• All Posts
  • Application Development
  • Customer Success
  • Enterprise 2.0
  • News & Events
  • Product Updates
  • Tips & Tricks
  • Posts tagged ‘enterprise microblogging’

    Enterprise Microblogging For Fun and Profit

    “It’s cool, but is it work?”

    That was the question of the day last week when I visited one of Socialtext’s newer customers, Oxford University Press. We’re deploying to all 4,500 employees, and they’re a wonderful client: intelligent, committed, and keenly aware of both the threats and the opportunities that social media present to the publishing industry. I went to OUP’s New York office to lead a Lunch-and-Learn to help OUP staff understand how Socialtext can fit into–and improve–the way they work.

    When I started talking about Socialtext’s microblogging capability, one of the participants interrupted to ask: “When I microblog on Socialtext…am I working or not?”

    It’s the elephant in the room–not just for enterprise microblogging, but for enterprise social media in general. There’s lots of buzz about Twitter-like tools inside the enterprise. There’s also a lot of skepticism about that buzz.

    The answer, of course, depends on what you’re microblogging and with whom. Like other social media, Socialtext is a vehicle for communication and interaction. So the question “When I microblog, am I working or not?” is a little bit like asking “When I talk on the phone, am I working or not?”. It all depends on what you’re saying, and to whom.

    I find that most of my clients get started by microblogging about, well, microblogging itself. The medium is the message. But as a user becomes more comfortable, the message becomes, well, the message. It’s not unusual to see a progression like this as a new user finds her way into microblogging:

    “Is this thing on?”
    “We’ll use microblogging to share information.”
    “Wow, I’m microblogging. Cool!”
    “There are oatmeal cookies in the 10th floor kitchen. Come and get ‘em!”
    “Does anyone have an electronic version of the slides from last week’s Sales kickoff?”

    There’s a natural progression implicit in that series of posts, from testing to socializing to getting work done. Some users complete the progression, others do not. A couple weeks after launch, it’s not uncommon to see a separation between members of an organization who lead the way, and their colleagues who form the rest of the pack. Sometimes there’s a decrease in the volume of activity, accompanied by a marked increase in quality. By quality I mean that

    • Posts are related to work; and
    • It’s clear that someone (the author and/or audience) could get value from the posts; and
    • They’re not the kind of thing that could be just as effectively communicated via email.

    Here’s a little test you can run. If you have a microblogging platform, search for the term “anyone”. You’ll find that it usually shows up in cases of exception-handling. These are cases which fall somewhere outside the organization’s standard resources and processes. Almost by definition they are relatively uncommon, but they can suck up an enormous amount of time because the organization isn’t set up to deal with them. A post with the word “Anyone” in it is usually asking for information or help, in an attempt to address one of these exceptional needs.

    Oxford University Press let us have a peek at their data, and here are some of the results we got when we searched on “anyone” (reprinted with OUP’s permission):

    “Does anyone speak Turkish and would be willing to review a translation for us?”
    “Has anyone here in the UK got a copy of last Saturday’s Telegraph magazine?”
    “Does anyone know when (Publication) official launch date is?
    “Does anyone here work on (Journal Title). Stock has mysteriously arrived in the journals distribution centre”
    “It’s time to learn more about web usability. Can anyone recommend any training courses, books, or websites/blogs?”

    That certainly looks like work to me.

    In Challenging Media Landscape, Meredith Publishing Stays Ahead with Enterprise Microblogging

    As the media industry reinvents its business model to contend with the disruptive effects of the Web, I wanted to highlight a Socialtext customer, Meredith Publishing, that’s continuing to thrive by making sure its employees seize on new opportunities and react to change faster than competitors. One tool that aides Meredith employees in that effort is Socialtext Signals, our enterprise microblogging tool, which allows them to share information openly.

    Today’s Harvard Business Review article highlights how Meredith employees use microblogging to track competition and move faster on ongoing projects.

