| 17422 - An Adoption Strategy for Social Software in the Enterprise. Many-to-Many: | 22/03/2006 - 22:11:40 |
March 06, 2006An Adoption Strategy for Social Software in the Enterprise Perhaps the greatest competency Socialtext has gained over the past three years is fostering adoption of social software. Adoption matters most for IT to have value. It should be obvious that if only a third of a company uses a portal, then the value proposition of that portal is two thirds less than it’s potential. But for social software, value is almost wholy generated by the contributions of the group and imposed adoption is marked for failure. Suw Charman has been working with Socialtext on site at Dresdner Klienwort Wasserstein and has spearheaded the creation of the following practice documentation. I believe this will be a critical contribution for enterprise practices, so do read on… An Adoption Strategy for Social Software in the Enterprise Experience has shown that simply installing a wiki or blog (referred to collectively as ‘social software’) and making it available to users is not enough to encourage widespread adoption. Instead, active steps need to be taken to both foster use amongst key members of the community and to provide easily accessible support. There are two ways to go about encouraging adoption of social software: fostering grassroots behaviours which develop organically from the bottom-up; or via top-down instruction. In general, the former is more desirable, as it will become self-sustaining over time - people become convinced of the tools’ usefulness, demonstrate that to colleagues, and help develop usage in an ad hoc, social way in line with their actual needs. Top-down instruction may seem more appropriate in some environments, but may not be effective in the long-term as if the team leader stops actively making subordinates use the software, they may naturally give up if they have not become convinced of its usefulness. Bottom-up adoption taps into social incentives for contribution and fosters a culture of working openly that has greater strategic benefits. Inevitably in a successful deployment, top-down and bottom-up align themselves in what Ross Mayfield calls ‘middlespace’. Fostering grassroots adoption
Users who are potential evangelists should be identified at every level of management, not just amongst the higher echelons, or amongst the workforce. 1. Identify key user groups
2. Identify and understand key users
Ideally, key users will be ‘supernodes’ - highly connected, in contact with a lot of people on a daily basis, and heavily involved with the function of their department and the transfer of information within the group and between groups. This may not be the group executive, but could well be his PA or a direct report. Frequently, people’s supernode status is not reflected by official hierarchy. 3. Convert key users into evangelists More important is that the information gathered in steps 1 and 2 are communicated to key users. They need to understand:
This requires face-to-face, personalised sessions which can’t happen unless steps 1 and 2 are successfully completed. The aim is to convert key users into evangelists who can then help spread usage through their own team, encouraging the people they work with to take the training and use the tool themselves. 4. Turn evangelists into trainers These evangelists should be trained further and given the support and materials they need to become trainers themselves. The advantages of having evangelist-trainers are immense:
5. Support bottom-up adoption and emergent behaviours If people start to use social software in an unexpected, innovative, or informal manner, this should also be encouraged. If a user begins by putting their team’s coffee rota on the wiki, for example, this will help them understand how the wiki works and what benefits it brings. Management support Managers and team leaders should: 1. Lead by example In the software industry, this is known as ‘eating your own dogfood’, and it is essential in order to build trust, interest and understanding. 2. Lead by mandate Key to leading by mandate, however, is that the manager must also lead by example. If one of his team puts a document on the wiki, but the manager comments on it by email, that gives conflicting signals to the team. Managers must be clear about which tool they expect people to use, and must use that tool themselves. 3. Lead by reminding 4. Ensure there is adequate support 5. Ensure personal and business benefits reflect each other Understanding time-scales The cultural aspect of implementing social software in enterprise cannot be underestimated, and it is the hardest aspect to overcome. It requires time, patience and understanding, but given those three, it too is a temporary obstacle. Remember what your goals really are Wikis are a very powerful tool within enterprise, but like any other IT project, it takes thought and planning to ensure successful adoption. * Screencast: Digital recording of a computer screen output, often with audio instruction.Original Location: http://many.corante.com/archives/2006/03/06/an_adoption_strategy_for_social_software_in_the_enterprise.php#more |
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| 10696 | CommunityWiki: OrganizedCulture | commons community cooperation design glocalization guilds lenses paradigms socialnetwork socialnetworks socialscience socialsoftware technologiesofcooperation telecommunities unemploymenteconomy | 20/12/2005 - 17:23:45 |
| 8948 | i d e a n t: A del.icio.us study | AI blog blogging blogs business collaboration community cooperation cool delicious design education folksonomy information internet knowledge tagging studies software sociology socialsoftware socialscience rss knowledgemanagement networks psychology | 07/11/2005 - 17:21:53 |