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    Socialtext 4.5 Provides Integration With Salesforce.com

    Last week at Enterprise 2.0 in Santa Clara, we announced our newest application integration offering: the Socialtext Connector for Salesforce.com.

    In the following video interview, you’ll see how openly sharing events from business applications like Salesforce, allows everyone in your company to benefit from the information, as well as contribute to the important activities that drive your business.

    E2TV host David Berlind asks some great questions about how Socialtext Connect differs from other vendor’s offerings. I hope my answers make it clear why Socialtext is the best solution for your business. If you have any questions or feedback, please add a comment below.

    Socialtext 4.5 Unveiled at Enterprise 2.0 Conference

    Yesterday was a big day for Socialtext and our customers, as we released Socialtext 4.5 at the Enterprise 2.0 Conference in Santa Clara, Calif. Socialtext 4.5 builds on our goal of removing knowledge silos inside companies that stifle cross-departmental and enterprise-wide collaboration. As I write this post, my fellow Socialtexters are setting up our booth and hitting the conference sessions to talk with business and IT leaders about how they can get the most business value from social software.

    First a little context on the news yesterday. Socialtext proudly operates as a software as a service company. We also run on an innovative, agile development cycle. That means we make improvements to our software every few weeks. Consequently, 4.5 highlighted many of the major features that our dev team has been hard at work on the past couple quarters. Like all our releases, our devs and product team do a great job of listening closely to our customers to put together features and improvements that help them accelerate their company’s business performance with social software.

    With 4.5, we announced the addition of Socialtext Explore, a new feature that allows employees to find and discover not just links, but all the microblogging messages, pages, posts, pictures, and files they share with each other at work. We also announced a pre-built connector to Salesforce.com, which enables Socialtext customers to choose actions of virtually any type that happen in Salesforce.com, and automatically inject them as events into Socialtext’s activity stream. The connector was built on Socialtext Connect, our integration offering that allows you to integrate traditional enterprise systems with social software. Connect enables customers to build their own connectors to systems of all shapes and sizes. The Salesforce.com connector follows the launch of SharePoint Connector for Socialtext Connect earlier this year.

    We were excited to see extensive coverage on Socialtext 4.5 from great media outlets like TechCrunch, CIO, InformationWeek, ReadWriteWeb and many others, and I encourage you to take a glance (the deeplinks lead to the article for those respective publications).

    Also yesterday, our president and co-founder, Ross Mayfield, co-hosted the Enterprise 2.0 Bar Camp with industry luminary Susan Scrupski of the 2.0 Adoption Council. By nature, BarCamp is designed as an “unconference,” where attendees literally create their own sessions based on topics of interest. One cool thing about BarCamp this year is that it falls a little after the fifth anniversary of the first BarCamp, which was held at Socialtext Headquarters in Palo Alto.

    Ross led a session about “bringing enterprise 1.0 to enterprise 2.0,” in which we had some spirited conversation with attendees about how to align social software with existing business processes. Ross highlighted what has long been a passion for him and guided much of his thought leadership in pioneering the Enterprise 2.0 space: How social software can help exceptions to business process. This topic relates to a webinar we had recently, in which the Deloitte Center for the Edge discussed how OSIsoft (a Socialtext customer) improved its customer resolution time by 22 percent. We also recently highlighted how an accounting firm, Hayes Knight, utilized Socialtext Connect to tie its CRM system into a central activity stream. In that case, accountants cut the time in which they served customers in half.

    We’re looking forward to watching our customer, Larry Housel of Industrial Mold & Machine, talk tomorrow about how large enterprises can learn from his company’s use of social software. On Thursday, Socialtext CEO Eugene Lee will discuss the state of microblogging in the enterprise, while Adina Levin, our co-founder and VP of products, will talk about using open web standards to help integrate social software with other key applications across the enterprise.

    /cgl

    Transparency, Access and Focus: Getting the Most From Enterprise Social Software

    I recently had a series of conversations with customers to get their input on some upcoming capabilities. The conversations included a variety of stakeholders and participants in each organization. Each conversation triggered thoughtful reflection and lively debate among participants about how their organization should use social software for the right mix of transparency, focus, and security.

    I’ll tell the story, do some analysis, and talk about what it means for how your organization can get the most out of Enterprise 2.0.

    South Australia Office of the Premier

    At the South Australian Department of the Premier and Cabinet, the discussion was about whether to hold conversations among a larger group, or within smaller enclaves. They use Socialtext Signals heavily for Q&A to tap into the expertise of a broad range of employees and to share resources that are valuable across the organization.

    Several managers advocated in favor of holding and keeping the conversations in smaller groups, while others pushed for more enterprise wide discussions. A member of the risk management group raised concerns about security. A project manager gave a counter-example, talking about value she sees in asking questions and getting answers from the larger group.

