Does This IM Make Me Look Fat?
July 26, 2007 at 3:25 pm | In Fun, social software | No CommentsI wrote previously on how attention management can be applied to losing weight (see Attention Management for Weight Loss!). Now I’m wondering if technologies commonly associated with social software can do the same.
As I’m sure you’ve heard by now, researchers at the University of California in San Diego Harvard Medical School have found that social networking effects influence weight loss/gain. For one of a zillion articles on this story check out “Is obesity contagious?” 25 July 2007 - New Scientist. If a person’s friends are all thin or go on a diet, it encourages that person to also view thinness as achievable and desirable. The interesting part to me is that it is the bond of the social network, not merely proximity, that matters. The article states:
Fowler notes that friends living nearby seemed to exert just as much influence on a person’s weight as those living 800 kilometers (500 miles) away. To him, this suggests that the trend has more to do with a spread of social norms than behaviors. In other words, the idea of what constitutes a normal weight travels more easily across distance than do behaviors – such as exercise and eating routines.
So, does IM’ing count? How about participants in my social bookmarking? Should I only join discussion groups with exercise fanatics? Can I set up filters on my e-mail to block any sender with a body mass index over 20 (don’t need the extra pounds with that spam!)? Swarm with comments on my blog and lose weight? Nah … I’m just having fun with this of course. But it still does point out the importance of social networks over artificial networks such as who sits around you in your cubicle or who the org chart says are your immediate peers.
And I wouldn’t be surprised if every topic area in the Collaboration and Content Strategies service relates to weight loss at some point. What’s next: portals or content management …
Gender-bending Avatars Inspire Less Trust
July 6, 2007 at 9:21 am | In social software, virtual worlds | No CommentsAn article in the July 5, 2007 issue of New Scientist Tech indicates that the ability to select avatars that are vastly different in appearance than their creators can exacerbate the trust problem. The study found that androgynous avatars were perceived as less trustworthy and goofy avatars (like a ketchup bottle) rated very poorly. Trust is fundamental to business relationships and, accordingly, solutions for conveying trust will need to be established before enterprises can make full use of virtual worlds.
Trust is a currently an unresolved pain point for virtual worlds. As I posted earlier, David Weinberger at the Enterprise 2.0 conference listed the next frontiers for Enterprise 2.0 to conquer as authority, trust, and boundaries. The set of characteristics used to inspire trust in face-to-face communications is hamstrung in virtual environments. As virtual worlds slowly make their way into enterprises, how can we know who to trust when anyone can shape their appearance? What about people that have multiple avatars for different occassions? If someone today treats me rudely or cheats me, how do I know I won’t encounter them again in a new skin and with a new name tomorrow? Trust is established based on relationships or behavior, but which behaviors matter in a virtual world?
Trust in business usually involves
- Knowing that a person is who they say they are, both from an identity and role point of view
- The ability to predict a person’s behavior with a high degree of accuracy
- Viewing the motivation of a person as based on benevolence and sincerity
Shopping sites have created trust metrics such as eBay’s ratings system, but these ratings have not yet been applied to virtual worlds and may not work as well as they do with Friendster or Slashdot (karma points).
Ultimately, Captain Kirk shouldn’t have been so focused on space; “trust” is the final frontier.
The Police Reunion Tour and the Web 2.0 Generation
July 6, 2007 at 7:58 am | In Fun, Web 2.0, social software | No CommentsI’m starting out a little slow today after my first arena-scale rock concert in about 15 years - The Police. I used to go to several a year in my college days and had gotten used to the feel of them and their traditions such as lighters for the slow songs and guessing which song they left for an encore.
But I forgot we’re leaving in the Web 2.0 era, which has changed everything from politics to, apparently, rock concerts. When the opening notes of Message in a Bottle start up I look to the stage and from my vantage point I can see the screens of a sea of mobile devices glowing in front of me. Hmmm, I don’t remember that from Def Leppard ‘88.
The guy sitting in front of me is on his Blackberry about 50% of the time. Apparently the communal aspect of 45,000 fans around him isn’t sufficiently social for him, so he feels the need to constantly send emails to friends and family. Sample email (hard not to see the screen in the dark): “I’m at The Police concert with your daughter. Cool.”
As they work through the set list I am not at all surprised to hear most of the favorites off of their Greatest Hits album. And if there was any mystery left, it was eliminated by the Wikipedia entry that already exists for the concert listing the set list, encores (two), and tour dates.
