Enterprise 2.0: Jeffrey Stamps and Jessica Lipnack – Collaborating in the Transparent Enterprise

Talking about networks in many ways. Focusing on the people side of this. Not going to talk so much about tech or wikis or blogs, going to focus on networks as a concept that’s useful personally and in business.

People have always formed networks. Wrote a book about networks in 1979, published in ’82, wondering what happened to the issues from the 60s. Sent letters to ask for names, then sent letters to those people. Ended up with 50,000 people – all by snailmail – interesting in networks.

Web caused explosion of networking – much more is now possible. It’s people that make organisations what they are. The network is us.

Now talking about Zoetrope.com, the writers’ community started by Francis Ford Coppola. [I’m a member of Zoetrope, btw.]. Asked what ‘network’ is in different languages and it turns out that in many of them, it’s still ‘network’. All these networks we have are the same thing, just different manifestations.

Four networks in enterprise
– organisational network
– working networks
– knowledge networks
– social networks

Need to be careful about privacy, as without it network is damaged. Yet a lot of useful information can be gathered.

If things are going badly? Is the purpose clear? Do you know who is doing what? Who is linked to who? People, purpose, links.

Technology is not enough, it’s really about the people. Can take this simple model and do a lot with it.

Principles provide consistency when working in online spaces. Realtime techs attempt to replicate face-to-face experiences and will always fall short. Asynchronous techs are the more important ones, which change the way that things work.

Online spaces much have a place for people, links, purposes. Must learn to do this in a consistent way.

Virtual teams great, but teams can become very insular and lose sight of the larger organisation we’re part of. Good on focus, but losing context.

We all need to be connected.

Enterprise 2.0: Marthin De Beer – How Video and Other Web 2.0 Technologies Are Changing the Enterprise

New generation who are used to social software in their personal lives have an expectation that business will have tools that they are familiar, such as IM, blogging, etc.

Websites used to be top-down and managed, now users create the content, and defines what is available on sites like Wikipedia and others. Next generation of Web 2.0 tech enables users not just in terms of creating content but also allows them to program what appears on those sites.

Has a wiki for business ideas and it is very successful as people collaborate on developing the ideas. Mash-ups. Google maps, where it’s going will improve video mash-ups. YouTube is just the beginning.

Unique personas are blending, consumer, producer, etc., becomes ‘user’.

Web now much more interactive.

The network blends, private public networks, no one cares which network they are using, just want to be able to do what they want.

Applications, anytime anywhere. IM, etc. from any device, anywhere. Unsecured, not inside company’s firewall, but users want it, are familiar with it, and use it to be more effective and productive.

Creation and consumption => collaboration and sharing.

Concept of what a website is is changing rapidly. Traditional website was a destination, needed to know where to go to find information or do business. Required search – if you didn’t know where to go you had to find it. Still need to know where you’re going, but it’s much more unstructured and unmanaged.

P2P, the network is the destination, all you need to know is what you are looking for, not where you are going to find it. Very open and unmanaged. Shared music. Starting to see the next step as Apple is increasingly solving the DRM problem. You’ll be looking for a song, and where that comes from you won’t know and it won’t matter because you’re just interested in [i presume he means legally] acquiring that song.

Computing processing power just keeps getting greater, and will do moreso as telepresence makes its way into your home. Devices we have in our pockets are equal to the processing power you had on your desktop two or three years ago. Enables new ways to create media, new media types, that has never been possible before.

Video will becomes and increasingly important part of Web 2.0. Historically, very different market segments which are now converging fast.consumer, business, service provider => social networking, collaboration, entertainment.

Video is a very powerful medium. [Show’s video that illustrates how a photo doesn’t give you the whole story… but then, neither does video].

Web 2.0, it’s XML, wikis, blogs, mash-ups.

Best is yet to come. Future will be about any media, anywhere on any device. Will create a new wave of apps in video and virtualisation. Just at the beginning of what is possible for collaborative possibilities and Web 2.0.