    Eventually, the manager weighed in. He said that the goal they were striving for in their use of social software was increased transparency. Part of the goal was to move the culture toward greater openness and transparency. Sure, there is the possibility that someone might make a mistake. But people use email every day and make decisions about what information to share with whom. It’s better to share the goals and trust people’s judgement.

    Getty Images

    At Getty Images, the conversation took the opposite direction. Getty Images is a major distributor of digital images and stock photography. They are using Socialtext broadly among their sales, marketing and service professionals.

    At Getty Images, people are using Signals to ask questions about the broad range of products and services the company offers. They are also using it to promote new campaigns, share reports and good news. A sales manager boasted that “we rocked the Emmies last night.” But people were starting to feel like the discussion in the larger group was too much information. At Getty Images, they are starting to steer people to hold some discussions in smaller groups. The reason is not security, but to improve signal to noise.

    Also, the Getty Images team is finding that brand new users sometimes share things that other people find to be irrelevant and trivial right when they get started. But then they see what others do, and learn from others’ practices, and adapt to the norms of sharing what people feel is relevant.

    GT Nexus

    GT Nexus is a company that makes software for the shipping and transportation industry. At GT Nexus, there was a lively debate among representatives of IT, engineering, product management, design and customer support about the need to share enterprise wide versus in smaller groups. On one hand, some product management and design team members were collaborating in private groups. Meanwhile, an engineering manager was encouraging them to post more publicly across groups.

    The debate didn’t conclude during that meeting. But GT Nexus will be able to use self-join groups and workspaces where they can collaborate in smaller groups without disturbing others, while valuable information is still being to others via browsing and search.

    Analysis and recommendations

    In all of these situations, the ability to share both broadly and narrowly, more publicly and more privately, set up a lively internal discussion about how broadly and narrowly to share different sorts of things. Each organization needed to think through its own culture and information needs, and come up with guidelines and heuristics about what to share with whom. Also in all of these cases, adoption timeline comes into play. People’s initial impulse is to share “too much” or “too little”, and the adoption process is about settling on the norms and accommodating people’s behavior to these norms.

    Overall, the value of enterprise social software comes from increasing transparency, so that more people in the organization have access to the people and information they need. Transparency is tempered by two different factors – the need for security, and the need for focus. If too much information broadly shared, and too much is said out loud, everyone drowns in the noise.

    Enterprise social software needs to enable organizations to manage, focus, and access along both of these axes:

    1. Security is provided through private groups that are visible to members only
    2. Focus is provided by small groups where activity can be easily discovered, and interested parties can join

    It is business decisions and cultures, not features, that enable organizations to gain the benefits of appropriate transparency and access. People need to decide, and develop shared culture, about when to share and ask publicly, and when to refrain from distracting their colleagues. Employees need to understand what information must be kept confidential, and what problems would benefit from increased insight and collaboration from a broader audience.

    The implementation of social software catalyzes important conversations and requires important decisions about transparency, access, and focus in your organization. There is no one right answer, and getting it right takes key decisions about what’s right for your organization, and tools that let you tune for your company’s goals.

    Improved Search, Sharing and Speed In Socialtext 4.4

    This latest Socialtext release contains several exciting updates. You’ll notice performance is improved across the board, especially in faster Dashboard load times. The search engine has been completely overhauled for workspaces, yielding faster and more accurate results. Finally, we’ve made it even easier to share workspace pages and files.

    Improved Workspace Search

    Searching workspaces has been improved in several ways:

    • Results will now be returned much quicker, especially across multiple workspaces.
    • Result accuracy has been improved, especially for multi-word searches.
    • The previous limit of 500 page results has been removed.
    • Both the content within file attachments as well as the file attachment names are now indexed.

    Easily Share Workspace Pages

    When reading a workspace page, you can now click “Signal This!” to post a link back to the page and choose which group will see the message. Similarly, the “Signal This Edit Summary” feature, which allows you to post a link when saving a page, has been enhanced to also allow you to choose which group to post to.

    Improved Attachment Management

    When uploading attachments to a workspace page, if a file with the same name already exists you will be asked to either add the new file or replace the existing file. Also, the attachment widget on each page now shows who attached each file and when.

    We hope you enjoy these enhancements.

    Socialtext Enhances Support for Safari and Chrome

    Here is a quick overview of what’s new in the latest release of the Socialtext business collaboration platform.