When Wrapped Around your Finger started up a smattering of people held up lighters, but most of the crowd held up cell phones instead. The eerie glow of the cell phone screens was no substitute for the star-like effect of thousands of lighters.
The show went off well though. A few wrong notes, but not as bad as the show on May 31st. How do I know that? Because of Stewart Copeland’s blog entry that day of course (is this entry legit?). This is the Web 2.0 era. Cell phones instead of lighters, e-mail during the concert, recent pop events already chronicled in encyclopedia form next to World War II, and online journals from band members are now just par for the course.
Live from the Enterprise 2.0 Conference: Tuesday
June 20, 2007 at 4:34 pm | In Enterprise 2.0, Web 2.0, social software | No CommentsI’m here at the Enterprise 2.0 Conference in San Francisco. I was not here on Monday, but Tuesday’s speakers had some good food for thought.
David Weinberger
David Weinberger posed an interesting question: “If there’s too much information, why aren’t we drowning?” His answer was that we’re adapting well and the solution to information overload is metadata. I believe he’s correct that we’re adapting well and that metadata is a key to surviving, but I think much of the information out there is redundant too. Frequency is often used as a measure of importance. All one has to do to catch up on the latest travails of a wealthy young heiress is catch one of the thousands of stories floating around. By showing the phrase “Call me Ishmael” torn out of Moby Dick he made the point that deep searching (through the details of the data) is enhancing our ability to find information. That’s true, although it’s not an example of metadata. He also made a good point about the next frontiers for Enterprise 2.0 to conquer: authority, trust, and boundaries.
Andrew McAfee
Andrew McAfee was up next and assigned grades to E2.0. While he’s a highly respected Harvard professor, I suspect some grade inflation going on here:
Awareness: A. Among technology people I would agree, although awareness is often far short of understanding. Among business people though, I think it’s a C. There are a significant number of CEOs and business people that have heard of web 2.0 technologies, but nowhere near as many as know the latest business buzzword.
Technology: A-. Since he’s specifically talking enterprise, it’s hard to see how it could get an A- unless you mean “progress”. He seems happy there is so much to choose from. But that makes his point of view the technology vendors and not the implementers. Until the frontiers mentioned by David Weinberger (authority, trust, and boundaries) are conquered I can’t see giving the technology more than a “C” at best.
Communicating results: C. I’ll buy that. We seem to keep rehashing same success stories. The conference didn’t help in that regard though. I went to two sessions on case studies and half were vendors doing the case studies. The end users ones were not the best either (alerting? Nah).
Stowe Boyd
Stowe’s description of social apps sounded like self-actualization to me: “Judge the app by how it helps people discover who they are”. I don’t find that description applicable in an enterprise setting. Enhancing their ability to get their job done, visibility to management, feeling a part of a community: yes. Learning about myself: no.
Any middle level manager who believes Stowe will want to immediately ask for a demotion or make a play for CEO since he says the center of organizations will hollow out, the “edgelings will self-organize”, and management (always just a necessary evil anyways) is doomed. There’s more to say on this than I can type here at the airport this morning, but I find this view extreme and unlikely. I don’t think 10,000+ person organizations can be self-organizing and I don’t think they will increase shareholder value by breaking up into 1,000 ten-person organizations. I don’t think everyone wants to be self-directing and self-organizing. I don’t think that employees will all become essentially independent contractors who decide what they want to do, self-organize into teams, and the “company” becomes little more than which logoed shirt they decide to put on the morning. The market has generally voted its money on the idea that people organized in a hierarchy of groups (teams, divisions, conglomerates) are most likely to produce a return on investments and when that is not true (like a spinoff) they break up the units themselves. I don’t see that changing. That doesn’t mean employees will not become more empowered - just that their new networks are superimposed (not replace) the existing structure on the org chart.
Live from the Enterprise 2.0 Conference: The Conference Lifecycle
June 20, 2007 at 4:34 pm | In Analyst biz, Enterprise 2.0, Web 2.0, social software | No CommentsAs an analyst, I’ve generally been assigned to coverage areas with a full life cycle. By that, I mean they have exciting beginnings, a bump against reality, then settle down to a boring, mature, reasonable level. I’ve covered Java (Java 1.1 through J2EE), application servers (remember when you used to pay a real lot for those and they were highly differentiated?) and enterprise portals, all of which followed that curve. Sometimes I felt I really enjoyed myself more than the guys covering steady but consistent technologies like databases, but sometimes I envied them too for the consistency their posts in the technology wilderness had.
