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	<title>Online shared intelligence &#187; web 2.0</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.onshi.com/category/web-20/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.onshi.com</link>
	<description>like tears in the rain...</description>
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		<title>If you run Safari on a G5 Mac, avoid Silverlight</title>
		<link>http://www.onshi.com/2010/02/silverlight-bombs-your-safari/</link>
		<comments>http://www.onshi.com/2010/02/silverlight-bombs-your-safari/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Feb 2010 17:45:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Carlos Caballero</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[nausea]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web 2.0]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Microsoft Silverlight Safari OS_X]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Silverlight bomb Safari OS_X]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.onshi.com/2010/02/silverlight-bombs-your-safari/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Silverlight, Microsoft's latest piece of bloatware, is here to compete with Flash, a slick, multi-platform media delivery platform. Just to convince you that it is needed (why, oh, why, would we need another plugin), it will bomb your machine mercilessly. Unless, of course, it is running Windoz...    Typical Microsoft.<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2010/02/silverlight-bombs-your-safari/">If you run Safari on a G5 Mac, avoid Silverlight</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to more Microsoft goodness! The latest installment, after having to uninstall Office Mac because of its constant bombing: now the Silverlight virus bombs your Safari&#8230;</p>
<p>You may have noticed that bombing is so common on Office Mac 2008 (running on G5 Quad-core, all versions up to 10.5.8 OS X) that the latest Mac version of Office enters into bomb-recovery-auto-save every 30-60 seconds? Well, if you know you will bomb, I guess wasting your users&#8217; time is marginally better than actually bombing, isn&#8217;t it?</p>
<p>Well, the latest installment of the bombing masters is this virus Microsoft calls &#8220;Silverlight&#8221;&#8230; Take the latest version of the G5 (possibly the best debugged OS ever to run on a known platform); take Safari, one of the most robust browser available (not perfect, but robust).  Now, go to any Silverlight-heavy site (you can find them by searching for SharePoint Web Sites – every consultant in the SharePoint ecology is busy using Silverlight for everything that would be well served by CSS and basic JS).</p>
<p>In any case, let&#8217;s say that you still need to see what the stupid Silverlight control contains (you may be doing research for work), you&#8217;ll need to install the &#8220;plug-in&#8221;. Otherwise, when you get there you will find that there are blank boxes all over the place (put mildly, Silverlight doesn&#8217;t degrade too well, as other types of compost). The white boxes have that &#8220;Get Silverlight or f**k off&#8221; messages&#8230; Now, you will go through the installation (only version 1 of Silverf**k supports the G5 architecture). But don&#8217;t even think it will work&#8230; So far, trying it in three out of three G5-based Macs, when you find one of those sites plastered with Silverf**k, Safari will bomb in one of the nastiest ways it can (be ready to press that On/Off button).</p>
<p>While the machine bombs, and you are waiting for the reboot, it may be a good moment to meditate on why, considering that we have a well debugged, proven, multi-platform media delivery vehicle (called Flash), already installed in 98% of all personal computers worldwide, why do we need a buggy, surely bloated (just give it two months or so), almost certainly privacy insensitive and platform-paranoid piece of junk software&#8230; Um&#8230;</p>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2010/02/silverlight-bombs-your-safari/">If you run Safari on a G5 Mac, avoid Silverlight</a></p>
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		<title>Is Microsoft marketing SharePoint as the &#8220;bottom-feeder&#8221; alternative?</title>
		<link>http://www.onshi.com/2009/06/is-microsoft-marketing-sharepoint-as-the-bottom-feeder-alternative/</link>
		<comments>http://www.onshi.com/2009/06/is-microsoft-marketing-sharepoint-as-the-bottom-feeder-alternative/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Jun 2009 17:18:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Carlos Caballero</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[social networking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web 2.0]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[content management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SharePoint]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.onshi.com/?p=77</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At a time when Web 2.0 and wonderful technologies such as Flash, Air, AJAX, social business, innovation hubs, user-centric workspaces, and much, much more, are making the web into the creative fertile ground of a small, but quickly growing garden, with engaging and absorbing delivery strategies combining and evolving, always testing the future, here come the bottom-feeders (?). SharePoint the platform of the future? It surely is being touted as a thing of the past...<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2009/06/is-microsoft-marketing-sharepoint-as-the-bottom-feeder-alternative/">Is Microsoft marketing SharePoint as the &#8220;bottom-feeder&#8221; alternative?</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At <a href="http://gilbanesf.com/">Gilbane&#8217;s Conference on Content Management</a>, last week, there was a keynote slot reserved for Microsoft, a Platinum Sponsor of the event, titled &#8220;The Web platform of the future&#8221;. <a href="http://gilbanesf.com/speakers.html#Bush">Tricia Bush</a>, a SharePoint Group Product Manager, was the speaker. I expected to get the usual forward-looking, optimistic &#8220;we do everything web, content and social better with SharePoint&#8221; message that has the norm for Microsoft&#8217;s SharePoint message. Instead, I came to hear how SharePoint was presented as the product for mediocrity and low expectations, the FUD product of choice for anybody who has been hiding in a basement for the last ten years, and the way for IT groups to regain a level of omnipotent control that they have spent ten years losing (and justifyably so).</p>
