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    Socialtext Adds Page-Likes and An Awesome Page Tracker Widget

    This past weekend Socialtext 4.7.3 was made available to all our customers.  It introduces several new features that will help you share, discover and manage content like never before.

    I Like That!

    A new “Like” button has been added to Socialtext workspace pages, enabling people to indicate to their colleagues which content they like the most. Hovering your mouse over the Like button displays a list of the people that have liked the page. The new Like features are also available via workspace views and search results, both of which can be sorted so that the most liked pages are displayed at the top of the list.

    Page Likes

    Flexible Project Management

    The new Page Tracker widget provides a graphical way to display links to Socialtext workspace pages. The widget uses columns to organize pages based on a series of tags. There are a variety of uses for the Page Tracker widget, including project management, workflow processes such as accounts payable, organizing marketing material and more. The image below provides an example of how the widget can be used for task management, where the columns display links to pages representing tasks in their various stages and priorities. The Page Tracker widget can be embedded into a wiki page, Group home page or Socialtext Dashboard.

    Page Tracker Widget - Displayed On A Wiki Page

    Additional Socialtext 4.7.3 Screenshots showcasing Page-Likes and the Page Tracker widget are available on the web.

    What Time Is It?

    Prior to this release, you had to define the timezone in each workspace you belong to. Now there is a single global setting that covers all your workspaces, plus all time formats now include the year. From inside any workspace, click settings at the top right, then on the left click My Workspaces, then Preferences-Time.

    I know you’re going to enjoy using these new features along with the other improvements this release provides.

    My Favorite Enterprise 2.0 Session: American Hospital Association

    At last week’s E2.0 conference in Boston, I was surprised and pleased by the way my “in-the-flow” phrase has gained common currency.

    I was also surprised, but less pleased, by some of the “best practices” I heard flying around. Whether in keynotes, sessions, or just hallway conversations, I heard a lot of claims of dubious merit, claims like:

    • Start with a small pilot and let it grow virally
    • Invest heavily in community management, because a community is only as successful as its managers
    • Workers won’t use social software without personal incentives
    • Workers who don’t belong to the Facebook Generation don’t “get” social software.
    • Social software adoption requires a culture of collaboration
    • You shouldn’t launch collaborative tools without a collaboration strategy

    There’s a common theme behind all this advice: You should be scared of launching enterprise social software, because achieving adoption is really hard, really time-consuming, and really expensive.

    Sorry friends, but I’m calling Bullshit.

    In the hands-down best session I saw at the show, Karthik Chakkarapani from American Hospital Association described how AHA achieved phenomenal adoption. Here’s the video Karthik’s team put together. It’s a must-watch for anyone interested in this topic. And for those of you with ADHD, here’s the Cliff Notes version:

    • Made Socialtext their Intranet (so there’s one place to go).
    • Integrated all mission-critical work tools into that very same Intranet (so there’s one place to go)
    • Implemented Single Sign-On to remove the barrier of extra logins for the different applications (so it’s easy to get there)

    AHA launched with a project team of 2 FTEs working for 3 months. Six months out they’re getting over 95% active adoption.

    Karthik’s success makes me think that a lot of E2.0 experts don’t really understand what “in the flow” means. If your company is using social software in the flow of work, that means that the social software is where people work. It’s not a side-room where happy people take time out to brainstorm, swap ideas, or post random tweets. It’s where people go to work. Every day.

    And it ain’t that hard.

    Angry Beans Take Flight At Enterprise 2.0 Boston

    Now that I’ve recovered from last week’s Enterprise 2.0 conference in Boston, I wanted to take a moment and thank Steve Wylie and the entire UBM TechWeb team for putting on another great event. While the Hines Convention Center did feel like a cavernous maze at times, overall this was a much better location than those used in previous years.

    At the show we made two announcements:
    1) A new product offering that delivers introNetworks’ powerful Visual Matching Engine™ inside Socialtext‘s enterprise social networking platform. At our booth we highlighted how introNetworks can help people find colleagues with matching skills, passions and experience. This is just the start, stay tuned for more information about Socialtext and introNetworks integration.
    2) Socialtasks, a flexible project management tool that makes it easy to create and manage Socialtext pages.

    To add some fun to the showcase floor, we introduced Angry Beans, our version of the popular game corn-hole. As you can see in the pictures below, it was a lot of fun. There were some very skilled players and some others that… well they had a good time.

    Socialtext Integrates introNetworks Visual Matching Engine To Help Connect Colleagues

    Socialtext announced a new product offering today that delivers introNetworks’ powerful Visual Matching Engine™ inside Socialtext’s enterprise social networking platform. This robust integration improves people’s ability to pull together relevant colleagues and solve business challenges together in real-time.