In that regard, the Enterprise 2.0 conference feels like deja vu all over again. It has that same feel I remember from technologies past. The supply side attendees at the conference (vendors, media, speakers and panelists, pundits) outnumbered the demand side (enterprise buyers). By my estimate, about 40% of the attendees are from enterprises in listen mode. My figures come from a set of unscientific badge checks and one session where enterprise attendees were asked to raise their hands. By my equally unscientific crowd counting techniques there were about 350 attendees in the audience for the Tuesday keynotes counting the main room, standees, and overflow room. During dull stretches in the presentations I found myself scanning the audience for other stats and found similar figures to other technology conferences I’ve been to (e.g., blazers: 20%, male:female ratio: 7:1, Gen Xers: 65%).
This is pretty standard for the early stages of a technology maturity curve. Over time I expect to see enterprises strongly outnumbering vendors/media. Then the technology gets boring enough and the conference gets renamed or merged with another conference and the cycle begins anew.
Life Without MySpace
May 31, 2007 at 9:42 pm | In Web 2.0, social software | No CommentsCould social networking addicts picture life without MySpace? The Onion, a satirical newspaper, doesn’t think so.
MySpace Outage Leaves Millions Friendless
However, because the sudden lack of friends has deprived MySpace users of comments, bulletin posts, and searches for elementary school crushes, it is feared that the ordeal could inflict long-term psychological damage. In Chicago alone, an estimated 50,000 people remain trapped in their apartments, with no way of contacting the outside world about new bands, Adult Swim cartoons, or the latest video games.
“I lost 6,456 of my best friends in an instant,” said Minneapolis resident Peter Steinberg, 20, who has loyally befriended as many profiles as possible over the past two years. “Nothing can describe how devastated I feel. Some of these people I’ve exchanged two, even three comments with, and I can’t tell you how many ROTFLMAOs we’ve shared, too.”
McKinsey Quarterly: How Businesses Are Using Web 2.0
May 9, 2007 at 1:15 pm | In Web 2.0, collaboration, social software | No CommentsA new study from McKinsey came out that shows the planned adoption of “Web 2.0″ technologies. You can take a look for free here: The McKinsey Quarterly: How businesses are using Web 2.0: A McKinsey Global Survey.
I found it interesting as much for how it chose to structure the survey as the answers themselves.
Definition of Web 2.0: McKinsey’s definition consists of blogs, collective intelligence, mashups, p2p networking (file sharing), podcasts, RSS, social networking, wikis, and web services. Web services? That struck me as an odd component to include as it doesn’t pertain to the two commonly accepted elements of the bundling: participatory web and rich internet applications. It seems collective intelligence and social networking overlap quite a bit as well. But it’s tough to come up with any set of discrete categories for Web 2.0 without hitting some overlap now and then.
Who they talked to: McKinsey surveyed 2,847 executives (44% C-level positions). Those who adhere to the Web 2.0 ”empowering the information worker”, “breaking down the hierarchies”, and “exploit the hidden network” mantras may find it odd to interview executives about what are inherently grass roots technologies. Accordingly, I think the somewhat low adoption figures are a bit distorted by the fact that these executives often aren’t aware of the use of these technologies and place more value in tools tied to the existing hierarchy and status quo than those that turn it around. In a web architecture workshop I led in 1999 I asked where the technical attendees thought they were in adoption and risk of web technologies and then where the executives thought they were and the differences were striking. I similar chart from this survey would have been interesting.
Timeframe: The survey asked about financial return on Web 2.0 investments over the past 5 years. While these technologies did exist 5 years ago, the term Web 2.0 is only about 3 years old, so there are 2 years where they are retroactively anointing investments as being Web 2.0.
So what about the results? Overall, I believe a modest picture emerged of adoption of these technologies.
- They found early adopters to be most satisfied, but I don’t think that translates into a broad recommendation since this is a self-selecting group.
- Mash-ups got mashed - not only did a mere 21% say they were using or planning to use them, but 54% said they were not even under consideration. This is an example of a case where I believe executives don’t see the impact from their point of view. But I believe mashups will seep into their organizations as a form of “composite application lite” whether they even notice or not.
- Most other technologies were being used or planned to use in 30-40% of organizations, but I believe this reflects formal usage (per enterprise standard) or usage the executives know about. I would propose that a more in depth study would uncover significantly higher usage of these technologies under the radar.
- India ranked much higher on Web 2.0 usage, but mostly because of the addition of web services in the package. When you take that out the numbers are similar to North America.