Network as the platform. Use cases:

Consumer, network will enable user created video, deliver not just to PCs but also TV and mobile devices. Prosumer class emerging – very talented consumers using tech to showcase talent, who are attracting millions of fans over a few months. Professionally created media uses network as platform to deliver to wide range of advices, e.g. AppleTV.

Telepresence, will make its way into the home and video calls will become more common. Surveillance, can keep an eye on children or relatives in day care [creepy idea], not just on PC but on a range of devices. On demand, live broadcast video will be used for wide range of applications, training, exec comms, etc.

His company has rolled out telepresence, and used thousands of times, 1/3rd with a customer. Product dev cycles shortening, sell cycles shortening, collaboration is more effecitve. Collaboration isn’t just about Web 2.0, but to drive next generation need teleprsence.

All forms of creative media use the network as a platform. Over last decade, networks becomes increasingly intelligent, will become intelligent video network of the future. Seeing wide range of apps and solutions. Apps need new levels of features, enabled not at endpoint or apps level, but make way into the network.

Web 2.0 – defined by users not by owners of content; evolving everyday, hard to imagine what it will look like tomorrow.

Video is finally here, has been an evasive promise for many years, but now we have the bandwidth and processing power. Becoming pervasive, here to say because it’s most experiential medium of all.

Enterprise 2.0: Ambuj Goyal – Drive Innovation and Growth in the Enterprise with Web 2.0 Technologies

Will play the role of an anti-social, fat, dumb, happy exec who doesn’t want to move into the next phase. Where is the resistance? Twelve years ago when web started to get really popular. People didn’t understand why they needed the web, thought that they didn’t need it, didn’t need to share information.

Then e-business started. Ent 2.0 is the natural evolution of e-business. they said then there were three things enterprises could do:
– share information in an extranet
– do commerce on the internet
– share information with employees on the intranet

Those three things started to take off. Could put any info up anywhere in the world, and people can see it. Didn’t need contracts, business deals, etc., could just access information. Were some extreme views, that bricks and mortar would not be needed; that didn’t happen but lots of new things did. Businesses expanded, new businesses started.

So why name it now? We can do a lot of things now that we couldn’t before, can help people to benefit from this new technology. Time for the next step, something new is happening, so right time to rename it.

Have a bunch of technologies, but the key one is that other people can update a website, can tag things. Multiple technologies but it’s important about updating. Might say we had Geocities, or message board, but they are very hard to navigate, not metadata. Take a look at Facebook, easier to navigate through. Different kinds of communities are forming, evolution taking place, very different to traditional message boards.

How do we take advantage of that. Can I create communities? hard to talk about ROI, but easier to talk about commerce. Today’s commerce sites are designed for a few markets and millions of people; not the long tail, ie. millions of markets with a few people. Long tail gets marketing people very exciting as can personalise, and meet the needs of individuals and sell more products.

What do we do with our intranet site? Very simple – when you deliver service/support to a client, you find you can improve your support documentation, if you put it up as a wiki, anyone in the field anywhere in the world can edit the manual. Live document. Can create forums and communities of interest. Make it easier for people to talk to each other, customers, suppliers, etc.

Is there going to be be a brand-new set of technologies or will existing platforms embed these technologies?

[Interlude for IBM WebSphere Portal marketing stuff which I’m not going to write up – sounds sort of a rather full-on game of buzzword bingo and my jetlag is getting in the way of my understanding anything that’s not said in plain English. There’s also an attempt to play a video which is not working. Sometimes I worry that I’m missing something when my brain switches off during these sorts of things, but on the other hand, these people need to learn to talk interestingly about their stuff, rather than just yapping on in impenetrable jargon.]

Enterprise 2.0: Andrew McAfee – The State of the Meme

Where are we now? How has Enterprise 2.0 progressed?

How are we doing with awareness?
Lots of awareness about this idea, the mainstream press has covered this, but the high-school and college age children of decision-makers in companies are doing the most to spread the meme, because they are on Facebook, or Wikipedia, and are showing it to their parents who then think it might be useful inside their business.

