Analysts have warned that social software techniques and technologies are
becoming crucial in supporting and strengthening collaboration and non-routine
work in businesses.
As many organisations struggle to justify investments in social software,
Gartner
advised enterprises not to dismiss the phenomenon as a fad or a threat to
productivity.
The analyst said that businesses often struggle to identify where to start or
what business areas to address with social software, and has identified five
major challenges when pursuing social software applications.
"Some enterprises have achieved substantial results with social software, and
many enterprises are now experimenting with the technology," said Anthony
Bradley, research director at Gartner.
"The demand from workers is escalating and they are turning to the consumer
internet if their corporate technology provider is not offering a solution.
"Organisations need to exploit this growing consumer literacy for business
purposes and prepare a social software strategy with a realistic understanding
of the associated challenges, risks and benefits."
Gartner maintained that all organisations should at least be at the stage
where they are investigating social software, even if the explorations are
likely to result in a "wait and see" strategy.
The analyst warned that almost every organisation will face some cultural
obstacles to the use of social software, including the difficulty of motivating
a large enough portion of the community to progress beyond observers to active
contributors.
Gartner advised enterprises to invest the time and resources to understand,
design, grow and nurture social software implementations, rather than simply
installing a tool and expecting a community to automatically assemble and
flourish.
However, data security breaches and the privacy problems of
Facebook,
MySpace
and
YouTube
have worried many businesses and are often stated as impediments to social
software initiatives.
But Gartner said that these social applications are advertising driven and
intended to be open to the general public.
Most enterprise applications of social software, on the other hand, should
address more constrained social circles with defined privacy measures which are
easy to implement.
Social applications, as with all social structures, will contain bad
behaviour which needs to be anticipated and addressed in application design and
social mediation.
Good governance of social sites hinges on good policies and enforcement by
the participants rather than elaborate rules automation implementation.
Gartner advised organisations to balance the benefits of mass collaboration
with the risks of bad behaviour, including security breaches.
Finally, Gartner said that many organisations are not yet equipped for a
virtual workplace and virtual workday scenarios, and are concerned with managing
productivity in this more loosely structured work environment.
Organisations will need constantly to challenge the way they evaluate
employee productivity, and promote the work/life balance as social software
becomes more pervasive in the business environment.
"The severity of these five challenges will vary significantly from one
organisation to the next, as will their impact on decisions concerning whether,
when and how to proceed with social software," said Bradley.
"There are no absolutes. For each potential social application organisations
must balance the business benefits over the risks of overcoming these
challenges."
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