The notion of an enterprise 2.0 revolution in business around
social software goes back to at least 2006 and Andrew McAfee's
definition of how Web 2.0 technologies would change business. Given
how successful Facebook and other social experiences are on the
consumer web, why wouldn't every organization flock to this vision
of agile, spontaneous, transparent, and people-centered corporate
collaboration?
Sadly, there are a few reasons.
1. Command-and-control culture. Who says every
organization wants to be transparent and flexible and invite
participation from every quarter? What if the CEO sees corporate
social media as giving employees the tools they can use to plot
against him? Why foster the illusion of democratic organization if
that's not the way you want to run the company?
I'm painting an extreme picture, but it doesn't take a
Dilbert-style Pointy-Haired Boss. Lots of moderately conservative
organizations will think twice--and maybe rightly so--about whether
an internal social network makes sense for their corporate
culture.
2. Facebook connotations. The phrase "Facebook
inside our company" works magic in some quarters. When I wrote
about the SAS Institute implementation of Socialcast earlier this
year, that was exactly the phrase the corporate communication folks
promoting the project used. They heard "Facebook" and thought, this
collaboration system will spread virally through our company, and
isn't that wonderful.
Facebook has other connotations, however. If management hears
"Facebook" and thinks "frivolous, time-wasting medium people will
use to share jokes and baby photos," then appealing to a comparison
with Facebook or even using the world "social" will only make it
more difficult to sell the concept internally.
3. Profusion of tools. The explosion of social
software tools is a source of great innovation, but also a lot of
confusion. Organizations can easily wind up with several enterprise
social networks used by different teams or departments, or for
different purposes, along with social applications for purposes
such as project management or employee recognition, each coming
with their own user profiles and activity steams and notions of how
connections are formed.
A fragmented social environment--one that promises a global view
of people and activity but in fact does not--might be worse than
none at all.
4. Lack of integration. In enterprise IT,
integration is the universal goal that is never quite perfectly
achieved. Perfection is not achievable, but for every application
there is a threshold of "good enough" integration to make the
system usable. One of the hurdles that successful enterprise social
networks must clear is having enough integration with relevant
systems such as corporate directories and content management
systems that they deliver on their promise as next-generation,
people-centric portals.
The vendors can deliver all the application programming
interfaces imaginable, but achieving the necessary integrations
still requires IT time and effort. If an enterprise social network
launches with significant integration gaps, employees might come
away unimpressed.
5. SharePoint. Microsoft's portal platform was
singled out for scorn as part of Hincliffe's lament about
"competing vendor camps" within enterprises slowing down adoption
of social software. "SharePoint has often slowed down the move to
more social tools for big companies in particular," he wrote.
Although SharePoint is ubiquitous as a collaboration and
document management platform, it has a reputation as an incomplete
social platform. Microsoft provides some of the basic elements for
social profiles and activity feeds, but creating a complete social
environment from SharePoint requires either heavy customization or
an add-on product such as NewsGator Social Sites.
6. Competition from free public social
networks. Employees will inevitably compare their
experience on an enterprise social network with the one they enjoy
on consumer sites such as Facebook. That can be a problem if the
enterprise experience suffers by comparison by being awkward to
navigate, frustrating to use, or missing important features.
Also, if there is too much bureaucracy and administrative
overhead associated with the corporate social environment, some
project teams might find it easier to collaborate through a
Facebook group or a freemium product such as Yammer or Teambox.
Is that a bad thing? It certainly can be if sensitive
information is being shared through a tool that doesn't meet
corporate security and compliance requirements. A Facebook group
could be a fine solution for organizing a holiday party but not a
merger. In the case of the freemium solution such as Yammer, the
open-minded organization might at least consider the solution of
"paving the cow paths" by officially sanctioning something that's
already working and establishing corporate control over it.
7. Compliance headaches. Regulated industries
such as financial services and healthcare must pay particular
attention to whether an enterprise social network meets compliance
requirements such as data archiving. Moreover, they might tend to
see more risk than benefit in a technology that makes it easy to
share information widely when they have a responsibility to keep
some categories of information under tight control.
These are not insurmountable obstacles, but they can slow things
down.
8. Lack of fit for business processes and
workflows. Ideally, social software should make business
processes more efficient. When you see someone post that they are
working on the same problem you are, you can combine forces. When
you have a question you need answered, you can ask it of the entire
company--or of the relevant department or interest group--and often
get an answer much more quickly. For maximum effect, the social
experience should be embedded in the business processes you want to
accelerate. On the other hand, failing to fit the two together
smoothly can inhibit adoption.
9. Optional vs. mandated. With few exceptions,
such as the case of the French IT services firm Atos banning e-mail
in favor of social collaboration, organizations that adopt internal
social software promote its use but do not make it mandatory.
Dictating a solution might be easier. At least, it might sound
easier.
But voluntary adoption is probably the right approach. If social
software really is so wonderful, employees ought to gravitate to it
naturally, as something that makes their lives easier. If the
adoption is not happening, maybe it's the social network that needs
to change to accommodate employee behavior, rather than the other
way around.
10. Groupware, knowledge management hangover.
Haven't we heard all these promises before? The vision of
enterprise social networking sure can sound a lot like the benefits
that were supposed to be delivered by previous generations of
enterprise collaboration, workflow, and knowledge-management
products. Sure, sure, it's different this time.
For social software to be successful, it has to do a better job
of living up to its own hype.
Source:
The BrainYard