Ideas that are gaining momentum:
– social software, very different to software companies are used to deploying which are ‘anti-social’, but people are clueing into the idea that we can use tech and software to put people in touch with each other, build network of peers and colleagues. New idea that software is inherently social too, starting to penetrate organisations pretty well.
– network effects, idea we need to get more people onto these tools, and get a lot of participants involved, more good things will happen.
– freeform authoring, once we get more people on social software platforms, our goal should not be to impose structure on their interactions or give them forms to fill in, but should be getting out of the way and let people do what they want. Really don’t know what people want in advance, but don’t know what they know in advance. Get clues from org chart, job description etc, but sources of expertise are widespread. Being freeform, don’t try to predict what they know, where they have energy, are they authors, editors, organisers? A small percentage of people are ‘gardeners’, who like rearranging stuff. We need more of them. But don’t know what people are going to want to do. Wikipedia originally tried a seven step review process, but their insight was to get out of the way and create an egalitarian place.
– metadata, known for years we need metadata, but it used to be about experts defining it. Huge leap forward in Web 2.0, users generate metadata, and produce it almost as a by-product, not sitting down thinking about it. Tags, labels, etc. Do it for our reasons, without imposing structure, and huge multi-dimensional schema for it.
– emergence, used to think that the web was a big mess “the world’s largest library, just that the books are all on the floor”. Structures emerge. Ability to find stuff. Want to encourage this inside companies.

How are we doing with toolkit?
Toolkit is fantastic, and it’s growing all the time. Making good progress on what the specific enterprise needs are with freeform and emerging collaboration. Cambrian explosion going on, explosion of tools. Most won’t work out, or be final answer, just like the species of the Cambrian explosion. Probably not what you want if you’re the CEO of one of these start ups, but we want to see this massive amount of variation then the selection mechanisms kick in. Seeing some great start-ups, but the incumbents have not been slow at all. Pleasantly surprised with the speed that they are rolling out new tools, and leaving behind old way of doing corporate software.

Need to watch out for ease of use, technologists suffer feature creep and add in too many things to do with it. think about the tech that’s compelling – zen-like simplicity, do one or two things that really need to be done. We are not deploying these technologies in a vacuum, there is an incumbent tech which this has to work with. 100% of knowledge workers use email, but if you are proposing a replacement for an incumbent tech then people over-emphasise the benefits of the incumbent tech, and underweight the value of the new tech. Have this challenge with email.

Communicating results
Need case studies – have a few examples that we fall back on. Our store-houses of success stories needs to expand fairly dramatically if we are going to get traction with decision-makers within companies. What will help them make that decision is verifiable case studies. Need to make sure we don’t keep using the same examples over and over. Mustn’t get into the trap of coming up with impressive ROI numbers for these techs, Lots of these ROI numbers quoted are 200% – 300%, which makes people ask, if these are true then we should be throwing money into buying software. Those numbers have to be suspect. Don’t want us to fall into the trap of coming up with glowing numbers.

Can talk about what happened, at the anecdote or case study level. These are very persuasive. Not all companies have a rigid ROI view of investments, but what they want is ways to triangulate the quality of investment.

Need to address this problem, need a repository of information. If and when we do this we need to throw the gates open as widely as possible – should be emergent, widely accessible, and egalitarian. Need to disclose where this information comes from – it’s not automatically suspect when a case study comes from a vendor. Too often, we don’t to basic levels of disclosure, so just need some disclosure rules about who’s putting information up. Wikipedia has an elaborate set of rules, guidelines and policies which have emerged over time. Not sure what they set of ground rules is needed, but we’ll come up with them over time. He volunteers to participate in this effort, what we need is a couple of technologists or vendors to provide environment; perhaps a wiki. Then everyone else throws information up, and structure will emerge over time, as will groundrules, but it would be an invaluable resource for all of us if there’s a repository were we can point decision makers to so they can find valuable information.