<p>The presentation got me thinking further&#8230; Let&#8217;s face it, with all its fanfare and massive adoption, SharePoint is still used mostly as a very basic content manager. The reasons behind this massive adoption, and the corresponding adoption pattern, have already been discussed to death, with my favorite interpretation being that Microsoft just leveled a Content Management space that could not bear the weight of heavy, slow but entrenched &#8220;enterprise players&#8221;, who brought very little innovation or standardization to a mature market, while keeping outrageous licensing margins. Add to that unrealistic market players behavior the reality of corporate IT groups starved for real web talent (easy to generalize to talent in general) and fearing that power will slip out of their hands as the cloud and SaaS makes most of their services equally irrelevant and unsustainable, and a the &#8220;bottom-feeding&#8221; picture starts to emerge.</p>
<p>The presentation in question was interesting because of some of its key messages, articulated in very clear terms, such as:</p>
<ol>
<li>52% of developers involved with your corporate web sites are millennials (said in the same tone as you would say &#8220;terrorists&#8221;, or &#8220;idiots&#8221;). &#8220;Do YOU want those guys to &#8216;control YOUR brand&#8217; and &#8216;manage YOUR content?&#8221; If George Carlin had been in the conference he would probably at that point refloat the idea of massive asilum states where to send all the violent criminals, with the milennials added to the hilarious list;</li>
<li>&#8220;After all, the role of your web sites is not to entertain, it&#8217;s just to INFORM your visitors&#8221;. Thanks, we can now forget everything we learnt in the years after 1998 and go back to being young and stupid.</li>
</ol>
<p>At a time when Web 2.0 and wonderful technologies such as Flash, Air, AJAX, social business, innovation hubs, user-centric workspaces, and much, much more, are making the web into the creative fertile ground of a small, but quickly growing garden, with engaging and absorbing delivery strategies combining and evolving, always testing the future, here come the bottom-feeders (?). SharePoint the platform of the future? It surely is being touted as a thing of the past&#8230;</p>
<p>It may be a consistent strategy (few people expect Microsoft to innovate these days), but it&#8217;s a real pity. Come October 19, at the SharePoint Conference, when Microsoft unleashes yet another bag of glass beads,  other valuable categories will probably be fed to the bottom:</p>
<ol>
<li>Social – &#8220;After all, all you need to be social is to have wikis and blogs that don&#8217;t totally suck, unified tagging and a zillion web parts that you can pepper through your pages. Right? If it looks like a Facebook, it doesn&#8217;t matter what it smells like: it&#8217;s a Facebook!&#8221;</li>
<li>Usability – &#8220;Yes, we have a universal delivery client called Flash, and AJAX, and AIR, and soon Waves, and yes, those <strong><em>millennials</em></strong> use them to create things that are fun and engaging, but you know, you need to think, and compete with young talent without the privileges of holding the IT keys in order to develop them! Let&#8217;s introduce another bloated and unneeded technology, Silverlight, so that now we can have obnoxious ribbons all over the place, not only in Office bloatware, but now YOU can develop them as well! After a while, you won&#8217;t even notice that you see everything as a list! Let&#8217;s make every site look like a PowerPoint presentation!&#8221;</li>
<li>Web Branding – &#8220;Just make sure you use your logo, which now YOU WILL BE ABLE TO CHANGE YOURSELF on your web sites, and just keep informing the hell out of your visitors. That&#8217;s all  that branding is, after all&#8230;&#8221;</li>
</ol>
<p>I know, the tone is too acidic&#8230; But the worry is sincere: Microsoft <strong>IS</strong> the bull in the china shop; I didn&#8217;t care much about seeing the bloated Content Management players be the china that Microsoft threw around, but I really believe that social business and Web 2.0 technologies are a garden, not a stale china shop. I&#8217;d hate to see the bull poop all over it&#8230;</p>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2009/06/is-microsoft-marketing-sharepoint-as-the-bottom-feeder-alternative/">Is Microsoft marketing SharePoint as the &#8220;bottom-feeder&#8221; alternative?</a></p>
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		<item>
		<title>This site&#8217;s wordle</title>
		<link>http://www.onshi.com/2008/08/this-pages-wordle/</link>
		<comments>http://www.onshi.com/2008/08/this-pages-wordle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Aug 2008 21:02:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Carlos Caballero</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[web 2.0]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cool site]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[word map]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wordle]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.onshi.com/?p=52</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[If you feed this blog&#8217;s URL into http://wordle.net, you get a word map (where size indicates frequency of words in the page, not tags) that looks just like this:
 
Post from: Online shared intelligence; copyright &#169; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.This site&#8217;s wordle
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/08/this-pages-wordle/">This site&#8217;s wordle</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If you feed this blog&#8217;s URL into http://wordle.net, you get a word map (where size indicates frequency of words in the page, not tags) that looks just like this:</p>
<p> </p>
<div id="attachment_54" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 509px"><a href="http://www.onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/wordle11.png"><img class="size-full wp-image-54" title="wordle11" src="http://www.onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/wordle11.png" alt="Word map for this URL" width="499" height="202" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Word map for this URL</p></div>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/08/this-pages-wordle/">This site&#8217;s wordle</a></p>
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		<item>
		<title>About auto-censorship</title>
		<link>http://www.onshi.com/2008/08/about-auto-censorship/</link>
		<comments>http://www.onshi.com/2008/08/about-auto-censorship/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 Aug 2008 15:16:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>CC</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[nausea]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web 2.0]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[censorship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enterprise collaboration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[technopoly]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://onshi.com/?p=41</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This has to be one of the finest anecdotes I have heard in a long time. Perhaps everybody knows it, but nonetheless it&#8217;s excellent. 
