Wikipatterns session at enterprise2open

Here are my slides for my wikipatterns session, it’s been a good discussion too – people are eager to discuss implementation approaches, they are sensing that established ways have limitations and are looking into more customized paths and insights. Good news for specialized (wiki) implementation consultants …

wikipatterns _ enterprise2open

Euan Semple @ E20Summit

Now Euan Semple on the “Quiet Revolution” at the BBC and what they did at the BBC about 6yrs back. BBC’s cool, check out Backstage for a start of what they’re doing, see also Ian Forrester.

He starts off with the cluetrain, the power of relationships that’s underlying.

Tells us how troubleshooting and “helpdesk stuff” was handled in the BBC then, it was clear that they needed a way for users to find the needed information by themselves … when sharing knowledge via Email is cumbersome, distributed replies etc. make it difficult to compile and refactor “answers”

– the collective space (“Connect”) that they devised was a lightweight and very usable platform
– fostering communities leveraged existing informal communities, users were allowed to introduce their own spaces

Euan likes the term “interest group” more – as opposed to community – I can understand this, communities can’t be engineered and “ordered for”, yet they emerge around common interests and tasks.

– they added blogs to the mix, Euan shortly points out the often overlooked little things (permalinks for a start)
– wikis too, example BBC blogging guidelines, done with a Confluence wiki.

Then he diggs into some Web 2.0 tools that are in the mix too, like
– RSS readers
– tagging too, explains the rationale behind tag clouds (“a more organic way of navigation information”), mentions Thomas Vanderwal too …
– social networks as “information mediaries”, showing his Last.fm page and stream of played music, then Plazes too.

With the closing slides he’s putting on speed again, showing Innocentive open innovation network and Zopa p2p lending before leaving the stage to Jeff Schick of IBM.

Web 2.0 im Unternehmenseinsatz

Pünktlich zu CeBIT und Enterprise 2.0 SUMMIT erscheint auch im Handelsblatt ein kleiner Artikel zum Thema “Enterprise 2.0”.

Recht kurz geraten, aber mit einigen interessanten Zitaten und wie ich finde einer realitätsnahen Einschätzung, sowohl der Marktsituation in Deutschland als auch von den Aufgaben, die im Kern anstehen:

[…] „Der überwiegende Teil der Interessenten kommt aus dem europäischen Ausland, das Thema ist bei den deutschen CEOs einfach noch nicht virulent“ […] Insbesondere kleinere und mittlere Unternehmen interessierere das Thema bisher so gut wie gar nicht.

und

[…] Letztlich gehe es beim Thema Enterprise 2.0 also weniger um die eingesetzte Technik, als vielmehr um eine Veränderung der Unternehmenskultur: „Das Thema Wissensmanagement, Wiki etc. ist keines der Technik

Erfolgsfaktoren der Wiki-Einführung (in KMUs) …

… das ist der Titel des Kurzvortrags, den ich zusammen mit einem Kunden am CeBIT-Samstag im Rahmen der Content Management Arena halten werde. Zusammen werden wir einige Eindrücke aus einem akuell laufenden Pilotprojekt geben, im Mittelpunkt steht die Implementierung eines Wikis als Intranet eines weltweit verteilt arbeitenden Mittelständlers.

Daneben werde ich versuchen einige der Vorträge rund um innovative Intranet- und Collaboration-Lösungen zu besuchen, wobei mir der Schwerpunkt auf Wissens- und Innovationsmanagement sehr zusagt. Hier freue ich mich besonders auf ein Treffen mit Beraterkollegen wie Stephan oder Tim …

In meinen CeBIT-Mix kommen dann noch einige Termine mit interessanten Lösungsanbietern, groß und klein. Wir sehen uns!

21 days on wiki adoption cont.

I am at the BarCamp Jena/Mitteldeutschland and spent the whole day in sessions and mingling with the crowd. As the WiFi has been shaky I didn’t blog that much. But now as I am sitting in a cozy bistro with working Wifi and have some time on my hands I can post the next couple of Stewarts video series on wiki adoption:

Day 2: Wiki vs. Email:

The primary difference between a wiki and email for collaboration is in the mechanics of each. If you and I were using email and an attached text document to collaborate, a lot has to happen between when I edit the document and when you can. Not so with a wiki:

Day 3: Your Wiki Isn’t Necessarily Wikipedia

Wikipedia is different from organizational wiki sites both because of its primary use – encyclopedia – and the way its community is structured. These characteristics have made Wikipedia successful, but they aren’t necessarily the conditions for success for every wiki.

Day 4: Run a Pilot

The first major step in growing wiki use in your organization is to run a pilot. It lets you get wiki use started in a controlled environment, build use examples that are relevant to your organization, and develop a support structure to help keep things running smoothly.

Stewart Mader video series on wiki adoption

Whoa, fresh content for this blog is secured for the next 20 days, as Stewart Mader (whose book I’ve just reviewed very favorably here) will post a short video episode each day. I’ll try to not only post his content but to add some thoughts and observations of mine as time permits. For now let’s start with the first two episodes, number one is the introductory episode, number two is the first episode dealing with the details (Day 1 “Grassroots is best”)