This has been an incredibly interesting year. Used to think that the IQ of a crowd was half the IQ of the dumbest person, but his view has shifted 180 degree – we have tools that help the IQ of the crowd be double the IQ of the smartest member. Used to think blogs were teenage diaries, but now thinks it’s the single most important source of information. Used to think that people who got social interactions online was pathetic, but now is amazed at how well you can get to know someone from their blog, and has met some wonderful people, and the strength and non-patheticness of the people online.

We are not anywhere near the end of this. Most he’s seen are people dipping the corporate toe in the water. Good things await those who experiment.

Enterprise 2.0: David Weinberger – Rattling Business’ Foundations

Here in Boston at the the Enterprise 2.0 conference, ready to start blogging at 8.35 in the morning, despite the fact that the jetlag kicked my ass last night, and I got just four hours’ sleep. The schedule for today looks completely bonkers, though, starting at the crack of dawn and going on til 6.30pm, with hardly any breaks. I really, really wish that conference organisers would have a little pity for attendees. If my brain doesn’t melt before 10am, it’ll be a miracle.

Currently the conference chair is getting people to do a mobile phone vote as to whether control over IT is more important than enterprise users’ needs, and whether Enterprise 2.0 is more hype than reality. Interestingly, users and reality are winning already.

First speaker of the day, and the reason why I dragged myself across the city at this ungodly hour, is David Weinberger. Here goes:

David Weinberger – Rattling Business’ Foundations
If we’re talking about Enterprise 2.0, someone must be talking about Ent 3.0, or 4.0… it’s just going to keep going. We might have the sense of ‘enough already!’, because everything has been changing. But another set of changes, multiple sets of changes, already at work. Next changes: authority, trust, boundaries, i.e the shape of business.

Why aren’t we drowning? Told from early 90s that there’s going to be way too much info, lots of natural catastrophe metaphors, and there’s way more what was predicted. yet we’re not drowing, we’re doing well, even though there are a few issues. Solution to info overload is more information – it’s metadata, info about info. Got way smarter about metadata. Ent2.0 is really about getting hold of metadata in interesting and important ways.

Frame this broadly. There are two orders of order; in the first order you organise the stuff itself; in the second we physically separate the metadata, reduce it in size, and then have two or three ways of sorting that. This is handy, we’re good at it, and it works for physical stuff. But limitation – whoever gets to make up the sorting order is in control of something important, ie. how we order our world, because you’re only allowed one way of organising. That’s a limitation of the real. Always have to do it because physical world demands it. Limitation of the real is that it seems designed to keep things apart because you can’t have two things in the same place in the same time.

E.g. real estate on a newspaper – someone makes the decision of what goes where and that person has the power. Org charts are the same sort of thing, we like tree-like structures, thought that they were a natural order, but that’s not quite true. But they are quite powerful and we use them for business.

But how we think about our information, in categories, and sub-categories, but the sad truth about the trees is that they sort the world the way we sort our laundry: have a big lump of stuff, and then split by person, by body part, by style. but you have to make a decision as to which pile you’re going to put stuff in. this limitation that requires us to do this we’ve imported into how we sort information.

It’s a sad thing that we have assumed that the way to think about how the world is organised suffers from the same limitations as our laundry when we go to sort it.

But now we are digitising everything, so there is a third order of order in which everything is digital: the data, the content, the metadata.

Principle that changes:
– leaf can be on many branches, photographic equipment can go on to many virtual shelves. Messy, but that’s good. Messiness in the real world is a disaster, but online it’s
great – more links the better. Messiness enriches online, so long as we can sort through it. – tracking visitors to your website is very hard to do, your customers are messy.
– less difference between metadata and data; almost whole books are online, so everything now is metadata, the difference is metadata is what you know, data is what you don’t know but are looking for. If everything is metadata we just got smarter, if your business isn’t taking advantage of this, you have a boost coming, but requires letting go of control.
– unowned order; if you go to a real-world store, and you get everything that’s your size and made a big pile, they’d throw you out. Online, you want just what’s your size, you’d leave a site that showed you stuff that wasn’t. Control this by tagging and plastic classification or user ratings.

