to create a commmunity of interest and support a community of practice.
Quoted Charles Leadbetter
Three year project - three times one year. Want to learn and adapt.
Blogs, mailing lists, 3rd party apps like flickr, physical gatherings, workshops etc.
Preparation, launch event, open innovation, progress and final results…
Collaborative R&D with small SMEs is a big thing - they find it hard to make space to do this blue sky thinking.
By the community for the community - the media community helped shape the criteria for grant award
Question they posed - how can this online stuff help us measure (various success criteria)
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
Social is Good for Business: Snockles
Neil Burton, Web Spiders
Enterprise Snockles - a corporate version of Snockles - yet another social messaging app which looks like another Twitter.
Aimed at creating a corporate social network to build better commercial and team relationships, improve knowledge management, build communities, speed up innovation.
Web and mobile phone integrated.
Key thought (JE) - why would I want my employer to own my social graph?
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
Case Study: A Whistlestop Tour Round Web Marketing 2.0
Will Wynne, ArenaFlowers.com
“Old” web marketing - paid search, natural search, retention marketing, PR, Affiliate Marketing, Comparison Shopping, Conversion Rate. Cost, Competition, Risk, Growth, SEO Optimised page <> Friendly page.
Using social media - video
Host clip of a BBC story, “About Arena” video, Show the team, shows that they do their own flowers, used for job ads, embedded in eBay listing using www.vzaar.com, total views 5k. Blog alongside the main site - good google juice, good for morale, human face to business, 4 times the £/page of rest of site. Fun app on Facebook sending virtual versions of the products and sending traffic to main site.
Backend systems are all web-based, faster to change, cheaper to deploy.
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
Social Computing and the Knowledge-Powered Enterprise
John Davies, Next Generation Web Research Group, BT
Social computing & Web 2.0
(user-generated, user-tagged content; social networking tools)
- 3rd generation KM - emergent social networks, opt-in, self-organising, tools chosen and integrated by the community
- social computing landscape - Ad-hoc-Structure, Personal-Enterprise. Link technologies to objectives.
- Knowledge-powered Enterprise - most knoweldge worker activity not based on formal processes - in people’s heads or unstructured documents. Most knowledge workers need to draw on knowledge from colleagues and from outside the enterprise.
Case studies
- BT: “Hubbub” Web 2.0 customer community as support and self-service channel. Business case: call deflection and improved service. 20% of user base for covered products have used the system.
- IBM: “Dogear” - social bookmarking for the enterprise. Expertise location, improved quality of recommendations. Enhances results from enterprise search, use bookmarking as a quality indicator. Using individucal’s bookmarks to derive user profiles, team bookmarks as project resources. Integrated into Lotus Connections.
Web 2.0 and the Semantic Web (web 3.0)
- Extending the web to use computers to do more linking of meaning.
- Ontologies provide a formal description of an information domain - a taxonomy is a simple example of an ontology.
- “Scruffies” and “Neats” - bottom-up folksonomies vs. top-down ontologies. Not mutually exclusive
- SemanticWiki - currently only keyword search, no consistency checking. Experiment - extend Wikipedia by adding type tags to links.
- Project ACTIVE
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m at Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
Social Tools Hit The Mainstream
Lee Bryant, Headshift
Ideas behind social tools now ready to challenge lots of existing IT and Internal Communications practices inside organisations - Tim O’Reilly
The social stack:
- Personal tools - organise your “stuff” by tags- personal portals, manage networks and feeds.
- Group Collaboration - wikis and group systems
- Blogs and networks
- Bookmarks and Tags
- Public feeds and flows
Proven benefits:
- Simpler, smarter, cheaper enterprise computing.
- Better personal productivity - move stuff email that doesn’t need to be in it, social network as information filter, better findability.
- Network productivity and presence sharing - “flow”formal
- Better informal collaboration and sharing
- Collaboration and networking - including with other businesses you are partnering with
- Open innovation
- Internal communications - more interactive engagement, combination of tools and media two-way not just broadcast.
- Recruiting and retaining emergent talent - the “digital native” expect to participate. Many of their IT skills being wasted by forcing them into traditional IT environment.
- In-context, continual informal learning
Success factors:
- Start with small, simple self-powered projects.
- Create conditions for shared meaning e.g. a shared del.icio.us account - share social objects
Challenges
- Enterprise IT sucks badly - IT industry still centralising, internet is about intelligence at the edges.
- Try to put IT in the hands of the users - IT governance processes can slow things down so much that costs can be an order of magnitude higher.
- Moving from .doc and email to the wiki way
- Iterative approach, agile development. Get something done, expose it to users, adapt to feedback.
- Enterprise Information Architecture - moving away from a priori taxonomies to folksonomies. Individual tagging actions lead to collective benefit.
- Information Professional become network nodes.
- Support the early adopters, but avoid it being a geek ghetto. Make more intimate collaboration environments. Everything needs to be based on a real-world use case. Think of the web as an innovation lab.
Three Myths
- Social Networking is a waste of time - recognise that online life is distributed, don’t cut it off when they come through the door.
- New security risks? - yes, but the old ones are worse, because people work around bad old unusable IT
- Sharing is dangerous? We cannot stem the tide of sharing - better to teach responsibility than police use
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference
I’m blogging Web 2.0 and Beyond - Applying Social and Collaborative Tools To Business .
- Social Tools Hit The Mainstream - Lee Bryant, Headshift
- Social Computing and the Knowledge-Powered Enterprise - John Davies, BT
- Case Study: A Whistlestop Tour Round Web Marketing 2.0 - Will Wynne, ArenaFlowers.com
- Social is Good for Business: Snockles - Neil Burton, Web Spiders
- Facilitating Open Innovation in A Distributed Community Using Free Social Software Tools - Claire Reddington & Ed Mitchell
- Technology Brings Power to the People - Crispin O’Brien KPMG
- Business in Virtual Worlds, How we got here with Web 2.0 - Ian Hughes, IBM
- KM Goes Social: From KM 1.0 to KM 2.0 David Gurteen
- Social Media in Action - Adrian Moss, Bottle PR
- The Power of Film - Adding video podcasts to the communications mix - Joyce Lewis, University of Southampton
- Who’s Afraid of Identity? - Tom Ilube, Garlik
- Deploying, measuring and succeeding with Social Software - Ian McNairn, IBM SWG
- …
Technorati Tags Collaboration, social-computing, Web20-conference