    • Rich-text editing in Apple Safari and Google Chrome browsers
    • Search results from collaborative workspaces and enterprise microblogging now includes content attached in Microsoft Office XML formats (docx, xlsx, pptx)
    • SocialCalc, the shared online spreadsheet, has a new command menu for moving, sliding, or filling in cells. (as shown in the video below)

    Socialtext Signals Gets File-sharing, Tagging, and More

    You can now use Socialtext Signals to share files and links to web sites and Socialtext workspace pages. You can also use tags to group similar conversations together and make them easier to find via search.

    Here you can see the new Insert action buttons:

    Insert objects into a signal

    Sharing Files: Using the new Attach File action, you can now add richer content to a conversation including pictures, presentations or documents. If an attached file is an image, a small thumbnail version of it will be shown which can be clicked on to display the full size.   All other attachments can be downloaded or opened in their native application.

    Sharing Links: These two new buttons make it easy for you to include a link to either a web page or Socialtext Workspace page.

    Adding Tags: Tags are a useful way to group similar topics together. For example, you may wish to tag all Signals about deals your company wins as “Customer Win.” Tags can be added either via the Insert – Tag action or if you’re familiar with the Twitter “hashtag” convention you can begin a tag using “#” followed by one word. You can click on a tag that appears with any Signal to open a list of all Signals containing that tag. You can also search by tag, using the convention “tag: tagname” where “tagname” is the tag you are searching for.

    Sharing A Web Page As You Surf

    If you’re reading a web site that you want to share with your colleages, you can now simply click on “Signal This!” to share a link to the page.   This will create a new signal for you,  which you can either send as is, or update the text, choose which group you want to share it with and even add tags to.

    SignalThis

    To Install the Signal This! tool:

    • Click on Signals in the universal navigation bar at the top of any Socialtext page.
    • Scroll to the bottom of the Signals stream, click on the link in the sentence “Tip: Use the Signal This! bookmarklet to share any page on the web via Signals.”
    • Follow the instructions on the Signals Bookmarklet page to drag and drop Signal This! to your bookmark bar.

    These new features make it easier than ever to share information and engage with your business colleagues using Socialtext Signals.    We have customers using Signals for: questions and answers, sharing competitive intelligence, making company announcements, taking virtual rollcall and meeting minutes, brainstorming ideas, and more.   What are you using Signals for?

    Be Part Of The Conversation With Socialtext Signals

    Socialtext Signals makes it easy for you to share information and participate in conversations with your colleagues. Below are three of the new Socialtext 4.1 enhancements that you’ll want to start using right away.

    Conversation Threading

    Signals now groups all responses below the original topic, making it easy for you to follow the entire discussion.

    Link To A Signal

    Since a great deal of valuable corporate knowledge is now being shared inside Signals, it is important that you be able to reference past conversations. To facilitate this, each Signal now has a permanent address that displays the message on a web page in context with the discussion it was part of.

    Monitor Important Information

    Finally, there is a new way you can follow the stream of information in Signals. You can already use a web browser, the Socialtext Desktop client, and your mobile device, and now you have an additional method called “popout streams.” A popout stream allows you to open a separate browser window (or multiple), so you can continue using your main browser window for doing other work. Popout streams allow you to filter the information to display the messages that are most important to you.

    We know that some of the greatest ideas and insights come from open conversations with your peers. With the latest version of Socialtext you can now easily share information, participate in discussions, and keep up to date with the latest activities all across your organization. We hope that you find Socialtext Signals to be an invaluable business tool. As always, we love to hear stories about how Socialtext is helping your company succeed.

    Socialtext 4.0.1 Improvements All Around

    You’ll be happy to know Socialtext 4.0.1 contains several updates that will immediately improve the way you work.

    The video below provides an overview of some of the enhancements, including:

    • Sending longer microblogging messages in Socialtext Signals
    • Installing the Desktop application for rich-client access to Socialtext
    • Filtering a Group’s activity stream so you can focus on specific types of events
    • Improving the look of certain wiki page elements

    Communicate Openly With Your Colleagues

    Trying to collaborate with co-workers via e-mail can be frustrating. That is why many people are using our microblogging application, Socialtext Signals, when they need to get answers, share links, and give quick status updates. Based on your feedback, we’ve now increased the Signal length to 400 characters, so you can send longer messages.

    Experience Socialtext Desktop

    The Socialtext Desktop application is a great way to access Socialtext Signals, the activity stream, profiles, even all your Socialtext workspaces pages. We want to make sure you get a chance to experience Desktop yourself, so we’ve placed a new link at the top right of Socialtext where you can click to install it.

    Easily Keep Up With Group Activity

    Socialtext Groups make it easy for you to work with your colleagues on projects or areas of interest. Each Group has its own home page, with an activity stream that displays what the group is up to. New in 4.0.1, you can now filter the stream to display just specific types of events, such as signals, page edits, comments, etc.

