Skip to main content

Diigo Home

Reconciling social computing with the enterprise | Enterprise Web 2.0 | ZDNet.... - The Diigo Meta page

blogs.zdnet.com/Hinchcliffe - Cached - Annotated View

enterprise2open links's personal annotations on this page

enterprise2open
Enterprise2open bookmarked on 2009-06-10 adoption enterprise2.0 implementation

Dion writes about how to bridge the gap between the social collaboration world outside and classical organizations.

Strategies and battle plans "how to proceed", I am with this but have doubts at the same time.

To me it's probably about the benefits of aiming high (you might achieve at least a bit) vs. procedding with cautious little steps? We all know it's about the social dimensions in the first place with Enterprise 2.0, where both approaches have their up- and downsides ...

  • what’s turning into an increasingly larger gap between what happens in the business world and what happens everywhere else
  • the act of work itself is becoming more of a collective journey instead of a final destination as our individual work experiences become more open, collaborative, participatory, and social
  • This situation creates a delta that, sooner or later, will simply become untenable for many organizations
  • exerts a subversive force on organizations as their workers help themselves to the tools of their own volition, bring their (and arguably better) new behaviors and processes to work, and try to get things done with them, whether that’s crowdsourcing, Enterprise 2.0, online customer communities, etc.
  • constituencies that have a stake in doing things the old way are disrupted by new social models for achieving those same business objectives, whether the replacements are highly collaborative work processes or the network co-creation of product designs and other outputs
  • So what’s an organization to do? Are there strategies that can help mitigate the seemingly growing tension, take advantage of new skills and behaviors of our workers, and avoid potential for sudden and/or unexpected changes in our businesses? In fact, is it even possible to intentionally encourage and adopt bottom-up processes? Fortunately, based on the experiences of those that have adopted them, there do seem to be some general strategies that can help.

This link has been bookmarked by 7 people . It was first bookmarked on 09 Jun 2009, by Workcolab ..

  • 16 Jul 09
  • 22 Jun 09
    • the classical way of working has been to create finished, perfect-as-possible outcomes (products, services, etc.) from opaque, unknowable, lengthy processes which outsiders, within or outside the organization, could not directly perceive, alter, or improve. As Jarvis writes of traditional work methods:



      It is the byproduct of the means and requirements of mass production: If you have just one chance to put out a product and it has to serve everyone the same, you come to believe it’s perfect because it has to be, whether that product is a car (we are the experts, we took six years to tool up

    • The key point here is the broader changes we are experiencing today: The pervasive presence of social software and today’s highly open, interactive, and remixable Web embedded deeply into our personal lives is increasingly allowing us to experience a new way of living. And it’s one that bears less and less resemblance to the workplace all the time, with significantly differing behaviors, skills, tools, and expectations.
    • 12 more annotations...
  • 14 Jun 09
  • 10 Jun 09
  • enterprise2open
    enterprise2open links

    Dion writes about how to bridge the gap between the social collaboration world outside and classical organizations.

    Strategies and battle plans "how to proceed", I am with this but have doubts at the same time.

    To me it's probably about the benefits of aiming high (you might achieve at least a bit) vs. procedding with cautious little steps? We all know it's about the social dimensions in the first place with Enterprise 2.0, where both approaches have their up- and downsides ...

    adoption enterprise2.0 implementation

    • what’s turning into an increasingly larger gap between what happens in the business world and what happens everywhere else
    • the act of work itself is becoming more of a collective journey instead of a final destination as our individual work experiences become more open, collaborative, participatory, and social
    • 4 more annotations...
  • bertrandduperrin
    Bertrand Duperrin

    This increasing distance between these two worlds creates a gap — a disconnect, even — that increasingly cuts organizations off from their most valuable assets (their people) and also exerts a subversive force on organizations as their workers help themselves to the tools of their own volition, bring their (and arguably better) new behaviors and processes to work, and try to get things done with them, whether that’s crowdsourcing, Enterprise 2.0, online customer communities, etc.

    socialcomputing enterprise2.0 enterprise culture strategy process control measurement roi

  • 09 Jun 09