If you're thinking of bolting your company's social network
activities onto your existing IT infrastructure, you're headed for
problems. Your company will have a much better chance of success
rebuilding your infrastructure around the social network
environment.
On Wednesday, I spent a day at Salesforce.com's Cloudforce 2011
event in New York City. Now, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and
company are among the most extreme advocates of rebuilding
organizations around the "social enterprise" idea, but I'm not just
drinking their Kool-Aid. It's apparent that social networking
environments are ready to break the confines of marketing
departments and find their way throughout company operations.
So what is the social enterprise? In Benioff's model, it entails
a three-step process: creating a social customer profile that
extends beyond simple customer contact information; creating an
internal social network; and creating a customer social network and
product social network.
If you can imagine an organization whose technology improves
customer interaction, where business intelligence systems measure
customer sentiment, and where internal discussions are as vibrant
as those among Facebook-proficient employees, you'll start to get
the idea.
If your 2012 priorities already include cloud computing,
mobility, prosumer hardware, and new business applications, you
might not be eager to add a robust enterprise social network to
that agenda. But you must.
Here are my 10 tips for CIOs to create the foundation for a
social networked enterprise.
1. You don't have to create everything from
scratch. While Salesforce may be the most vocal vendor in
this sector, many companies offer enterprise-level social network
systems. What makes them enterprise-level? The ability to meet
security, privacy, and compliance needs, for starters.
2. Find the expertise within your company. It's
not just the 20-somethings who are adept at using social
networks.
3. You don't have to invent a reason for a social
network. Case histories, difficult to find a few years
ago, are now widely available. At the Salesforce event this week,
Daniel Flax, CIO of TheStreet, showed how the financial media
company is using social networks to engage with customers. Martha
Poulter, CIO of GE Capital, discussed how its GE Edge is spurring
innovation among senior executives at midsize companies. Dig into
those kinds of case histories and ask your peers how their social
media projects were funded and how they're producing.
4. Social networks require top-down buy-in.
Often, an internal social network such as Chatter or Yammer can
languish until the boss starts creating and responding to
discussions.
5. Think beyond the marketing department. The
idea of "earned media," using external social networks to build and
monitor brands, has been the province of the marketing folks. But
customer service, product development, and supplier interaction are
prime candidates for an extended social network infrastructure.
6. Understand the new development platforms.
Facebook isn't just a social network, but also a development
platform, as is LinkedIn, Twitter, and Google+. These platforms use
their own distinct application methodologies and APIs.
7. Think beyond the PC. Social networks and
mobility go hand in hand. Tablets and smartphones are where much of
the social networking action will take place both within and
outside your company.
8. Think beyond text. YouTube, Facebook, and
Google+ are multimedia-friendly.
9. Don't try to do it all at once. A full-blown
enterprise social network is a big undertaking. The good news is
that you can start with fairly simple internal and external
collaboration applications and move sequentially into broad-based
social applications and social measuring and monitoring.
10. No one has all the answers. As Michael
Krigsman, president of technology consultancy Asuret and longtime
chronicler of enterprise IT successes and failures, described it:
"The social enterprise is not a product, but a concept." The more
you can share your experiences with other CIOs, the more advice
you'll get back. After all, isn't that what enterprise social
networks are all about?
Source: InformationWeek USA