Social media and intranet case studies, best practices, & evolution by Toby Ward.
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View Article  Web 2.0 / Intranet 2.0 gaining traction

According to Forrester, social networking tools and internal wikis will have the greatest impact on workplace collaboration (see Forrester Projects Which Enterprise Web 2.0 Collaboration Technologies Will Grow, Which Will Decline). Technologies such as forums and RSS have a future in the enterprise but are currently underused, while podcasts have a limited future as an enterprise tool to increase productivity and enhance collaboration.

The study is the latest in the TechRadar series, Forrester’s research methodology used to predict the success of a set of related technologies over the next decade. The enterprise Web 2.0 analysis provides insight for two roles: Information & Knowledge Management professionals and Vendor Strategy professionals.

"Web 2.0 collaboration technologies solve problems that enterprises have today, but most companies have not used these tools anywhere near their potential" said Gil Yehuda, senior analyst, Forrester Research. "This new research illustrates to enterprise users where the smart money is invested and where to place their strategic bets. In the current economic climate, Forrester believes collaboration tools can save enterprises operation costs by getting people and processes together quickly and efficiently"

"While so much of the buzz around Web 2.0 has focused on the business-to-consumer market, the greatest opportunity today for vendors is in the business-to-business collaboration space" said Oliver Young, analyst, Forrester Research. "Some Web 2.0 collaboration technologies have shown a faster-than-normal life cycle, so it is critical for vendors to take stock of the enterprise tools that have the greatest long-term potential and invest wisely in those technologies"

Forrester previously estimated the enterprise Web 2.0 collaboration market will hit $1.8 billion by 2013. The enterprise Web 2.0 TechRadar study is based upon an analysis of previous research and interviews with industry experts, vendors responsible for building or implementing these technologies, and enterprise customers and users.

Forrester predicts the following Web 2.0 collaboration technologies will continue to experience growth:

o   Social networks (cultural resistance exists, but Forrester believes this will eventually break)

o   Wikis (users report success with Wiki endeavors, particularly when sponsored by business leaders)

o   Blogging (social networks will breathe new life into internal blogs by providing more context to blogged content, but Forrester found that blogging alone does not capture the audience’s attention)

o   RSS (underappreciated in the enterprise)


The following Web 2.0 technologies have large and resilient ecosystems, according to Forrester, and can last for several years or even decades, but over time, the markets will become highly consolidated, customer numbers will flatten, and revenues will level off or decline:

o   Podcasting is on the decline. Users tell Forrester that podcasts in the context of enterprise productivity and collaboration are neither very engaging nor immersive, and the vendor landscape is shrinking.

o   Forums are underused. While forums will continue on as a fundamental enabling technology for collaboration, the marketplace is flat, and forums will become part of larger community-focused packages.

 

View the full report Enterprise Web 2.0" and "Forrester TechRadar™ For Vendor Strategists: Enterprise Web 2.0" are currently available to Forrester RoleView™ clients and can be purchased directly at forrester.com.

 

Bill Ives agrees with most of the reports findings, but believes mashups should be listed with the social networking and wikis as “significant” successful technologies:

 

“In my discussions with vendors, mashups are being increasingly used as the application development platform underlying many tools,” says Ives in his post More from Forrester on the Future of Enterprise 2.0 Technologies. “So it is both getting harder to separate them and they are becoming more pervasive. I think social bookmarks provide a useful utility that is getting integrated into other tools.”

 

However, Bill cautions organizations who look at all or any of these tools as a stand-alone technology working in isolation.

 

“I see an increasing movement among vendors to provide integrated platforms that make use of a number of these tools. Even a very focus(ed) tool like Connectbeam combines social networking with social bookmarking and integrates it with search. Broader platforms like Traction make use of blogs, wikis, forums, and, most recently microblogging. Deki Wiki and Central Desktop combine many of these tools with a wiki platform under the covers.”

 

My study on Intranet 2.0 reveals similar findings about the adoption rate and usefulness of these technologies – and why some companies aren’t bothering to adopt them. If you want a full copy of the findings, you must complete the survey– even if you don’t have Web 2.0 / Intranet 2.0 tools your feedback is invaluable. To that end, make sure you please take 10 minutes to take the Intranet 2.0 Global Survey and you’ll get a copy of the full results including the good, bad and learned lessons.


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View Article  How to blog the intranet

One of the biggest questions I’m confronted by attendees at the conferences I speak at, as was the case at jboye08 in Denmark this week, is how do we blog? Or rather, how do we get approval to blog? Okay, to be perfectly frank, the question is more often a comment: “We have no idea how to begin a blog…”

 

Bill Ives is a blogging expert, has been walking-the-walk for years, and is paid to

blog. He offers a number of suggestions for starting corporate blogging:

 

Phase One: Setting up the Blog and Getting it Ready for Prime Time.  Before you start to promote the blog you will want to get it in decent shape. Here is what needs to be done.

 

Ensure the Blogging Strategy is Aligned with Business Strategy. Review the business objectives of the blog and how they fit within your firm’s overall marketing and business strategies.

 

1. Decide on a descriptive name for the blog and write a two sentence description to go along with this name.

2. Pick the content coverage of the blog and consider the types of posts you will write. This can be enhanced and modified as you continue.

3. Write the “about this blog section” which covers your objectives, content coverage and any relevant policy issues.

4. Decide and name the major categories of content, or themes, that will be covered in the blog. Make sure they align with your key words and all the significant key words are covered. You can add more later.

5. Pick the original bloggers. Match expertise with selected themes. This group can be extended later.

 

In fact, Bill has developed an entire action plan that is well worth reading: Sample Action Plan for Business Blogging.

 

For engaging senior executives and management to play a role, I recommend a business case that demonstrates the employees’ need for more direction communications from the top, and highlights winning case study examples from others…

 

KEEP READING:

Bill Ives’ Blogging Consulting Services

Blogging the intranet

Case study: PNM Resources CEO blog

IBM leads corporate blogging pack

Should you blog the intranet?

Study: Intranet blogging on the rise

Blogging policy examples

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