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  • Seven steps for idea flow in a wiki

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    Feb 2, 2010 at 6:08:02 PM by Stephen Danelutti - Tags: trenches idea thought wiki crowdflo - Comments (0)

    NOTE: This is part of a "from the trenches" series of posts covering general work day items of noteworthiness (most often as a result of customer work) that I feel I can share and which hopefully add some value!

    From a discussion with a potential client on the use of Crowdflo (which is a wiki, amongst other things) as an idea management as well as implementation platform. The thinking behind our solution as it stands, which does incorporate ideas creation, also covers the implementation part through project and task functions. Allow me to explain using a fairly simple action flow from a user point of view:

    1.  Starting point is ideas - adding of a standard wiki page with several fields the most important being status (e.g. new, under consideration, planning, implementation, failed) 

    2.  Only admin or evaluation group can change status after its automatic start at "new" 

    3.  All pages have comment function and people are encouraged to progress idea in comments - only creator can edit page and embellish concept based on feedback (standard collaborative authoring approach that wikis enable) 

    4.  Rating can go up or down depending on progress 

    5.  If idea gets to planning status (decided by review board) it becomes a project with related tasks to start implementing. Of course implementation is managed in the same way. If needed because project so large, a separate site is set up with just standard wiki pages, project and task functions. 

    6.  In main site standard wiki pages are used to manage documentation if needed and blog to keep general updates flowing. 

    7.  Our ideas already integrate with Twitter so as soon as an idea is created it is automatically tweeted. Specific hashtag per idea could be added and other ways of leveraging social media should be considered.
  • Enterprise 2.0 Redux

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    Jan 24, 2010 at 4:26:43 PM by Stephen Danelutti - Tags: archives enterprise2.0 innovation change thought - Comments (2)

    NOTE: This is a post in the archive series. It is partly the replication of a post already covered in our old website (in the process of porting all those considered worthy over :) but at the same time an updated look at the subject matter!

    This is by no means an exhaustive analysis of the landscape (no time ) just a fairly spontaneous snapshot and partly an attempt to consolidate my thinking.

    Thought it would be useful to chunk this post and believe the holy enterprise triumvirate of process, people and technology (covered below) will do the job just as well as any other set. I also thought I should revisit some thinking I did a while ago to see whence I've come from and possibly contrast this with the current state of play and my thinking. Below is a deck of slides I put together when I was still working at Sony in 2005. It preceded my departure and the start-up of netociety and was used as a basis for collecting my thoughts so it is perfectly applicable here!

    If you don't have the time to view the slides it essentially posits the following theory (covered in the first 6 slides and supported in the remaining slides):

    • Successfully managing Innovation and Change activities is critical for long term survival - recognised by most CEO's
    • Mostly companies are failing in their attempts to innovate or change
    • Why:
      • Innovation/change efforts often stand-alone and unstructured
      • Work-force is not sufficiently engaged and do not collaborate effectively
    • Solution: Align innovation and change activities more closely in a complementary business transformation cycle and support with the following toolsets / processes / approach:
      • Research and Knowledge Transfer
      • Consultancy or Interim Management (outside experts)
      • Social Software
      • Cultural Alignment
        • Locking-in Competence
        • Engaging Workforce

    I believe that most of these points still apply, in fact if anything they have become even more relevant and they have a general enterprise 2.0 flavour with a definite commercial bent (point 2 under solution). Furthermore, I think business transformation has become a key executive management priority that attempts to align people, process and technology initiatives within a company more closely with its business strategy and vision to support and help innovate new business development and growth. Peter-Evans Greenwood, CTO of Capgemini Australia has written a very thoughtful piece on the overall topic. Although he has emphasised change, he has essentially covered business transformation in all the areas I have but he has also gone on to cover some other interesting points that I will pick up on in the three categories following:

    Our problem is that change has become a major business driver, and the pace of change has increased to the point where we are seeing radical change within a single generation. We're all racing to find the edge that will get us on top of the competition. This ranges from small innovations, tweaking and optimizing our business or creating new product categories, through to wholesale market creation; remember that Microsoft came out of nowhere to blindside IBM in the 80s, and then Google did the same thing to Microsoft in the 00s.