    At Meredith Corporation, the publisher of Ladies Home Journal and Better Homes & Gardens, microblogging tool Socialtext Signals is the platform of choice. Using Signals, the marketing function can post alerts to employees and partners on a wide range of marketing issues, such as researching competitors, brainstorming new ideas for a direct marketing campaign, or analyzing the outcomes of current campaigns.

    Says Dave Ball, Vice President of Consumer Marketing for Meredith, “Signals allows us to break down the silos and easily share information with each other internally. We also use Signals to communicate with groups of external vendors, so we can brainstorm current campaigns with them, propose new ideas and share best practices. It is amazing how much we have cut down on email traffic while increasing our productivity.”

    While the companies that benefit from Socialtext hail from a variety of industries, media companies have embraced enterprise social software more urgently than their counterparts in some other verticals. At the Web 2.0 Expo in New York, our co-founder and president Ross Mayfield held a panel with two clients, McGraw-Hill and The Washington Post, to highlight their use of enterprise social software to drive business value inside their companies. We also wrote a case study to highlight how St. Louis Public Radio utilizes Signals to improve collaboration across departments.

    Meredith’s use of microblogging also highlights the strength of our Signals product in comparison to our competitors: It’s integrated with other critical tools employees use to get their work done. For example, Meredith also uses SocialCalc, our social spreadsheet, to track the progress of their direct mail and subscriber campaigns. With Signals, employees can Signal links to each other, which brings those numbers — and the people and context behind those numbers — into the flow of work.

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    Architecture Matters – Privacy in the Social Platform

    This week I had an engaging conversation with Mike Gotta of Burton Group, whose enterprise and architecture chops are as strong as anyone I know. Concerning enterprise social software, Mike says he’s seeing an increase in the breadth and depth of questions from his clients about security, privacy, control, and regulatory compliance. As I talked about Socialtext at a platform and architectural level, he encouraged me to talk about it more openly, so here goes.

    Enterprise 2.0 requires much deeper thinking than merely copying Web 2.0 patterns, throwing in a little SSL and email integration, and charging money for it. In order for enterprise social software to enjoy long term success, vendors must recognize the importance of security, privacy, identity, IT policies and procedures, and architectural fit, etc. The entire team at Socialtext has deep enterprise pedigrees, and that experience has been key to the robust architectural and design choices we’ve made over the years.

    In our early days, we learned a great deal about the dynamic tension between privacy and collaboration from pioneering the use of wikis in the enterprise. On one hand, we learned that too much privacy is an anti-pattern for collaboration and social software adoption. For example, if different pages in the same workspace have different privacy settings, people can get very confused about who can see or edit which content. On the other hand, we also learned that granular privacy can dramatically encourage collaboration because it helps people feel comfortable about the context of the group and the people with whom they are sharing. People naturally understand what’s appropriate to be shared in the “virtual watercooler” or “social intranet,” while the “Leadership Huddle Workspace” gives executives the confidence to discuss confidential or sensitive topics without worrying about leaks.

    As we embarked on building out our complete Enterprise social software suite, we wanted to build a sophisticated privacy model into the architecture. It’s important for privacy rules and patterns of user experience to be as consistent as possible. This is key not only for enforcement, but also for adoption. I’m pretty proud of how well this has held up since we introduced Socialtext 3.0 back in September 2008, and especially since we rolled out our enterprise microblogging capability, Socialtext Signals.

    To illustrate our privacy strength, take a look at how we implemented “Edit Summary,” which lets you summarize your edits to a wiki page. Some examples of edit summaries you might write: “Added links to Mike Gotta’s blog post” or “reorganized the lead paragraph.” Alongside edit summaries, we added a nice little feature called “Signal this edit”. If you choose to “signal this edit,” Socialtext sends the text of your edit summary out as a Signal (a short microblogging message) to your colleagues.– That signal will also contain a link back to the page you just edited. And it’s here where privacy safeguards are so important. What if the page you were editing was in a confidential workspace called “Acquisition Planning,” and the page was titled “Functions to be combined and reduced”? Could someone accidentally Signal this edit to the whole company?