    Socialtext Releases Chatroulette for the Enterprise

    Today Socialtext released the latest cutting-edge social software for the enterprise, unleashing a revolution in Randomized Productivity Management (RPM).

    The following video has details:

    RPM takes social to a new level. We’ve been hard at work adapting the best of the social web, from Wikipedia, Facebook, Twitter and more for enterprise use. Socialtext users can immediately start clicking on their navigation bar to realize immediate ROI.

    Signup for your own account today.

    Why Groups Matter

    Today Socialtext launched Socialtext 4.0, a significant step forward for our enterprise social software platform. One of the most important new capabilities we’ve introduced is Collaborative Groups, and I thought I would take a breather from press and analyst briefings to jot some thoughts down on why we think they are important.

    Groups in the enterprise are different from groups in public social networks

    Keep in mind that our goal is to help organizations become more effective – by releasing trapped knowledge, connecting people, and helping them collaborate to get work done. So our goal with groups is different from how a lot of group-type functionality shows up in places like Facebook or LinkedIn. A few of the key differences are:

    Some groups are related to org structure. Many larger organizations have groups that are formed from nodes on their directory tree. Socialtext People can be connected to corporate directories via LDAP or Active Directory, and our new Groups functionality leverages that capability.

    There’s a wide range of privacy needs for groups at work. There are two dimensions of privacy as they relate to groups in the enterprise – Discoverability and Membership. It’s just fine for many groups to be discoverable by any employee in the company – the golf club, a group of people with expertise in a certain discipline, or a task force working on a cross-functional initiative. Some of these may have open membership, while some may need approval. On the other hand, some groups need to not be publicly visible – for example a task force evaluating an acquisition target – in which case it needs to be completely private. We’ve always worked hard to design privacy into the foundation of our architecture; as a result our new Groups and related functionality preserves and leverages that multidimensional privacy spectrum. And remember that Socialtext has a uniquely flexible deployment option – a SaaS appliance that can be installed behind the firewall.

    Groups want to get work done. We’re enabling people not only create and form groups, but to provide and “personalize” the full range of Socialtext’s collaboration features (Signals, wiki workspaces, Dashboards, etc.) for the specific usage and goals of the group.

    Making it easy to form groups, but with appropriate administration

    Ross Mayfield wrote a great blog post talking about how “We’ve made group-forming ridiculously easy”. We’ve incorporated a lot of customer feedback into balancing the needs of IT Administrators to have some control while at the same time removing friction that makes it difficult for business people to create and form groups.

    Groups provide context

    Ever since we introduced Socialtext Signals, our secure enterprise microblogging capability, the deployment, adoption, and usage of it has grown rapidly. As Signals has been deployed enterprise-wide with great success, we immediately saw the opportunity to deepen the value by provide Signals Channels in conjunction with Groups. This makes it really easy for groups to take their discussions out of the fully public stream through a simple pull-down menu pick – note that people have been hacking this for awhile on Twitter using hashtags – except that everyone still sees them (remember the really annoying tweet flood last year during SXSW – oh no is that coming up again soon?) In Socialtext’s Signals Channels, the context is preserved for the people in those channels, and the signal-to-noise ration is improved for those who aren’t. Adina Levin wrote a great post expanding on this “The revival of groups in the age of the network”.

    Groups across the company boundary

    We’ve been supporting customers in B2B secure extranet use cases for years, and as we’ve added Signals and now Groups we’ve been thoughtful and careful to deal with the privacy and sharing issues that multiple extranets create. Maximizing sharing and transparency within the company while separating what is visible across and between different business partners is a hard problem, and I’m proud of some of the hard thinking and elegant solutions our team has come up with. If I’m a law firm, I clearly can’t have any leakage of information going on between my clients, or between what one team in my firm is doing with Client A and another team is doing with Client B – and moreover I probably don’t want either client to know the identity of my other clients. We’ve tackled some pretty complex situations throughout our company evolution and we’re lucky to be able to build on our past experience and the architecture has evolved through that experience. Some highly visible privacy mis-steps by some other vendors recently just highlight the importance and difficulty of these problems.

    Groups are all about people

    My “Business is Conducted by People, not Users” post described how important People are to our way of thinking. Socialtext 4.0 is just another major step forward in putting people front and center – making it easy for them to find each other, create groups and teams, and then marshall the collaborative resources to help them get stuff done. I’m super proud of the Socialtext team in delivering this milestone, and we’re blessed to have great customers who’ve helped us design, refine, and deliver this major release.

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    About This Blog

    Weblog on gaining business results from social software.

    On this blog, Socialtext staffers and customers explore how companies can gain the most business value from their use of enterprise social software, including microblogging, social networking, filtered activity streams, widget-based dashboards, blogs and wikis.

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