Research Study of Social Technology in the Enterprise

Value | No comments | August 07th, 2009 

As people embrace social media in their private lives, they naturally expect to use similar tools within the enterprise.

This is one of the findings of a research report conducted by Jakbo Nielsen of the Nieslen Norman Group. The report tracks 14 companies in 6 countries and addresses how social technology is being used on their internal networks (intranets). Nielsen provides a summary of the report in this blog post. The full report can be purchased from the Nielsen Norman Group site for $298.

Most of the findings are in line with the operating principles behind Decision 3D.

Some of the key findings include:

  • Slow adoption of social technology will risk losing workers who expect innovation in the outside world to reflect directly on how they communicate at work.
  • The majority of social technology implementations began life as grassroots initiatives.
  • Initiatives that were deemed successful and continue to provide value were predominately built to meet business objectives  and not just for the sake of technology.
  • Social systems tend to be “self-policing” from within the community itself, and requires little “management control”; in fact too much management control tends to reduce the effectiveness of these systems.

My thanks to Bill Ives of the FASTForward blog for the pointer.

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Tags: bill ives, FASTForward, jakob nielsen, recruitment

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