    The answer is no, and that’s because of the Socialtext platform’s underlying privacy architecture. The Signal you send, regardless of how broadly you send it (accidentally even), will only be visible to those people who have view privileges to that confidential workspace. From a technical perspective, this privacy is enforced on the server side. It is not an exercise left to the developer writing client-side code, a key to enforcing privacy rules in a consistent manner.

    Privacy is a design pattern in the Socialtext platform. It applies to visibility (who can see a Signal, a group, a page) and participation (public vs. private vs. semi-private groups). This is on top of the fact that security is a core capability of our platform – whether it’s our shared hosted service, or our SaaS appliance that customers install inside their own firewalls. We’ve been thinking about and working on this for a long time – Adina Levin has written a few blog posts on the importance of privacy in enterprise social software, which I encourage you to read: Data Sharing, Context, and Privacy, What’s Different about Enterprise Twitter?, and Enterprise OpenSocial – A Year of Progress

    But we never waver in our attention to these issues. We’re constantly listening to our customers and industry experts to see how we can make it better. It excites us that our customers do mission critical work inside our product, and our team constantly makes improvements in our agile development cycle to keep up with their complex privacy and security requirements.

    Enterprise Microblogging Enables Everyone To Participate

    Conversations via email and instant messaging only reach a limited audience. Often those conversations would benefit from allowing more people to participate. This is where enterprise microblogging comes in.

    Three of the most beneficial uses of enterprise microblogging are: (click each for more details)

    1. Status Updates
    2. Questions and Answers
    3. Sharing Links

    There are many other uses in addition to these three, what are your favourites?

    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.

    Using Enterprise Microblogging for Sharing Links

    As children, our parents teach us to be kind and share with others. “Share your toys. Share your snacks. Share your games.” So shouldn’t we be expected to behave the same way when we grow up and join the business world?

    Unfortunately in competitive corporate environments, people sometimes horde information to try and gain any advantage they can over their colleagues. Thankfully, a cultural shift is occurring, where people understand that sharing and openness are vital to company-wide success, and that helping others is actually one of the key ways to getting ahead.

    This is the third part of a series explaining the benefits of microblogging in the enterprise. In part one, we took a look at how sharing status updates can lead to tighter knit teams and reduce duplication of work. In part two, we examined how affective microblogging can be for questions and answers, enabling everyone to benefit and contribute to knowledge sharing. Today, I’d like to highlight how enterprise microblogging can be used effectively to share links to information, from public websites as well as internal resources.

    When you read a blog post or news item online that you find informative, do you share it with others?? If so, how and with whom? If the only corporate tool at your disposal for sharing is email, do you really want to bother your colleagues by putting yet another message in their inbox? Will they even read it? What if there are other people that should know about the information? That’s where enterprise microblogging solutions, such as Socialtext Signals, come in, providing a better way to share information.

    Sharing links via microblogging, instead of e-mail, has several benefits

    1. Audience – Everyone in the company benefits from the information, not just a few people on an email recipient list. For example, you may think that article about a competitor will be interesting to the Marketing team, but the Engineering team could benefit from reading it as well.
    2. Discoverable – Via search, everyone can find links that have been shared, since they are not locked away inside someone’s mail file.
    3. Conversations – Often, when a link is shared, it sparks a discussion, leading to thoughts and ideas that let you improve products and services, or better satisfy customers.

    Each of these characteristics have lead to link sharing becoming one of the most popular uses of Twitter. According to a recent New York Times article, “(on Twitter) One-fifth of posts and 57 percent of repeat messages contain a link, proving that this is an increasingly popular way to spread news” – Dan Zarrella, Social Media Scientist.