    If change is the driver in our organizations, but our organizations are resistant to change, then the biggest challenge we face in not technical but the strategy we use to manage change. It's quite easy to define a technically and economically possible solution that would provide a boost to our business, or even deliver a step change in capability. But if we cannot get our organization to deliver and then adopt the solution, all our work will be for naught.

    The first thing I think we need to do is realize that change is an ongoing processes, and so should change management be. It's not a one shot affair where we hire some external organization to come in and transform us, and it's not something we should only worry about every two to four years. The second is that we need to make change something our people want to do rather than something we do to them.

    Before I get onto the categories I'll just say that another reason for me including them in the context of Enterprise 2.0 is that they are far more encompassing of any one angle, technology say, which as with most observations (excellent as they are) seems to be the predominant focus. In other words I agree with Peter-Evans Greenwood that the "biggest challenge we face is not technical". I tried to convey this in my other later thoughts on identifying some enterprise 2.0 memes. Anyway, onto some of those category views:

    On process

    Process design is a vital theme to consider. I'm confronted every day by the reality of this when trying to implement social software solutions with clients. A major component of social software is that its functions are often emergent and its value is derived over time by supporting more easily and in a very adaptable way, the standard business process that already exist in a business or are specifically created for it. But then very important is to have a process or to understand them and how they support operations. This is very often missing. I am often confronted by clients (mostly potential ) who think in the traditional way about enterprise software where functions and features are predetermined. They have become overly reliant (even lazy) on process residing in functions or features built into software developed by supposed experts outside the organisation and have no real insight into how their company operates. They expect the technology to solve their problems.

    A couple of key tenets for me (to borrow from Ross Mayfield) is that social software is emergent in its use, focused on people and supports process by allowing it to reside outside the software and within the network where its complexity can be more easily managed and the software can more easily be adapted to its changing circumstances.

    I admonish anyone to not look to the software to solve their business problems but rather look to their business first, understand what works and what doesn't by looking at the underlying processes and then seeing how social software can support the processes that are finally adopted. This way you can more easily mould the software (especially the new forms of social software) around process, facilitated by people, which brings me to my next point.

    On people

    I'm not sure there is much I can say here in relation to people being at the heart of social software, indeed new enterprise technologies. This has been stated ad nauseam. What is important are the specifics about people, collectively, at work. In my view, in their collective context, people are the entities that form the basis of culture, i.e. their behaviours, beliefs, values and habits. And that is what often needs changing and is what is so difficult to do.

    What I believe is different about the new approaches to change management is that people need to be engaged more as the study referred to in the slide deck suggest although I also believe that some top down and process/technology led considerations need to be borne in mind as well, as suggested by Dr. Ross, a principal research scientist at the MIT Sloan School of Management's Center and Dr. Weill, a director and senior research scientist at the Center for Information Systems Research:

    Problems arise not so much from the technology as from the management challenges of driving the business-process changes once systems are in place. Installing and using companywide information-technology business processes requires cooperation and sharing of resources across businesses, regions and functions. But that's something most companies do poorly, often because there is no strong central figure overseeing the project—someone with the necessary authority to push for change.

    Some companies, however, have found a solution: the strategic execution officer.

    Source article here

    On technology

    This is the one area that has exploded for me. My adoption and understanding of the technologies has been enormous over the last few years. The shifts I have observed with clients and in general, although often frustrating and not up to my levels (for obvious reasons), has been phenomenal. Things have come a long way since I started out with netociety. I think without going into a detailed overview of what has been covered extensively, I will refer to the one aspect that is most pertinent: the contrast between traditional enterprise software and WEB 2.0 software now being used more and more by enterprises. Below is a summary that borrows some aspects from an original Dion Hinchcliffe post that I cannot find now, with my own embellishments:


    Conclusion

    So what about my new and improved outlook now that I've reflected on my past views as well as brought my current experiences to play. Well aside from the fact that I maybe should have more coherently thought about business transformation in the context of people, processes and technology (they are all there, just not so obviously), I still believe as I've written so much about in the past and specifically with this post, that Enterprise 2.0 does go far beyond technology and requires an holistic perspective on the entire organisation. Innovation and Change still do lie at the heart of it in my opinion. But the real difference between then and now is also still down to the technology.

