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Andrew McAfee: potential benefits of Enterprise 2.0 as well as the actual benefits most companies will be able to achieve
His analysis was insightful, extremely thorough and bold.
I was amazed at how much buzz it created in the organization
Harvard prof. envisions Enterprise 2.0 Web services
In the end, McAfee told his Oracle audience that while he is "personally optimistic" about the future of Enterprise 2.0, it is still too early to tell how big a factor it will be.
Andrew McAfee: Sharp Responses to Flat Communities
I believe that emergence is central in explaining the power, novelty, and potential of Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0; it’s what keeps large repositories of digital content from becoming hard to navigate, analyze, and use.
Separating the information from the decision
So now it becomes a question of who is most qualified to make the decision, separated from how they get the information ???
The Pursuit of Busyness
E.20 should not be considered “after the fact” knowledge management tools.
If the E.20 tools are used as the primary platform for everyday work, that’s where they (co-)develop their work products, your MBAs sure will look busy enough
The Shocking Processes of IT Impact
IT’s impact on business processes is not limited to a few geographies or industries. Instead, it’s very broad-based. I regard IT spending as a proxy for the amount of IT-enabled process innovation and propagation taking place.
Busy and/or Bursty?
Andrew: it’s far from clear what’s the right mix of busy and burst, but it’s pretty clear that both extremes are far from optimal
The Pursuit of Busyness
Excellent piece about what I have found out the hard way: using web20 tools inside the firewall is by the larger part of emplyees seen as a no-no, having better / more productive things to do. Management guidance is essential to steer this culture
Rough Type: Nicholas Carr's Blog: Is Web 2.0 enterprise-ready?
Over the years, big companies have dumped a lot of money into computer systems that promise to automate "knowledge management." Most of that money has been wasted. No matter how technologically elegant their design, knowledge management "platforms" and "r
I STILL Agree with Tom. And yet...
these technologies really are something new under the sun. They’re not extensions or enhancements to previous generations of corporate tools for collaboration and knowledge management; instead, they’re radical departures from them.
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