Posts Tagged 'facebook'



My 5 Favorite Enterprise 2.0 tools

I’ve been talking recently about some of IBM’s social software solutions, and even shared some screenshots with you, but until now – no list. Why? Well, I’m not that of a list guy. Top 10, top 5, top 2 – there are too many lists, and often people are posting ‘my top xx list of..’ instead of writing something that has more meaning, but more time-consuming (to write).

Still, after reading Orli‘s post of My 15 Favorite Web 2.0 Sites (2008) at her Go 2 Web 2.0 site, I decided it’s time to post a list of my own. IBM is really a technology and innovation oriented company, and we have numerous enterprise 2.0 tools – some internal while others matured to IBM solutions. Three of my fav five started off as an internal project of some research dude, who then published his project internally, in our ‘technology greenhouse’, aka TAP – Technology Adoption Program‘. TAP is basically how IBM embraces innovation and technology, by encouraging its employees to develop and pilot new technologies, that might mature one day and become IBM solutions. If innovation and technology interests you (and it should), read the whitepaper IBM published about TAP.

Here goes, my fav five list of enterprise 2.0 tools:
Lotus Sametime (instant messaging)
I know, IM is not an enterprise 2.0 tool per se, but if we’re talking about connecting people with knowledge, IM is as good as it gets. Lotus Sametime celebrated earlier 2008 its 10th birthday, and with over 100 million corporate users, is the leading IM platform to date. At IBM, the daily usage of IM has surpassed that of emails, and personally I chat between 10-30 times a day, unique chats. The tool gathers its employee information from our employee directory (see fav #5), saves chat history (if I wish to), works with my IP phone, and with the public gateway I can chat with business partners and AOL/Gtalk/ICQ/Yahoo users.

Dogear (social bookmarking)
Ultimately one of my favorite ‘web 2.0 that made the enterprise 2.0 leap’ tools. Dogear actually started as a TAP project within IBM some 3 years ago. Since then The Dog attracted many (internal) early adopters, until 14 months ago – when Dogear was introduced to the market within Lotus Connections, IBM’s social software for the business solution. At IBM we have some 500,000 links, 800 of those are mine 馃檪 There’s a Firefox extension (dogear this, search), private/public options and the ability to import del.icio.us bookmarks (among other features) – Super COOL!

Cattail (file sharing)
Again, another TAP graduate. Contrary to belief, you can’t find MP3s or Dexter Season 2 at Cattail – but you can find other kinds of knowledge: customer presentations, competitive analysis, reviews, analyst reports, whitepapers, screenshots, solutions overviews and much more. Yes, it’s basically a document repository, like a wiki (which is also available internally at IBM), but the social aspects that were added to Cattail makes it a hugh success internally. In fact, some Cattail features will be incorporated in a future release of Lotus Quickr… but you didn’t hear it from me.

IBM w3 (intranet)
Probably the best corporate intranet out there, and I’m not saying that because I used to editor-in-chief the local Israeli site. With some 400,000 employees worldwide, 30 something languages, thousands of roles and expertise, IBM On Demand Workplace (aka w3) is the one stop shop for every employee and manager working at Big Blue. The abundance of external articles and internal news pieces are obvious, but I’ll just mention the ability to download any software internally – without IT, manage your passwords, locate people and expertise, personalized and role-based homepage, track stocks, work with your opportunities, semantic tagging, experience new research projects, watch and download webcast and podcasts – should I say more?

Fringe (web 2.0 employee directory)
Again, TAP graduate. Fringe (source unknown) is an enhanced employee directory, aka BluePages, which hosts over 450,000 employee profiles (including task ids, assignee in/out, etc). Each profile contains some general information from our HR systems (timezone, organizational tree, dept., contact info, etc), but there are also fields for user generated content: skills, CV, customers, experience, teams and communities and photo. I know, a photo is very obvious in today’s web 2.0 arena, but IBM campaigned internally for profile photos some 6 years ago, when digital cameras had 2MP… Fringe also adds social software capabilities, such as adding friends and building a network (facebook anyone?), adding RSS links, showing your social presence (second life avatar, flickr, del.icio.us, twitter) and updating your status (which can be synced with your IM status – nice).

Meet my fav five
If you interested in some of these tools and technologies, there’s an excellent opportunity to watch (some of) them in action – in our KM and Collaboration User Forum, Monday Sep. 8th. Register now, seating is limited.

Coolest Lotus video

I know, Ed has already written about this, but I just saw it and had to complement my creative Lotus colleagues in the UK for making this a very cool video !