    Fundamentally, there is a shift in technology creation and use that is transforming the way transformation happens and that is excellent :)

  • Introducing Crowdflo, et al

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    Jan 11, 2010 at 6:16:45 PM by Stephen Danelutti - Tags: announcement crowdflo research science services idea iphone - Comments (0)

    Introducing Crowdflo

    For those of you that may have known about Crowdflo in its previous incarnation as Halvr, this may come as a surprise. But Crowdflo is nothing more than Halvr with a new name. We at Netociety decided that while we are in the relatively early stages of product development, that it is best to go with a name that our customers and prospective customers feel comfortable with. The feedback on Halvr was not great, at least for our customers in the "Anglosphere" and so we have gone for something a little more hard working and understandable. As the name suggests, Crowdflo is our product that enables "simple web work" for teams, in other words, web-based group collaboration. Early feedback is great but if you have anything to add please don't hesitate to contact us.

    In terms of Crowdflo features, you can find out about our latest offering and look at the related pages in the section too for info on our hosting and support offerings. More to follow in the coming months...

    Industry Solutions


    We believe that the only way to succeed in an increasingly crowded social software market, is to focus on niche sectors, dominate them and then expand from there. In addition to the generic features you get with Crowdflo, we have added some bespoke features specifically tailored to the Science or Research park or Business Centre. Our two customers in this sector in the UK (Oxford Innovation and Surrey Research Park) are at the very top of their field and we are looking to expand further globally. 

    Nations are ploughing big money into Science/Research Parks to attract the sharpest minds and become more competitive at an international level in some cutting edge industries. Find out more about this sector and our offering to it.

    Idea Management

    We are working frantically on porting our highly successful and award winning idea management solution that we created for Confluence (find out more here) to Crowdflo. Nearly there - watch this space, subscribe to our newsletter or catch the screencast on the home page for some early screenshots!

    Crowdflo for iPhone

    We have also started working on making Crowdflo work on the iPhone. This will take some time but work continues apace. Watch this space for more in the coming months or onec again you can catch the screencast on the home page for some early screenshots!
  • Performance Comparison of the Major Web Browsers

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    Nov 18, 2009 at 2:57:45 PM by Wills - Tags: browsers comparison thought - Comments (0)

    Jacob Gube of Six Revisions posted an interesting chart last month which investigates the comparative speed of the top 5 web browsers. Click here to see his original post with a full size benchmark chart.
    It seems chrome is the fastest, although I'd be intrigued as to weather any firefox extensions were being used as many extensions could impact these results however I expect it was a fresh install of the browser.

    As nice as chrome is, I still can't live without my firefox extensions, so for me it's still the browser of choice :)

  • Enterprise 2.0: An idea who's time has come?

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    Nov 18, 2009 at 12:36:24 PM by Stephen Danelutti - Tags: idea enterprise2.0 thought - Comments (0)

    There have been a lot of arguments recently both for and against the concept of Enterprise 2.0 and all that it encapsulates (Susan Scrupski's for position that I linked to is not so much an argument as a very simple counter point :). These are just examples from two of the main protagonists I've been following and there are many other worthy arguments both for and against. I'm squarely on the for side but not because of the arguments and therein lies my point. The arguments don't really matter - it's the idea itself that does.

    Enterprise 2.0 is just an idea reincarnated from the old knowledge management paradigm (started early 1991). It may also have its roots in the CRM movement of the late 1990's, early noughties. Regardless of the veracity of those statements my point is related to the idea that Enterprise 2.0 represents, i.e. new types of technology, focused on people (social in nature), lightweight, revolutionary in terms of impact on work practices, etc. and the fact that it may be an idea which is really an old one in new guise so it is sustained. The point is no amount of reductionist, analytical, ROI based scrutiny can destroy the idea that things can and should get better (regardless of how important that scrutiny is) and who's time has come. The idea that humanity strives to evolve and perfect itself. That work can be a better place to be with the help of new technologies and practices. Those ideas are very difficult to kill because they tug at people's emotions and drives them. Regardless of what you call it in its current or new guise, the overall idea will endure any attack I believe. Like the idea that there was a better way for the East German people eventually toppled the Berlin wall and an old discredited ideology and countless other worthwhile revolutions that started with an idea.

    There - scratched that itch :)