IT chiefs should use the technologies and guiding principles of enterprise
2.0 to boost productivity and knowledge sharing within their organisation and
improve customer engagement outside, according to experts at Gartner's
Portals, Content and
Collaboration Summit in London.
Gartner analyst Tom Austin argued that widescale enterprise 2.0 - the use of
Web 2.0 concepts, especially social software, in the enterprise - is inevitable
given the trend towards consumerisation of IT.
But he encouraged technology leaders to move away from constructing rigid
pre-ordained systems and instead try to put more responsibility for the running
of social software projects into the hands of end users, for example by
replacing an intranet with a wiki-style system.
"Enterprise 2.0 depends on freeform environments rather than forcing
everything to be pre-ordered. It leverages how people work by mirroring freeform
simplicity," he said.
"It is informal, socially-enabled and participative. People are social,
informal, messy and intuitive, so you can't engineer what they do."
Austin acknowledged that there must still be guidelines covering what people
can and cannot do, but said that to get the most from people they will need to
be given flexibility and freedom.
"Pick a few areas to allow patterns to evolve, like folksonomies and wikis,"
he said. "It is not IT giving up responsibility but pushing some onto the end
users, because if you do this they will discover things they never could have
otherwise."
Such an approach could not only benefit the organisation from an internal
perspective, but could improve customer loyalty and drive sales and marketing
initiatives by locating and engaging existing communities externally, Austin
explained.
Ian Black, global operations manager at enterprise search firm Autonomy, said
that there needs to be a balance between control and freedom if organisations
are to benefit from enterprise 2.0 initiatives.
"It is interesting that we are constantly having conversations about how it
must be one or the other, but from experience I have seen a mix," he said. "The
reality is that we are in chaos and technology should deal with that."
Gartner analyst Carol Rozwell argued that social software can also be used to
improve the success of technology implementations by discerning the
interrelationships between colleagues, and identifying the key members of an
organisation.
"By decomposing the organisational hierarchy you often find that the best
connected staff are not the bosses. They are often quite peripheral," she said.
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