    The integration includes 3 new widgets for use in Socialtext:

    • Social Radar: This visualization of a user’s best matches can be placed on a Dashboard, embedded in a Profile, and used on Group pages to show how the members of a Group are all related to each other by Skills, Passions, Experience and Interests.
    • Attribute Selector: This interactive tool gives users the ability to not only select attributes that describe themselves but specify how important each attribute is. When words are ranked from Important to Most Important, the embedded engine can make extremely precise matches.
    • Profile Attributes: This embeddable widget shows how users describe themselves using the Attribute Selector and which ones they have in common with the person viewing their Profile. Used to help find common interests and subject matter experts, this simple and powerful visualization is a key addition to the Profile page.

    More information about each component can be found on the introNetworks site.

     

    Enterprise Social Software Adoption: Now Available in Prescription Strength!

    When companies ask me how to deliver enterprise social software adoption, my advice is simple: Go to your local drugstore.

    pharmacy

    Walk into any drugstore in America and whether it’s Walgreen’s, Wal-Mart, Rite-Aid, CVS, or an independent, I can guarantee you it’s laid out the same way: The pharmacy is in the back of the store.

    The marketers who create drugstore planograms figured out a long time ago that the pharmacy customer is a captive customer. If you walk into Walgreen’s for Zoloft, Zyrtec, or Zyprexa, you will fill that prescription. By locating the pharmacy far from the entrance, drugstores force you to walk past a vast array of other items that you may not have come in for: magazines, candy bars, greeting cards, shampoo, toothpaste, and even groceries. While you’re in the store, why not pick up AAA batteries and a few chocolate Easter eggs for the kids

    The same principle applies to enterprise social software.

    If you want your colleagues to try enterprise social software, you must get them in the door. Every organization has its “prescriptions”, information or transactions which employees need on a regular basis. If you make your social software implementation a place–better yet, the place–to fill those prescriptions, you greatly increase the likelihood of its adoption long after the hype and hoopla of the initial launch has faded.

    What prescriptions do your colleagues need to fill on a regular basis? The answer depends on the nature of your business. Here are a few good, generalizable  examples:

    These are very different use cases in very different businesses, but they have two things in common. First, they fill prescriptions. They deliver must-have content and functionality that a broad cross-section of staff need on a regular basis. Second, they lead to other “purchases”. Users who initially show up to submit a Help Desk ticket or look up a price quote often find themselves staying to post an idea or upload a slide deck.

    When companies struggle with social software adoption, it’s usually because they’re not filling anyone’s prescriptions. They try to lure shoppers into the store by promoting items that are perceived–at least initially–as non-essential. Because those lead promotions are weak, they don’t attract the traffic required to generate follow-on business.

    If adoption is an issue for your company, I ask you this: What prescription are you filling?

     

    Warning: Side-effects may include euphoria, engagement, reduced frustration, enhanced productivity, and noticeable spikes in interpersonal connectedness.

    Visit Socialtext’s Booth At The Enterprise 2.0 Conference and Play Angry Beans

    Long conference days certainly can get monotonous, so we were thinking… what spices things up more than a little friendly competition? So, at this year’s Enterprise 2.0 Conference in Boston, Socialtext is introducing Angry Beans, our version of the popular backyard game cornhole.

    Teams consisting of two players will battle it out in a single elimination bracket to determine who’s the Angriest Bean of them all. All attendees are eligible including speakers, vendors, press and analysts. Competition will take place at the Socialtext booth (207) during Expo hours on Tuesday and Wed, with the finals being held at 5pm Wed.

    Do you think you’ve got game? Pick your partner and signup via the comments section below.

    Socialtext Chairman, Customer to Speak at Enterprise 2.0 Conference in Boston

    I’m pleased to announce that Socialtext’s chairman and co-founder, Ross Mayfield, will be a keynote speaker at the Enterprise 2.0 Conference in Boston on Wednesday, June 22, at 10:15 a.m. eastern.

    The event will also feature Socialtext customer the American Hospital Association (AHA). Karthik Chakkarapani, the AHA’s IT Director of Technology Solutions & Operations, will be hosting a session about how that organization built a vibrant social intranet on Socialtext. Karthik will speak Thursday morning (June 23).

    Ross is acknowledged across the industry (even by our competitors) as a pioneer in the world of enterprise social networking. He co-founded Socialtext a full three years before Andy McAfee published his famous “Enterprise 2.0” paper for MIT Sloan Management review. He has been an advocate for utilizing social software to improve business processes and the way we work together in a collaborative context.

    Last year, our CEO, Eugene Lee, gave his “Social Layer” keynote at E20. Eugene encouraged the industry to embrace social software as a layer that spans all systems and applications inside a company, rather than silo them off into point applications (like a CRM or ERP system). We have built on that vision this year with our customers via the use of Socialtext Connect.

    I can’t share too much about Ross’s talk yet, but here’s the description we submitted for the Enterprise 2.0 website that is now public. You can watch it live on E20 TV (free with registration).

    The Social Software Evolution, Not Revolution

    Social Software in the Enterprise adapts the best of the web with practices that make it work in the context of an organization. In this keynote, Socialtext Chairman and Co-founder Ross Mayfield will chart this evolution over the last ten years. Core patterns that have emerged help form strategic planning assumptions for Enterprises. But there are also core anti-patterns in social software deployments that fail to account for the context of an organization and their existing culture, processes, and infrastructure. While creative, they lead to tactical destruction. Understanding these evolutionary forces is critical for any strategic implementation seeking change and growth.