    So what advantages does sharing links via internal microblogging provide versus using Twitter?

    1. 1) Privacy – Employees want to share information with each other easily, but not disclose it publicly. For example, if employees research a company for a possible acquisition and want to share lots of links about it, that must be kept confidential. The same goes for sharing information about your competitors. Also, people share intranet links with sensitive information and descriptions which must be kept internal, such as “Everyone please take a look at this list of questions from the Acme account.”
    2. 2) Expertise – Sharing links is not just about the content, it’s also about the people. Enterprise microblogging integrates with the corporate profiles of the authors, providing a great way to discover which people have expertise and interests in certain areas.
    3. 3) Integration – Rather than using multiple tools, content creation, link sharing, search, and profiles (mentioned above) should be integrated. Socialtext Signals features the unique ability to post a microblogging message automatically when a workspace page is updated. The resulting Signal (microblogging message) provides a link back to the page, and shows who made the update. Click on the person’s name or photo to see their profile. Go to the search bar in Socialtext, and find pages, people, and signals all from the same location.

    But what about social bookmarking?

    Sharing links is not a completely new idea. “Social bookmarking” sites, such as Digg and Delicious, have been around for a while. Some enterprise software vendors even offer dedicated internal social bookmarking tools. However, sharing bookmarks in their own unique location results in employees having to look in more places to find information. Instead, by sharing links via microblogging, employees now have a single experience for creating and discovering status updates, questions and answers, and shared links.

    So the next time you’re reading something that you think could benefit others, signal a link, and let everyone know.

    Here is a video of sharing links via Socialtext Signals.

    Using Enterprise Microblogging for Q&A

    In Star Trek, the crew of the Enterprise could get an answer to almost any question instantly, simply by asking the Computer out loud. While we’re not quite there yet, with countless websites, search engines, and social networks providing access to almost unlimited data, we’re pretty damn close.

    The problem is that while automated search results are helpful, they often provide more information that you can (or want to) process. So how do we filter through all the results to get the best answers? The solution often involves turning to people. We ask our friends and colleagues for their insight and opinions. For example, on Twitter and Facebook, many people ask questions to the network they’ve built, rather than “Googling” for the answer. If you need to know who sings a certain song, or where you can get a replacement battery for your Macbook, odds are someone in your community will quickly provide a response. The power of querying your friends led both Google and Microsoft to pay Twitter millions to add public tweets in the results of their massive search engines.

    As the use of question-and-answers over social technologies increases, businesses are looking at how they can provide similar services internally. That’s where a secure enterprise microblogging solution, such as Socialtext Signals, comes in handy. Signals allows colleagues to conduct Twitter-like Q&A, but do so internally, eliminating any concerns that company confidential information might be discussed in public.

    With Signals, you can ask questions openly to your colleagues in a private setting, and get informed answers quickly. This represents a huge departure from past technologies. In the past, if you had an HR-related question, you most likely would have sent an email to someone in the HR department, and that’s if you even knew the proper person to contact. Depending on the size of your company, you might spend 20 minutes first, just trying to identify who to reach out to. Microblogging works much differently. If you ask the same question openly via Signals, anyone in HR has the opportunity to respond, or you might even get an answer back from someone in Engineering or Sales, who recently had the same question and now knows the answer. Additionally, that conversation is now discoverable by everyone, rather than locked away in just your individual inbox.

    Similar to how social networks provide advantages over Googling, Q&A via Signals also has advantages versus standard intranet searches:

    • Search indexes don’t (yet!) contain the information inside our heads. I can’t search the company intranet for “Does anyone have connections with a graphic artist that could help us with our new website?” Being able to access the wealth of tactic knowledge from across the entire organization is incredibly valuable.
    • Search results don’t factor in the human traits like opinion and experience which your colleagues can provide. While automated results are quick and plentiful, they may not always provide the most useful information.
    • Search is only good when you know what you’re looking for. If I want to find “Who is the Sales Exec for the Acme account”, an intranet search will probably find that from a page or profile. But an intranet search won’t help much with “Does anyone remember the name of the company that launched last week saying their engine is 10% faster than ours?”