A simple scenario, with a simpler solution – Lotus Collaboration.

Speaking of collaboration, our event page at FB is up and running, KM and Collaboration User Forum. It’s a month and something away, but better be safe (and RSVP now) than sorry.
Speakers list (not final, so don’t blame me for changes):
Bank Hapoalim, Israel Securities Authority, Ministry of Finance, Menora Insurance, TEVA and Standards Institute of Israel.

Links:
Lotus on Youtube – Everyone Collaborate, Ed Brill
IBM Lotus Blackout – youtube video
KM and Collaboration User Forum
Lotus Collaboration Solutions

I want a facebook thing. I think

Just wrapped up my presentation at KM Annual Conference (another one), where I got 20min (but took 30) to talk about Enterprise 2.0, or ‘I want a facebook thing. I think‘.
The event was more about traditional knowledge management (aka – documents), and how to maintain a document library within your internal portal, so my Enterprise 2.0 portion was unique and different. I like to be unique.

I adopted some tips from Ed and Alan and came with Jeans and a buttoned shirt (short sleeves – it’s Israel), instead of my usual dress-code. Being the last speaker before lunch is not easy, especially where you consider who came before me. If you happen to follow me on twitter, you know I was up with some fierce competition, as all the speakers before me, and sponsors outside, were MOSS/WSS/Sharepoint integrators. One hilarious moment came when a presenter took the stage to demo a solution over Powerpoint 2007 – but the main hall laptop had Office XP.. :-)) The laptop refused to open the Office 2007 file. LOL

The important thing, I ROCKED !!
And mentioned how IBM beat Sharepoint in Enterprise 2.0 face-off earlier this week.
And gathered some business cards for future opportunities.
I talked about social computing in general (what is facebook), then dived into Lotus Connections (I want something like this…) with references from Ernest & Young and Sprint, and finished with three first steps for piloting/adopting (COOL!! How to get started?).
With little time to spare I didn’t talked about the barriers to adoption, but Enterprise 2.0 Conference already covered this in one of their discussions.

You can view the embed slides below, or download from slideshare.net/dvirreznik.
The slides are in Hebrew – will prepare an English version over the weekend.

Breakfast with Jeff Pulver @ Tel Aviv

Went to my first Jeff Pulver’s Breakfast clubs, at Tel Aviv harbor. I met Jeff last month, lecturing at KM Summit – he was at the hotel, doing back-to-back meetings (I think it was something like 30..). The concept of these breakfasts is very cool, and Jeff really got this down to a form of art. Upon arrival you get a little welcome package, with stickers to write your name and tagline, and another blank sticker that serves as your personal ‘tag cloud’ – so people you meet can tag you.
Jeff explains it better in this video.

The most interesting thing for me was meeting couple of 12 year old kids, who came with one’s mom, to see and learn what social networking is all about. The kids are familiar with blogs (although they don’t write any), know what facebook is (but use Ning instead) – but social gatherings are not IN yet. If you think about it, that sounds strange, since the first groups are formed in pre-school and high-school, so the transition to social networks should be quite natural. That’s not the case here. The kids were quite the attraction – Jeff also spoke with them, and interviewed them, so did Kfir Pravda.

Generation Y seems so real all of a sudden…

The facebook test

Met with another government agency today, to discuss about social software for the enterprise, or Enterprise 2.0. As I mentioned before there’s a hugh difference between Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0, and implementing social software solutions within the firewall is not that common. Yet.

The meeting was actually a lead from the KM Summit I lectured a month ago, and today I met the KM Manager of that agency. They are a pretty large agency, with couple departments, already using internal portal and other KM tools, so they are quite advanced in that aspect. Still, Enterprise 2.0 is something entirely different.

When we started talking freely about the value and benefits of Enterprise 2.0 I decided to try the facebook test, out of the blue. I didn’t rehearse this before the meeting, it was an ad-hoc attempt, to see how many employees are members of that government agency group on facebook.
We found over 20 different groups, in one of them – 500 members. Impressive.

What did we learn?
First, the demand is out there, people want to share their content and connect online. It’s their way of communicating with the world, and even with their friends.
Second, when lacking the right tools within the firewall, they turn to tools outside the firewall, sharing content that should have stayed inside.
Third, it’s time to seriously consider Enterprise 2.0 tools. And that’s the hard part.

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Mobile & Media Consultant. I help startup companies launch products to the consumer market. Reach out: dvir.reznik [at] gmail.com
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This is my personal blog. The postings here do not represent the thoughts, intentions, plans or strategies of my past employers or of my clients. It is solely my opinion.