This talk was given by Harvard Business School professor Andrew McAfee, who popularized the term Enterprise 2.0 . The topic has generated tremendous reaction and discussion on his blog, as it did at the conference as well.
Emergent Platforms:
1. Structure is not imposed up front
- roles and identities are of little importance
- any form of data or information is acceptable
- Busisness process is not rigid, workflow is flexible
- Optionality - these technologies are not mandated
2. Structure emerges over time (just because we don't state with a structure, doesn't mean one doesn't develop over time).
He makes the point that almost everyone has an easier time finding information on the free Internet, than they do on their supposedly structured intranet.
Google works because the link structure of the Internet gives us a great structure for the Internet. The same type of principle works with tag clouds on flickr, del.icio.us and technorati. It gives structure to something that had no structure at the start.
The Current State of Enterprise 2.0:
- We are in the early days of this - Business executives at Harvard Business School get either a deer in a headlights looks or are utterly overwhelmed. Many executives feel that creating a blog takes to much work. Awareness of tools, ease of use and accessibility is very low.
- Encouraging examples: wikis, blogs, prediction markets, tagging
- prediction markets - an internal stock exchange that allows people to buy or sell on the success of certain events (based on Iowa Electronic Markets
- Tech companies are early adopters - need to move slowly in other business areas where they are not tech savvy
Which is easier - Web 2.0 or Enterprise 2.0?
Web advantages
- Long Tail - only need a small set of passionate users
- Can dial up or down the level of anonymity
Enterprise Advantages
- Incentives - can provide direct motivation for participation
- Culture - the collegial atmosphere and caring is not sufficient and caring
- Management? - not users or IT staff - what is going to make this work in a company is whether management really wants this to work or not
Vibrant Communities and Ghost Towns
When Enterprise 2.0 works
- Interdependance - what makes a team is the level of interdependance, you need some level of shared fate
- Goals/deadlines/output - need something tangible that you are working to
- Nudge from leaders - not mandate
- No powerful holdouts
When Enterprise 2.0 doesn't work
- Independence
- No goals, deadlines
- "If we build it, they will come
- Wrong user demographics - younger and tech friendly your workforce is, the more success you will have
Question was raised as to whether it makes sense to go with blogs or wikis within an enterprise. There was the issue of the need for attribution.
Two issues:
- It is only logical that these tools (blogs and wikis) will begin to merge together
- There is still a documented trail on a wiki
The issue of relevancy - A blog is more like a lecture, from one trusted source, where a wiki is more like a discussion. Difference between opinion and subject matter expert.
Issue of incentives - Depends if you are incentivized for participation or goal acheivement. In a competitive environment, you may want personal recognition (i.e, every individual is rewarded for their talents)
What is needed from technologists?
- Better search
- Integration and consolidation - the danger of not doing this is having a bunch of individual walled gardens
- Simple, intuitive UI
- Features? - do we keep these completely free-form. That may be a little naive for the Enterprise
- Workflow - Are we ever going to need to build in a little bit of assigned procedures
Decision: Which is it?
Do leaders really believe "People are our most important asset...we believe in transparency...we want to encourage collaboration and cross-functional cooperation..."
or do they really think...
"Every bureaucracy seeks to increase the superiority of the professionally informed by keeping their knowledge and intentions secret..." - Max Weber