    As you can see, enterprise microblogging can empower your entire organization to help one another. Questions get answered faster, enabling people to spend more time on business tasks, rather than searching for information.

    Using Enterprise Microblogging for Status Updates

    Sharing Status Updates Reduces Duplication Of Work

    Last week I wrote Using Social Software To Accelerate Business Performance, as the introductory post to a new series where I’m going to discuss how “Enterprise 2.0″ tools provide benefits in the business world. I’m going to begin the series today by discussing the internal use of microblogging, which enables people to openly share short messages with their coworkers.

    For those of you unfamiliar with microblogging, the most widely known example is Twitter, where you enter “140-character or less” messages, press update, and essentially anyone in the world can read what you have to say. Notice that microblogging differs greatly from email and instant messaging, where the audience is limited, since you specifically choose who the recipients of an email or chat message are. With microblogging, the information is shared openly, enabling more people to read, and thus benefit from what is being shared.

    Internal microblogging provides companies similar benefits to services like Twitter, but adds a layer of privacy, by sharing the information only within your company. This enables you to provide status updates internally, which you would not share with the public. For example, you can mention customers, codenames, future projects, and other “internal-only” things.

    Socialtext provides internal microblogging via Socialtext Signals. With Signals, when someone posts a message, all their colleagues can read what is being shared. (In a future blog post I’ll explain how you can send signals to a subset of people using Groups) It important to point out that the content shared via Signals is searchable, so the information can be discovered by everyone at any time. Compare that to email, where a great deal of valuable knowledge is locked away in individual in-boxes, available only to the people that were listed on the To: and cc: lists.

    So let’s look at a specific example. This morning I signaled a status update “Generating a list of 2000 fake name, titles, phone numbers, and office locations for our new demo sandboxes.” I did not think much of it at the time. I was simply practicing what I preach, and openly sharing with my coworkers what I was doing. Much to my delight, an hour or so later (as seen below) one of my colleagues Graham, read what I wrote and replied with “Once you’ve got that list, could you send me a copy?”

    signals.png

    Now Graham does not work with me in Marketing. He’s one of our developers who happens to work on things like directories and LDAP. The 10 seconds it took me to share what I was doing, has now saved Graham hours of time duplicating the work. Multiply the time saving benefits of this one occurrence by the dozens of similar times that this happens each day, and then ask yourself “How can we afford to not be using microblogging inside our company?”

    Want more proof, take a moment and read about how St. Louis Public Radio is using Signals to openly share information. As station manager Tim Eby says: “People understand each other more, and they know what others are doing. This lets us respond more quickly to new opportunities.”

    Next up, I’m going to write about how you can use internal microblogging for questions and answers.

    Why Enterprise Microblogging Must Be Integrated with Other Social Apps

    Although enterprise microblogging has emerged as a key technology to enable better collaboration between employees, it holds the greatest business value when it’s integrated with other bits of social and enterprise software. That’s the overall theme in an article today by Clint Boulton of eWeek. Detailing a recent Gartner report, Boulton writes that “while more than 50 percent of enterprises will use activity streams that include microblogging by 2012, stand-alone enterprise microblogging will have less than 5 percent penetration.”

    The predictions reflect what we’ve experienced in the market with customers. One of the reasons our customers have derived business value from Socialtext Signals (our microblogging tool) rests in the fact that it integrates well with social tools in our platform. For example, when saving a workspace page, Socialtext can automatically post a link to the page in Signals, making it simple for your colleagues to discover and access the updated content.