    Karthik, who presents Thursday, plans to cover the following:

    Consumer-oriented social media platforms are transforming the way that people communicate and accelerating the spread of information at the speed of light. This session provides an overview of Enterprise Social Collaboration, how to develop an effective strategy and implementation plan, and best practices and adoption strategies, as well as a demo of AHA’s collaboration platform using Socialtext. AHA has built a vibrant social intranet running on Socialtext and its success is largely due to utilizing enterprise social networking to enhance existing business processes and systems.

    Eugene, our CEO, and many Socialtext executives will also be on hand. We look forward to seeing you in Boston!

    Why It’s Not Just Filter Failure: Managing Tasks in the Unstructured, Social World

    One of the main benefits to social technology — and the Web in general — rests in its lack of structure. Or at least in our ability to surrender structure as a concept we held dear for ages.

    The Google founders were the first to figure this out in a meaningful way. They realized that packaging data into tidy, digital folders was an unrealistic endeavor. On the Web, too much information was already being created every second. We’d drive ourselves mad trying to keep up. Just let all that data be, they said. Google will go back and find the most relevant information for you whenever you need it.  Other features in the Web 2.0 era, mainly tagging, assisted in making things findable in this unstructured world.

    Then came Facebook, Twitter, and the general emergence of Activity Streams. These firehoses deliver a wealthy stream of unstructured data and information generated by both people and machines. Some of it might be annotated and tagged, but it’s still lightweight in its organization.

    Many ask, isn’t that too much data and information for people to process?

    Every consultant or social media expert, for their part, will cite Clay Shirky’s “it’s not information overload, it’s filter failure” theory to answer that issue for you. The problem is, when it comes to using these tools inside companies to get work done, it’s not filter failure that worries me; it’s an execution and prioritization failure within those filters.

    Filters have improved and are getting better (in fact, it’s an area where enterprise social networking is ahead of  consumer social networks). In many enterprise social platforms, you can filter by group or virtually any object type, which helps put relevant information at people’s fingertips.

    But while filtered enterprise social networking tools give people greater awareness for colleagues, projects and initiatives inside their company, it’s harder to keep track of which things need doing first. If we collaborate around enough work issues in a social environment, something needs to be done to ensure the individual — and the groups he or she interacts with — knows where they stand on a certain set of tasks, projects and issues within this collaborative context. And this  needs be done without imposing too much structure since business processes change so quickly.

    Right now, I think the enterprise social networking world has just scratched the surface of how to deal with this challenge.

    At Socialtext, our developers are probably ahead of the curve. They use a Kanban process that tracks key state changes in their development efforts via tagging. When they build a new feature, it’s chronicled on a wiki page as a “story.” With each crucial step along the way, they use different tags to mark that state change. Those changes are broadcasted in our activity stream, as well as on a visual representation built on a page (think: “assigned,” “in progress” and “completed” types of steps). We have actually made this into a widget for our customers to use to map to their business processes. In this case, our engineers used the lightweight tools within a social software platform (mainly tags, wikis and activity streams) to monitor these key changes without resorting to an overly structured system that would hamper innovation.

    One area that will also help is bidirectional task executions within the stream. Whether it’s approving a task in another external system, the ability to stay in the context of the stream helps end users immeasurably in getting their work done.

    I’m posting this with the obvious caveat that I’m not a social design expert. But what the Socialtext devs have done with Kanban might represent a larger trend with social software and enterprise social networking moving forward, and it’s something I’m listening to closely right now in my visits with companies utilizing these tools internally.

    How Social Software Helps People Get Work Done

    The opening section of the following slides shows how social software has evolved from tools that “help individuals be more productive” to “services that let people share and discover information with almost anyone, anywhere in the world.”

    This is followed by information and tips that can help promote active and ongoing use of social software tools within your organization.

    Chicago Enterprise Social Networking Event Wrap Up

    Last night, we hosted an enterprise social networking event in Chicago as part of an ongoing series to highlight best practices shared by Socialtext customers.

    It followed our event in New York in April featuring the CIO of NYU Stern (which you can read about here).

    Jack MacKay, VP and CIO of the American Hospital Association, led last night’s discussion at Harry Caray’s in Chicago, and it was a great one. Jack shared how the AHA has built a vibrant social intranet running on Socialtext.

    The reason for AHA’s success: Utilizing enterprise social networking to enhance existing business processes and systems. Using Socialtext Connect, our integration technology, the AHA integrated key HR and document management systems into its social intranet, making it a place where work gets done inside the company. I uploaded the slides to SlideShare so you can get more of the details.

    After the presentation, other Socialtext customers — including FONA International and Hospira — joined in a roundtable discussion about fostering adoption and value from their enterprise social networking efforts.

    We’re looking forward to the next event, and appreciate everyone who came out and contributed to a great discussion.

    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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