Enterprise 2.0 - A new Age of Aquarius?

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My presentation at the inaugural Edge of the Web conference in Perth, Western Australia on 6 November 2008. An introduction to Enterprise 2.0/Web 2.0 and then a look at business benefits plus a very quick look at a couple of case studies. It shares significant content with my earlier E2.0 talk, but is tighter and more focused. A full transcript is at http://www.acidlabs.org/2008/11/19/enterprise-20-a-new-age-of-aquarius/

Transcript of Enterprise 2.0 - A new Age of Aquarius?

Enterprise 2.0A new Age of Aquarius?

Stephen Collinsacidlabs

Who am I?

You need to be ready

Your customers want to be engaged

Smart. Innovative. Lots of ideas.

Communicators.

Neither efficient nor effective

We’re at a tipping point

What it is... and isn’t

It’s not this

It’s also not cause for this

Tim O’Reilly established his

“Web 2.0 principles” in

2005

Image © Wired, http://blog.wired.com/monkeybites/2007/10/web-20-summit-f.html

The Web As Platform

My Web 2.0 InfrastructureApplication Usage Launched

Email and calendar May 2003

Photos February 2004

Travel 2000

2007

2006

Project management 2004

CRM and contacts March 2007

Accounting 1998!!!

Time tracking 2006

Presentations 2006

Video 2005

Contacts and CV 2003

Contact syncing (local, Gmail, Highrise) Beta

Events 2003

Events and tracking 2004

Tracking, problem solving July 2006

Lifestreaming 2006

Location awareness 2008

Harnessing collective intelligence

Data is the Next Intel Inside

The end of the software release cycle

Lightweight programming (and business) models

Software above the level of a single device

Rich user experiences

People not process

Network effects

Reed’s Law

“The value of a group-forming network increases exponentially... its implications

are profound.”

“The Law of the Pack” (Harvard Business Review, February 2001, pp 23-4)

Then Web 2.0 moved inside the wall

“Enterprise 2.0: The Dawn of Emergent Collaboration” (Spring 2006, Vol. 47, No. 3, pp. 21-28)

Mr Enterprise 2.0

http://www.flickr.com/photos/ross/250133349/

Web 2.0 for business. Sort of.

Uses the tools of Web 2.0

Puts people at the centre

Significant increases in productivity and innovation

Visible, persistent, transparent activity

across business

Benefits realisation

Improved knowledge retention (with better

opportunities to capture previously

tacit knowledge)

Better adoption of tools as near-zero barrier to use

Emergent efficiency over predefined patterns

Greater transparency and visibility of activity

Minimise duplication and rework

Boosted productivity as people can work

more naturally

SLATES

“Enterprise 2.0: The Dawn of Emergent Collaboration” (Spring 2006, Vol. 47, No. 3, pp. 21-28)

“These [tools] are part of a platform that’s readable by anyone in the company, and they’re persistent. They make an episode of knowledge work widely and permanently visible.”

Dr Andrew McAfee, HBS

“Enterprise 2.0: The Dawn of Emergent Collaboration” (Spring 2006, Vol. 47, No. 3, pp. 21-28)

Search

Linking

Authorship

Tags

Extensions

Signals

A better ecosystem

So we get better, richer outcomes

Systems can push new information

Users can pull to themselves just as

easily

Users can pull to themselves just as easily

Flow

Building the Enterprise 2.0 organisation

In successful, satisfied organisations, tool choice is driven by

business not IT

Building the Web 2.0 Enterprise: McKinsey Global Survey Results, July 2008

Collaboration and cocreation

Building the Web 2.0 Enterprise: McKinsey Global Survey Results, July 2008

Tapping distributedknowledge

Building the Web 2.0 Enterprise: McKinsey Global Survey Results, July 2008

Organisational and management transformation

Building the Web 2.0 Enterprise: McKinsey Global Survey Results, July 2008

Conversation. Collaboration. Community.

Cluetrainwasright

Business is actually about people and conversations

Right strategy, right processes, right tools, right time

So what might they need?

Wikis

Blogs

Mashups

Communities

Bookmarks

Social networks

So what else?

Busy vs. Bursty

Bursty vs. Busy

“The burst economy, enabled by the Web, works on innovation, flat knowledge networks, and discontinuous productivity.”

Anne Truitt Zelenka, Web Worker Daily

http://webworkerdaily.com/2007/04/19/busyness-vs-burst-why-corporate-web-workers-look-unproductive/

Attraction. Engagement. Retention.

“Employee recruitment and retention could become one motivator and one very significant ROI.”

Bill Ives, FASTForward

http://www.fastforwardblog.com/2006/12/22/diy-km-and-recruitment/

My (everyone’s) generation

Success stories

CIA

http://community.e2conf.com/docs/DOC-1090

Do you really want to miss this boat?

“Networked, social-based opportunities are so explosive today that when we pursue them we’re flung forward at pace.”

James Governor, RedMonk

http://www.redmonk.com/jgovernor/2007/04/17/hyper-productivity-and-information-saturation-economics/

A BIG opportunity

Like the cool pictures?

iStockphoto.com and Flickr

strategies, tools and processes to empower knowledge workers

Stephen Collins

trib@acidlabs.orgskype trib22+61 410 680722

www.acidlabs.orgtwitter.com/tribwww.linkedin.com/in/stephencollinswww.facebook.com/profile.php?id=692035946