IT executives eager to exploit Web 2.0 wave
What good is a blog if no one reads it? IT managers find out and begin to make blogging and other Web 2.0 tools a more strategic part of their business.
While few of them expect this kind of success with social collaboration tools, many are launching blogs and wikis as part of their company Web sites. Many program Ajax into their sites to make them more interactive and navigable or try to get their brands mentioned on Web 2.0 hot spots like Digg and del.icio.us.
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"Blogging seems to be the low-hanging fruit for them," Hopper said. "It seems to be the starting point. So far they're struggling with the Web 2.0 strategy, but blogs have the most history and seem the easiest concept to get around."
While the social aspect of Web 2.0 is a good opportunity for companies to build up their brands online, many experts are excited about what is happening inside companies. They say this is where a real Web 2.0 strategy starts.
In February 2005, Janet Maurice, webmaster for Cannondale Bicycle Corp., introduced a blogging platform to her company's Web site. The Bethel, Conn.-based bicycle manufacturer has seen a resurgence in its brand ever since.
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Cannondale's employees blog on the company's Web site, too, and talk up new products, bicycle events, the latest technology in the industry and news about professional bicyclists. Customers can subscribe to the information they want to receive through Real Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds.
"I think most companies right now are taking a tactical approach rather than a strategic approach to Web 2.0," said Dion Hinchcliffe, founder and CTO of Hinchcliffe & Co., a Web 2.0 consultancy in Alexandria, Va. "I hear companies say, 'We created a blog. We're doing Web 2.0.' Well, no one is reading it. They are being really timid and really tactical."
A Web 2.0 strategy should look like "inverted" business process re-engineering.
"Don't think about and create this big, top-heavy business process management initiative," Hinchcliffe said. "Invert it. Give the tools to your people, and they can automate and reinvent their processes. Let employees and customers and business partners generate a lot of ideas for the business. Let them re-engineer your business process in a controlled way."
Web 2.0 behind the firewall
With blogging clearly boosting her company's profile in the market, Maurice said her company is exploring the use of Web 2.0 technology behind the firewall -- meaning using collaboration tools within the company's intranet for use by employees only.
"When we talk about different technologies and where they may fit within our suite of solutions, wikis often come up," Maurice said. "Our engineers … are also considering using wikis to help them share ideas and concepts, but there are concerns that need to be addressed. Marketing will also be looking at using wikis for internal use worldwide."
@28081 Hinchcliffe said businesses can get into the process rather quickly by allowing blogs and wikis on their intranets. Access to these tools inside the intranet can create an "ecosystem for feedback," he added.
Kirk Kness, vice president of strategy and architecture at Baltimore-based financial services company T. Rowe Price Group Inc., spends a lot of time thinking about how his company can use a Web 2.0 technology within the business. Kness said his company is formulating a strategy with an eye toward rolling something out next year.
"In our industry we're pretty regulated and pretty conservative," Kness said. "But we believe there's something there. Most people who get hired into our call centers, they're used to this technology."
One of the first Web 2.0 technologies to make its way into Kness' company was Ajax, the programming method that allows Web sites and Web applications to update information without reloading a page. An Ajax-powered application inside a company like T. Rowe Price can save valuable time that employees might otherwise spend watching Web-based applications reload.
"We have a production system call center application, an IBM portal-based call center application using Ajax," Kness said. 'We're using it to get all kinds of real-time information. To get prices, related customers, lots of information in related portlets. When you call me, and I'm a representative, I want to look at your account details. Ajax goes out and gets the information without waiting for the screen refreshing. It's definitely solved problems associated with browsers-based, portal-based applications. You need the speed."
Kness said his goal is use Web 2.0 technology to make knowledge and expertise among his employees more "discoverable" by the entire business.
"I've got 30 different yellow sticky notes around my desk," Kness said. "That's not discoverable. What if I was doing all that online. What if that became discoverable?"
Innovative employees often figure out how to handle exceptions and new scenarios that aren't covered by standard processes. However, these employees often don't have the time or the means to communicate their innovated solutions to colleagues.
Kness said CIOs and architects who are planning to launch a Web 2.0 strategy should find the "knowledge activist" in their companies. Knowledge activists are the people who are enthusiastic about understanding how processes in the business work. They are the people who are constantly looking to innovate the way they do things. By putting tools like blogs and wikis in the hands of these people, business leaders will get their collaboration initiatives off to a fast start.
"I'm a big believer in scenario-driven architecture," Kness said. "For instance, when Katrina hit last year, there was all kind of new implications on our business, such as where do you keep your mail, etc. What do you do if someone who was affected by Katrina calls in? What if I could blog that. Blog it, and it's published in real time and it's out there. And what if someone had this great search engine with social bookmarking. Then it's out there and I can find it. "
Kness said Web 2.0 does present cultural challenges to a company, especially for senior management. Managers and executives will want to impose some sort of governance over all of this democratically generated content.
"There's going to be governances, but a different kind of governance," Kness said. "You can't lock it down, but you do have to make sure it goes in the right direction. It's very difficult to do. There's a reason why management is afraid to let go of control. We're highly regulated. There's a legitimacy to that [need for governance]. You have to pay attention to it. Mother it. That is the most difficult thing, but it doesn't stop me from thinking we should do this."
Let us know what you think about the story; email: Shamus McGillicuddy, News Writer