All in all, a good and timely survey and worth reading through. But I think it demonstrates that the disconnect between traditional enterprise hierarchies and tools and grass roots empowerment that is driving a lot of Web 2.0 interest is also reflected in this survey of executives. A fascinating study would be to talk to bottom level employees and architects in the same organization and compare their answers to those of their executives and publish the differences.
Lessons for Social Software and Shaping Organizational Culture
May 2, 2007 at 12:15 pm | In Web 2.0, collaboration, knowledge management, social software | 1 CommentSet the way-back machine for 1999, long before “Web 2.0″ became a buzzword. I think it’s useful to take what Kanter says as a sociologist studying corporate interaction and apply it to the social software trends we are seeing in 2007. I think she deeply understands the value of networks and innovation, but she asserts the need for actively organized networks. I would be interested to hear her opinions on self-organizing networks which are much more visible today (I hesitate to say “prevalent” since actual statistics are hard to find) then they were 8 years ago.
This is an excerpt, but I recommend reading the whole article: An Interview with Rosabeth Moss Kanter
S&B: A lot of what you’re describing seems to do with the inability of many companies to transfer knowledge. Even when the hierarchies within companies are knocked down, it sounds like islands are created in their place. And the islands aren’t linked; each has its own path forward. Whoever is developing the food product, for instance, is not talking to the people who are actually consuming it. Is it true that this is something you have to attack, and if so, how do you do that?
ROSABETH MOSS KANTER: It’s very tough to attack when you’re huge and the problem cuts across big distances, even though information technology now theoretically makes it possible to go those distances. The companies that I talk to - many of whom now have “officers for knowledge management” or “chief learning officers” - still say that the human tendency not to share information is getting in the way, even as there is more and more information to share and the need to share it is increasing. The problems here, though, are not really ones of technology. They’re problems of how people communicate and collaborate, and they are also a factor of the amount of work people have; today’s workload itself inhibits sharing something with somebody in another country in another unit in another function.
And so the companies that have been successful at using networks to share knowledge have developed some rules of thumb. For one, they’ve found that knowledge-sharing works best when there’s a regular face-to-face encounter, every quarter or so. In between, people can communicate electronically or by telephone, but the face-to-face component is crucial.
The networks that work better are also actively managed; they’re not just spontaneously self-organizing. Somebody must feel responsible for whether communication is occurring on these issues across the divide. They also work better when people get something out of it that directly benefits the work they do; no one has time for altruism.
Du Pont has made a kind of art of networking because it had somebody who wanted to be the champion of networks. At one point, the company estimated that it had about 400 knowledge networks out of central R&D alone. Some were groups of people who formed a kind of resource network on a particular technical topic, like abrasion or adhesion. Some involved best-practice sharing, where participants identified a project they could do together. Some were task-oriented networks that were given a particular assignment to improve or fix something and would draw more people into accomplishing that task. The plant-maintenance network, for example, had the task of taking out a lot of costs. Eventually, more than 600 people got involved in pieces of that network, and they ended up taking out several hundred million dollars a year.
But one other comment about that. Networks based on things like best-practice sharing tend to fall apart quickly because there’s no real continuing path. It’s basically just getting together to pass along the practice. So these things come and go too.
S&B: So how do you keep a network going?
ROSABETH MOSS KANTER: Well, first of all, not all need to be kept going. Some have their purpose and then die. But even for them you need to create roles in your organizations for people to serve as a kind of ambassador or diplomat whose job is to work with certain customers or for a certain product line and travel from place to place sprinkling seeds of knowledge. “Oh, yes, I was just in Chicago. And here’s what they’ve come up with that you can take to Hong Kong.” Here the technology infrastructure by itself isn’t enough; you need the human infrastructure.
On this point, I was really struck by a recent change at British Telecom. One of the people interested in knowledge management there declared that I.T., information technology, should now be called I.F., information flow. This person is much less interested in technology than in making sure that actual communication occurs between people.
This is one reason the face-to-face factor is so important. One of my globally connected models is an emerging company that’s been growing quickly by acquisition and that has worked hard on this factor. It has a weekly management call that involves people from every office for an hour. The phone call is scheduled at a reasonable time for Tokyo and London and New York, and in each place it’s held in a big conference room with a big screen. The call is backed up by data transmission, so everybody can immediately see the same numbers being presented. Everybody involved knows that they have to make time for this call because it is an occasion to get knowledge quickly from one place to another. This has become part of the way of life at this company. It pulls people together and it keeps them moving.