    In the article, Garner also predicts that “70 percent of IT-led social projects will fail.” This bolsters our contention that line of business (LOB) people make the best champions for social software because they feel the pain points in their daily processes very tangibly. This is not to say IT won’t play an important role. In allowing enterprise social software to integrate with other enterprise systems in a secure environment, IT is a critical player and needs to work closely with LOB champions and vendors to provide this integrated experience.

    A significant downside to standalone enterprise microblogging tools, which isn’t cited in the article, concerns security and control. As some of these free, niche tools crop up organically within companies — and employees begin to share private, proprietary information over them — an IT administrator must pay the vendor providing the service just to get control of logins, passwords and the domain the employees set up to host the information. This isn’t a true freemium model; it’s an extortionist sales model.

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    Industrial Mold Uses Enterprise Microblogging and Social Software To Serve Customers Faster

    One of the coolest parts about working at Socialtext is to see the diversity of our clients and the types of businesses they run. Today, I’m happy to announce one of our newest customers, Industrial Mold & Machine. Industrial Mold is one of those companies that works quietly in the background of American business, yet whose work touches the lives of millions of consumers each day. As the name might suggest, the company makes metal moldings for a variety of manufactured products, helping shape things like plastic cups, playhouses, sleds, milk jugs or kitchen utensils (to name just a few).

    According to Larry Housel, Knowledge and Information Manager of the Twinsburg, Ohio-based company, Industrial Mold needed enterprise social software to serve its customers faster and better. With employees residing both in the offices and the shop floor, Larry and his team wanted a central, searchable place to store meeting notes and customer information. He also wanted to improve internal processes and workflow by providing tools that enable the company’s employees to share information with each other openly. So Industrial Mold turned to our enterprise social software platform, and is now using secure enterprise microblogging (Socialtext Signals) and wiki workspaces.

    Because Socialtext is as software as a service (SaaS) product, it’s easy for people on the shop floor to access our applications via a web browser. In addition, Larry installed Socialtext Desktop, our Adobe AIR client that runs locally on people’s machines and provides an elegant and fast way to consume Signals, Activity Streams and other areas of our platform.

    industrialmold.jpg

    “We want to appear as one unit in everything we do,” Larry told me this week. “To do that, we want process improvement. We have a lot of people thinking about how we can improve our daily workflow and serve customers better, and I want to capture that information. For instance, how do we accept a piece of material? Who needs to be notified? Who needs to be here for things coming in? These ideas will now go into a Socialtext for us to figure out, discuss, and act on.”

    For the back and forth conversations that occur between employees during the day, Larry says Industrial Mold employees will update their colleagues using Socialtext Signals, our private, Twitter-like tool that enables people to share short messages with each other in real time. Industrial Mold wants more of its communication to happen openly, opposed to being locked away in e-mail boxes or people’s brains. “Signals allows all that communication to be searchable and discoverable later,” Larry says. “The more stuff we’ve normally done in e-mail that we can pull into a Signals is a victory as far I’m concerned.”

    So why did Larry and Industrial Mold choose us? He told me he likes the fact that the social features in our product mirror those that employees use at home, such as Facebook and Twitter. In addition, he appreciates how each social feature ties in nicely with another. For example, when you edit a wiki page in our platform, you can choose to Signal that action to your colleagues so it appears in their microblogging stream, where they can click on the link to view the changes made to the page.

    We’ll be tracking Larry and Industrial Mold’s progress, and we’re happy to welcome them to the Socialtext family.

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    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.

    Search

    Find us on Facebook

    Read blogs from our team members:

    Archives

    Recent Posts

    Recent Tweets


    Socializing Customer Support to Drive Business Value

    Free Recorded Webinar

    Learn how McKesson and Ogilvy dramaticaly reduced resolution time and increased alignment with sales initiatives.

    5 Biggest Blunders to Avoid with Enterprise Social Software

    Free Whitepaper

    This paper is designed to help you focus on the areas that are most critical to success with social software, and to avoid the five biggest and most common blunders others have made when implementing social software for their organizations.