We’ve operated under the principle that you get some experts, they do the filtering, and then we look at their conclusions. But now we’re pulling the leaves off the trees, making a huge messy pile, associating metadata, enriching it all, and let the users postpone the moment that organisation happens until they know what they want to organise. Let them see the relationships which were invisible before.

E.g. Real estate site with map mashups with crime, or politics, or bus routes, or Starbucks proximity, or graveyards, or dog parks, flight paths, or where intersections of these things are. Knew someone who wanted to live under flight paths, so you can’t tell what people want, so give them everything and let them decide. So make it miscellaneous.

This is about authority, trust, fallibility. Institutions that have garnered authority over time, that people trust. Encyclopaedia Britannica, vs. Wikipedia. Why would you believe what Wikipedia says? Well you might know a bit about the topic, or look at the discussion pages, or how many edits there have been. But Wikipedia encourages you to put up notices if you see something wrong, .e.g. has ‘weasel words’, or reads like an ad, or is not objective…

Wikipedia is more credible because it’s willing to admit its fallibility. But you’ll never see them in the NY Times, because they are in the business of being authoritative. Businesses find admission of fallibility very hard to grasp, despite knowing that it is.

Wikipedia is not the only example of this – also present in every mailing list. Discussion expands the knowledge, and mailing list collectively is smarter than any individual within it. Knowledge is social, always was of course, but now it’s unavoidable. Conversations with suppliers, customers, etc.

But it’s not enough already. Ok, it’s been 10 years, but we’re not far enough along. Keep having major revolutions, these are big changes, it’s not hype, it’s right at the heart of knowledge, authority, trust, and how it’s smudging the supply chain, the org chart. We are reshaping business, whether we like it or not. Business is changing from being ‘theirs’, to the remaking of knowledge and authority that is ours.

links for 2007-06-18

Enterprise 2.0, Boston, and then Supernova, San Francisco

I’m off to a couple of conferences next week. First up is Enterprise 2.0, where I will be talking about the use of blogs and wikis in business, alongside Chris Alden from Six Apart; Oliver Young from Forrester Research, Inc; Sam Weber from KnowNow; and moderated by Stowe Boyd. The session is on Tuesday, and starts at 2.30. Sadly I’m only in town from Sunday night until Wednesday morning, so will miss much of the conference, but if you see me around please do stop me and say hello.

On Wednesday, I fly over to San Francisco for Supernova on Thursday and Friday. I’ll be blogging it obsessively over on ConversationHub, so if you’re interested please do subscribe to the RSS over there. I’ll be in town until the morning of 28th and again, feel free to say hi if you see me.

Looking forward to the trip and to meeting a lot of interesting people whilst I’m travelling!

links for 2007-06-14

NMKForum07: Future Gazing Panel

Matt Locke of Channel 4, recently left the BBC. He suggested reading an essay saying that Content is not King. People are happy to spend money chatting to their friends, more so than on content. How do you take a content object and then let people talk about it, build social interactions about it?

Jim Purbrick of Linden Lab, makers of Second Life. Facebook and their API to make a platform are the next step. Build a social network around a social object. Second Life is like that. You can build social objects. You can build content that can then become the basis of a conversation. A good example is the space flight museum in Second Life where people can go see and talk about space flight.

Jason Calacanis, praised both Jaiku and Twitter. Jaiku has some better features and greater stability. He called Twitter an indispensable business tool. It’s now the number second referral to his blog, after Google. StumbledUpon is now the fourth most common referral to his blog. He mentioned a blog post about how someone mentioned that they heard about Mahalo’s Greenhouse launch on Twitter. (That post might have been Rachel’s There’s no local post.)

Matt Locke: Responded to a question about whether this was about ego. We’re all basically practicing our identity. I’m interested in these technologies because people are practicing their identities.

