UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly...

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UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/conferences/ online-information-2010/ This work is licensed under a Attribution- NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 licence (but note caveat) Acceptable Use Policy Recording/broadcasting of this talk, taking photographs, discussing the content using Twitter, blogs, etc. is permitted providing distractions to others is minimised. Tag for del.icio.us ‘online10' Email: [email protected] Twitter: http://twitter.com/ briankelly/ Blog: http:// ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/ Track 2 Tuesda y 30/11/ 10
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Page 1: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

UKOLN is supported by:

Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web

Brian KellyUKOLNUniversity of BathBath, UK

http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/conferences/online-information-2010/http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/conferences/online-information-2010/

This work is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 licence (but note caveat)

Acceptable Use PolicyRecording/broadcasting of this talk, taking photographs, discussing the content using Twitter, blogs, etc. is permitted providing distractions to others is minimised.

Acceptable Use PolicyRecording/broadcasting of this talk, taking photographs, discussing the content using Twitter, blogs, etc. is permitted providing distractions to others is minimised.

Tag for del.icio.us ‘online10'Tag for del.icio.us ‘online10'

Email:[email protected]

Twitter:http://twitter.com/briankelly/

Blog:http://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/

Track 2Tuesday 30/11/10

Page 2: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Social Networks

• Focus on individual, not the institution2

Page 3: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Ouseful.info blog by Tony Hirst

Relaunched in July 2008

Original blog launched in March 2005

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Page 4: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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Martin Weller’s Ed Techie Blog.

Launched in May 2006

Page 5: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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Steve Wheeler’s Learning with ‘E’s blog

Launched in December 2006

Page 6: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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eFoundations blog, provided by Andy Powell & Pete Johnson

Launched in Sept 2006

Page 7: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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Marieke Guy’s Ramblings of a Remote Worker blog.

Launched in Sept 2008

Page 8: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

My ‘Must Read’ Blogs

Characteristics of my ‘must-read’ blogs:• Ouseful.info: hosted at ouseful.wordpress.com

• Ed Techie: hosted at nogoodreasons.typepad.com

• eFoundations: hosted at efoundation.typepad.com

• Learning with ‘e’s: hosted at steve-wheeler.blogspot.com

• Ramblings of a Remote Worker: hosted at remoteworker.wordpress.com

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Page 9: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Early Adopters

Characteristics of established & successful early adopters:

• Willing to take risks• Passionate about communicating• Identified ways of balancing personal

approaches & institutional concerns• Have developed established communities• Want to continue to do a good job

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Page 10: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Acceptance by Organisations

Increasingly the institutional perspective is:• We must use blogs• We need a Twitter account• …

Situation today:• Social Web widely accepted• Evidence of ROI, value, etc. still needed

But:• Where does early adopter work fit in?• Should existing approaches be continued?

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Page 11: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Institutional Concerns

Concerns regarding use of Social Web being:• On-message: having an authoritative,

consistent & authentic voice • Appropriate: relevant to organisation’s

mission • Legal: not being sued, …!• Present: not disappearing over holidays or

when author leaves• Persistent: Content and service is

sustainable• Consistent: Content, user interface, …

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Co

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Page 12: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Changes to Terms & Conditions

Ning changed their terms and conditions in 2010, removing the free service

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Page 13: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Blog Dies

Blogs which are abandoned

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Risks that abandoned blogs attract comment spam

Page 14: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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Blogs can also disappear

Page 15: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Inappropriate Content

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Story

Council blocks Twitter due to “A squirrel could run rings around journalist” tweet (meant to be private message)

Page 16: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Addressing the ConcernsInstitutional Appropriation of Professional Uses

• Close down blogs, Twitter accounts, …• Requirement to use institutionally

approved accounts

Professional Responses to Institutional Concerns

• What goes here?

Leave Well Alone• Accept the risks• Avoid confrontation

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Page 17: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Inappropriate Content

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Story

Council blocks Twitter due to “A squirrel could run rings around journalist” tweet (meant to be private message)

Parallel

Email message sent to list rather than individual.

Email service suspended

How To Respond

Training & advice for when mistakes are made (e.g. apologise)

Page 18: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Blog Dies Abandoned blogs may be hosted in the institution

Miles Metcalfe is now based in Shanghai – and has no access to institutional account (though he would be able to update blog hosted in Cloud).

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Page 19: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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In-house blogs can disappear – and reappear due to value placed on them by their owner

Page 20: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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The revived Auricle blog, which the author cared about.

Now at http://www.auricle.org/auriclewp/

Page 21: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Experience at Croydon Council illustrates the need for lightweight and flexible policies

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Lightweight Policies

Mosman Council provides an example of a lightweight policy for Twitter

Policies

Page 22: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Managed Closure

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There’s a need to manage the closure of Social Web services (in-house or external)

What we did for IWMW 2009 and 2010 blogs

Page 23: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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iPres 2010 paper on “Approaches to archiving professional blogs hosted in the cloud” gives advice on best practices for closing blogs

Page 24: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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The 1 – 9 – 90 Challenge

Participation Inequality: Encouraging More Users to Contribute

In most online communities, 90% of users are lurkers who never contribute, 9% of users contribute a little, and 1% of users account for almost all the action.

