6. Ethan Yarbrough, president and co-founder of Allyis, Inc. and Ken Efta, co-founder and principal consultant and solutions architect, Allyis, Inc. are presenting at the Innotech NW CIO Summit in Portland, Ore. May 6. They will speak to executive level IT professionals about how to dismantle societies of strangers at work by integrating social technologies to increase collaboration and nurture an Enterprise 2.0 culture. Employees are using social media and collaborative tools in their personal lives and expect them to be available and utilized in their job. Yarbrough and Efta will discuss how, while some companies are still debating the value of social media and whether they'll allow employees to use social technologies on the job, others are plowing ahead, using social networking and internal social computing practices to their competitive advantage. They’ll show how those companies are sharing knowledge, engaging employees, inspiring innovation, recruiting top talent and seeing increased business opportunities as a result of social computing strategies. Efta will show how, through organizational design and social technographics, IT leaders can design business strategies, intranets, portals, blogs and wikis that capitalize on their organization's culture and nurture Enterprise 2.0 adoption. Attendees will learn how to dismantle "societies of strangers" at work, uncover knowledge and build relationships that engage employees and lead to measurable ROI as organizational knowledge expands and surfaces. Yarbrough and Efta will provide valuable case studies and specific steps that can be taken immediately to integrate and deploy social tools.
7. What We’ll Cover: What is the “society of strangers”? How do these societies form? What do they cost your business? What are the benefits of dismantling these? What stands in your way? A look at the future.
8. No pressure, but we have a couple questions for you… Why did you attend this session? What does a “society of strangers” mean to your organization?
24. What technologies do we think of when we discuss social networking? Blogs Wikis Microblogging (public and private) Mobile solutions Voice and video; podcasting Aggregation, sharing, and collaboration Rating, commenting, tagging, etc. Knowledge profiling, location, extraction
26. How about Fantasy Football? Yes, it’s perceived as a corporate productivity killer, BUT . . . Participation across organizational hierarchies; creates strong social ties that can extend into business relationships Creates an opportunity to see how others strategize and deal with setback Opportunity to focus for sustained periods and maintain long term relationships Communities of interest can lead to communities of practice that actually work
27. Agile Development Processes Successful teams must act as an effective social network, which means: Honest communication leading to continuous learning An emphasis on person-to-person interaction, rather than documentation Minimal degrees of separation from what is needed by the team to make progress and the people/resources that can meet those needs. Alignment of authority and responsibility From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extreme_Programming
28. Social Workspaces New business model: workspaces and virtual offices for remote employees Co-working arrangements; pay money to work next to strangers Social interaction can lead to real collaboration and problem solving
29. Business is forged through relationships; relationships are forged between people
31. Social Networking: Benefits by the Numbers 60% Percent of the workday the average information worker spends being social in pursuit of goals –Dion Hinchcliffe, Dachis Group
32. Benefits by the Numbers 40% Amount of creative teams’ productivity directly attributable to the amount of interaction they have with others “to discover, gather and internalize information” --MIT Study
33. Benefits by the Numbers 7% Percent more productive Employees with extensive digital networks are than their Less-connected colleagues – MIT Study
34. Benefits by the Numbers Quantifying the value of connections $200,000 Amount one utility company saved in one day by facilitating cross-functional collaboration through an online social network
35. Benefits by the Numbers $5,000,000 Value of one new contract a national consulting firm landed because of wiki-based collaboration
36. Benefits by the Numbers $2,400,000 Increase in sales one software company attributes to information exchange via video podcasts between dispersed sales personnel
37. Benefits by the Numbers 20% Average increase in employee satisfaction among companies that implemented internal social computing tools -- McKinsey
38. Ethan and Ken’s Very Short True/False Quiz True or False: Social computing is a silver bullet for all your employee satisfaction, employee retention and productivity problems. FALSE It’s not for you, it’s for them Expect mistakes, but make them early Expect surprises that may change your objectives and how you get there Do it right, and it can be very effective
42. Wrap up People: Baseline your organization Objectives: Work gets done, but is it getting done well? Ask your people about their experience, their answers will show you what you need to be working on. Strategy: How to get there: building a business case; calculate ROI; pilot strategies, departmental and division buy-in Technology: Choose what enables the P, the O, and the S above