Jyri of Jaiku: Anyone who has read the Cluetrain Manifesto will know that these services answer our need for attention from other people. These services enable a conversation around your own everyday life.

Umair Haque bubblgeneration.com: Why do so many firms suck so much? Why are so few revolutionary? We have discussed pollution, spam, micro-blogging. We discussed trust and newspapers coming apart. The economic shift is that the cost of information has dropped off the cliff. We’re dealing with an attention scarcity.

One or two principles, we talk about content and context. The next revolution is not content is king but context is king. From an economic point of view, the share of traffic to context providers is exploding.

The cost of context was very high four or five years. Now, we are drowning in context. Context is the stuff that gives economic value to objects. Context is price. Context is the conversations that go on at MySpace.

What is interesting to me is what Jason said about Google being the greatest referral to his blog with Twitter being second.

Bobbie Johnson of the Guardian asks what comes after content? Whether create content professionally at the Guardian or as a labour of love like all the other places I fart around is to create some social value.

For existing or older media business, are we just doomed to be someone else’s bitch?

Dan Gillmor: Advertising is being systematically separated from journalism because there are companies that do advertising better than journalism companies. I don’t know how to solve that problem. I do know that people need good information.

I’m paraphrasing but he said that they will need to target niches, such as information for mothers as one example, to support the information on the macro level.

Jason Calacanis: As more and more mediocre information is dumped online, then quality will become more important. A radical shift has to occur in lowering costs. More verticals and more niche content to compete.

Umair Haque: People need context, more than they need content. What kind of context maximises my content?

The quality question again.

Matt Locke: If you look at the 19th Century, people took newspaper cuttings and made scrapbooks. There has always been an impulse to curate. What interests me is not a new crisis of information, but what are new ways people are curating information. What is the new scrapbook?

Q: Isn’t Twitter just a flash in the plan? Glorified text messaging.

Jason Calacanis: Quite incorrect about Twitter. Simplicity is needed in this space. I can pick as a user. The statistics prove that you’re wrong.

Meg Pickard: The power comes out of the patterns that come out of these actions and interactions. (I’m paraphrasing.) Attention data. Meg has been following the cicadas coming out in the US by the pictures uploaded on Flickr.

Nic Brisbourne (theequitykicker.com): You can use those patterns to find out what people are interested in.

Q: How do you create value and a proposition with user generated content?

Jason Calacanis: Fire middle management and fire editors. If you had the top New York Times write whatever they wanted everyday, you’d have a better product.

Dan Gillmor: I couldn’t disagree more. I loathe the term user generated content. Editors have saved my butt more often than I count. Some think UGC will save us. You do the work, and we’ll take your stuff.

One of the reason that I like what Jason is doing is because he is paying people to do stuff.

Jason: You have to cut the costs. Big media companies have to cut the fat.

Jim Purbrick: People now can read all of the information and decide for themselves. (Paraphrasing badly.)

Dan Gillmor: You’re talking about an or not an and. We loathe community input, and I make my work trying to get community input. The idea that the world can be one’s editor is simply unworkable.

The discussion now goes into the role and utility of editors.

Dan Gillmor makes a call for media literacy.

What does it mean to be media literate in a media saturated world? I’m begging for traditional media to take on the role.

I’m going to close this days blogging with a little or my thoughts. Jason Calacanis said that the fat is in the middle management of media companies. I guess I might be called middle management at this point although I tend to do operational work as well. But I think as margins in media firms are squeezed, I think that media companies will have to be a lot more ruthless in defining what it is that they do that is unique and exclusive. They will not be able to scramble for major events that are tangentially relevant to their core audiences. Will they need to go to party conferences? Will they need to send their own reporter to the next major shooting or disaster just to have their own reporter write or ‘face’ it?

I would suggest that they should throw their declining resources into content most relevant to their audience. Relevance and exclusive information will be more important than quibbles over quality. Media companies can’t afford to be all things to all people. Major, generalist metro papers in the US are suffering the most. What can you do, what should you do that no one else can provide?

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links for 2007-06-13