Jakob Neilson, Oct 2006

Implication: to maximise impact, go where the audiences are

Page 25: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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Benefits of putting resources on a popular service rather than a richly functional service or an in-house service

Note ability to pay for ad-free service

Page 26: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Popularity of iTunes for OU“The Open University (OU) today reached a milestone as the first university to hit 20 million downloaded tracks on iTunes U, a dedicated area within the iTunes Store (www.itunes.com). With an average of over a quarter of a million downloads per week*, the OU’s popularity has soared since content was first made available on iTunes U in June 2008.”

26 Institutions are using Social Web services, but what about individuals?

Page 27: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

A University Perspective

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Article on academics’ personal home pages published in THE

Page 28: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Personal Web Sites (1)

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Professor David Gauntlett’s Web site

Page 29: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Personal Web Sites (2)

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Professor Robert West’s Web site

Page 30: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Personal Web Sites (3)

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Dr Jim Wilde’s Web site

Page 31: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Exemplar

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Jo-Anne Alcock’s blog as an exemplar, launched in June 2007

Jo-Anne Alcock’s blog continues in her new role at BCU

http://www.joeyanne.co.uk/

Page 32: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

JISC Use of Social Media

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Increasing about of usage of Social Web services by JISC

Page 33: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Moving From Personal to Organisational Use

What moves:• The data and the service?• The contacts, the comments, the social

graph?• The expertise, the approaches, …?

The organisation moves:• To make greater use of Cloud Services• To accept importance of the conversation• To accept that staff may leave the

organisation & take (copies of) their content• To appreciate and value staff commitment33

Page 34: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Individual Responsibilities

Context:• Many information professionals use the

Social Web to fulfil business objectives• The ownership of the underlying

technologies is no longer as important

Implications:• Need to adopt (and be seen to adopt)

approaches which address concerns of organisations and others

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Page 35: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Social Web Audit

Memo

From: PVC (Sustainability)

To: HoDs

As agreed at Senate all departments must provide an audit of use of Social Web services used for departmental/institutional purposes.

In the audit you must provide:• Details of third party services used• A risk assessment • Strategies for addressing risks

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Page 36: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Social Web Audit

Departmental blogs (UKOLN):• UK Web Focus & Remote Worker blogs

have policy on ownership and migration• Data migration has been tested• Content hosted on stable service with

local implementation available• SUETr , IWMW 2009 and JISC PoWR

blogs have been officially frozen with announcement provided

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Page 37: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Blog Example

Aline Hayes, Assistant Director of SLS/ Director of Information & Systems Technology at Sheffield Hallam University

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Page 38: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Blog Policy (2)

Policies For This Blog

This blog is hosted by Sheffield Hallam University, therefore the content of this blog belongs to them and remains theirs in the event that I either cease to contribute to this blog, or leave the University.

Policies for the use of & inclusion of Twitter Feeds

The content of any Twitter feed relates to a mix of work and personal matters. … Staff who choose to follow me on Twitter are assumed to be happy that I may follow them in return … I reserve the right to treat the Twitter id Aline_Hayes as mine & not the property of SHU38

Page 39: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Blog Policies

Blog policy for UK Web Focus blog

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Page 40: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

A Scientist’s Approach

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Full disclosure page on Cameron Neylon’s blog covers:

• Ownership• Responsibilities• Finances• Copyright• …

http://cameronneylon.net/about/disclaimers-and-full-disclosure/

Page 41: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Professionalisation

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Guidelines for JISCinvolve blogs covers in-house blogs.

Guidelines on writing is applicable generally.

• Supporting organisation’s goals

• Personal responsibilities

• Personal style

• Legal issues

• Blogs are about links

Page 42: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Cloud Services As Saviour

Risks of:• Reduction in funding across public sector

organisations• Loss of staff, technical expertise and in-

house services

Therefore need for:• Scenario planning• Contingency plans for outsourcing to

Cloud services• Education and trust in staff offset loss of

in-house solutions42

Page 43: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

A Code of Conduct?

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Is there a need for a professional code of conduct for librarian bloggers?

Page 44: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

Conclusions• The Social Web is here and to stay• Organisations are now recognising that early

adopters were right• In-house services are being implemented –

but may not always be appropriate• There is a need for a mixed environment• The trust placed in librarians provides sector

with opportunity to demonstrate responsible approaches for working in this environment

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Page 45: UKOLN is supported by: Moving From Personal to Organisational Use of the Social Web Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK

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Questions

Questions are welcome

Name: Brian Kelly Address: UKOLN, University of Bath, BATH, UKEmail: [email protected] site: http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/Blog: http://ukwebfocus./wordpress.com/Twitter: briankelly and ukwebfocus (automated feed)

Name: Brian Kelly Address: UKOLN, University of Bath, BATH, UKEmail: [email protected] site: http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/Blog: http://ukwebfocus./wordpress.com/Twitter: briankelly and ukwebfocus (automated feed)