A Belated Posting from Lotusphere (part two)
April 27, 2007 at 9:59 am | In IBM, Microsoft SharePoint, portals, social software | 1 CommentIn part one of this posting I gave my overall impression that IBM Lotus has done a good job of bringing some excitement to the Notes/Domino camp. Here are some thoughts I had from the presentations and my conversation with IBM VP John Allesio.
On the SOA front I was pleased by the way in which the new services (Quickr and Connections) have been architected for consumption. The usefulness of collaboration is enhanced when it can be used in context with applications, data, or content it is referring to. This contextual collaboration requires being able to blend the collaboration services into existing applications and interfaces rather than forcing the user to switch to a dedicated interface. The connectors built into Quickr (for accessing RSS, blogs, content libraries, etc.) are a good example of building services meant to be consumed. This is still an issue I have with SharePoint, which is currently marketed and demoed as the center of its collaboration universe rather than a participant in other non-Microsoft applications.
WebSphere Portal 6.0 was also discussed, but it seems like sideshow at a Lotus conference. While WPS is becoming increasingly important to Notes/Domino customers, it still appeals to a different set of customers. WPS seems to me to be an incremental update and technology refresh, including features such as a template library, fly out menus and navigation, drag and drop, a portlet palette, and look and feel enhancements. But there was a bit of marketing spin mentioned twice that rubbed me the wrong way: “Integration at the glass”. If all I want is to integrate at the glass I’ll get an open source portal like JBoss Portal. If you’re just looking for web UI stitching with some personalization and an implementation of the standards, then open source is a lot cheaper than WebSphere Portal. But most large corporations need a full size portal product (or whatever similar technology is embedded in their superplatform). The value you get out of the full size portal product is the back-end integration into enterprise applications and infrstructure services, which are not “at the glass”. But enough ranting on that …
My teammates have commented quite a bit on the collaboration and social software additions in Connections and Quickr, so I’ll save a few calories by not retyping what they said. But I’d encourage you to see the blogs of Mike Gotta (multiple postings), Peter O’Kelly (multiple postings), and Karen Hobert for some great insight.
I am interested to see how the strategy for Quickr evolves in regards to being a SharePoint competitor. IBM was ready with a list of things Quickr can do that SharePoint can’t (DB2 data stores, works on more platforms and through more access mechanisms, etc.), but there was no comment on whether that list is supposed to explain why it is a different product category than SharePoint (apples and oranges as it were), or a better product in the same category (a better and shinier apple). The pricing (which hasn’t been announced yet) will be a big clue into how directly they wish to compete against Windows SharePoint Services 3.0. Hey, I’m a capitalist - I enjoy competition and think the end users of Quickr and SharePoint would both benefit from direct competition. But my prediction is that any direct comparisons will be played down and a safer - if less fun - path will prevail.
A Belated Posting from Lotusphere (part one)
April 26, 2007 at 11:08 am | In IBM, social software | 2 CommentsI was disappointed to miss the “real” Lotusphere in Orlando this year, especially after my teammates chimed in on the blogosphere with a flurry of postings [see Mike Gotta (multiple postings), Peter O'Kelly (multiple postings), and Karen Hobert].
Luckily, IBM does a series of mini-Lotuspheres and I was able to catch up with one during a visit to Minneapolis. The event is smaller, my posting will be smaller, but the overall impression is the same: this is the first Lotusphere in quite a while that provides a clear path forward for IBM and Notes/Domino customers. There can always be diversions on the path, but I think the direction is good.
John Allesio started with a slide that said “How do we embrace change in the business climate?” He was talking about questions their customers would ask, but I think it fits just as well to hear IBM Lotus asking itself that question. IBM Lotus has always had difficulty with clinging to the Lotus faithful while trying to address all the changes that had taken place in collaboration, social software, SOA, standard development languages, and UI design. IBM has done a better job lately of embracing this change with Quickr, Connections, and rejuvenated user interfaces.
Gia Lyons, IBM’s social software evangelist, had some interesting quotes from an Institute for Business Value study of CEOs in 2006. She said 75% of CEOs say collaboration is important for innovation. Not surprising, but always nice to hear them say it! She added that 19% of administrators and managers will retire in 5 years. The implication is that not giving the new entrants Web 2.0 tools is like not giving a phone to an information worker today. The analogy of the phone as something that businesses obviously depend on, can’t live without, and can’t prove the exact value of is often used when talking about newer forms of communication and collaboration technology.
Well, I’ve got a lot of emails to sort through and notes to process, but I’ll post some more specific thoughts in part two.
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