In a conversation about Acceptable Use Policies (AUPs) for Enterprise Collaboration, Gil Yehuda answered a comment I made about the chilling auto-censorship effect that AUPs can have on collaboration. In his [...]<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/08/about-auto-censorship/">About auto-censorship</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This has to be one of the finest anecdotes I have heard in a long time. Perhaps everybody knows it, but nonetheless it&#8217;s excellent. <span id="more-41"></span></p>
<p>In a <a href="http://www.jivesoftware.com/clearstep/message/1283#1283">conversation about Acceptable Use Policies (AUPs) for Enterprise Collaboration</a>, <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/gilyehuda">Gil Yehuda</a> answered a comment I made about the chilling auto-censorship effect that AUPs can have on collaboration. In his response he says:</p>
<p>As a security professional once told me<strong> &#8220;Anything you say can be used against you, so why speak when you can nod?&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>Couldn&#8217;t help but think about my posting yesterday in this same blog: this is another example of the limitations of 2.0-anything. We are all nice people, we all like each other, and we have really good intentions. But Big Brother doesn&#8217;t sleep. Or, in other words (Porter&#8217;s, in Technopoly), the transformational powers of technology can be grossly over-estimated, specially when that technology is brought about by those that would be most impacted by it.</p>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/08/about-auto-censorship/">About auto-censorship</a></p>
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		<title>Intelligentsia 2.0</title>
		<link>http://www.onshi.com/2008/07/intelligentsia-20/</link>
		<comments>http://www.onshi.com/2008/07/intelligentsia-20/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Jul 2008 22:21:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Carlos Caballero</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[desktop tools]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enterprise collaboration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social networking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web 2.0]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enterprise 2.0]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://onshi.com/?p=40</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Call me 1.0, but...<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/07/intelligentsia-20/">Intelligentsia 2.0</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>All buzzwords outlive their usefulness, and go from mandatory conversational drop-in to snobbish drop-out tag. That almost magical polarity change happens usually shortly after the buzzword in question is mercilessly extended beyond their original scope, until it&#8217;s left hanging &#8216;out there&#8217;, with little or no connection to the original meaning. Is that happening with the &#8216;2.0&#8242; thingy?<span id="more-40"></span></p>
<p>Don&#8217;t blame me for being buzzword-agnostic: twenty five years in technology are enough to kill buzzword sensibility. Perhaps I should clarify that rather than agnostic, the right qualifier would be antagonistic: it&#8217;s not that I don&#8217;t believe in buzzwords, it&#8217;s really  that I believe (and know) that they end up used for inflicting much more damage to reason and the collective IQ than benefiting it. The 2.0 postfix is no exception. Wired-to-tired.</p>
<p>From a wonderful way of grouping equally wonderful technologies that empowered hyper-connected users (as if such a demographic really needed any further boosts beyond those of wealth, class and education), the 2.0 &#8216;thingy&#8217; got increasingly appropriated by young X-ers, who wield it with the same acumen as a scalpel ready to castrate anything &#8220;old&#8221;. </p>
<p>Social networking is technically 2.0. Hard to disagree with that, just look at the technology and functional stacks, right? Well, yes, <strong>in principle</strong>, but not necessarily in execution&#8230; Trace the Web 2.0 technology stack back a few years, and you will find that early users of the term were, and most of us still are, in love with concepts such as the semantic web, topic maps, ontology, semantic meshes and much more as the true inspirational forces justifying a technology refresh; the 2.0 technologies were just early moves in those directions. And yet, try to find anything substantially semantic done beyond tag clouds and better online usability, even in social networks and collaboration products, and there is very little to show for it (the truth is, semantics is not a trivial game to be played by a handful of AJAX and WS hacks in a few agile iterations).</p>
<p>But that is OK, I guess, technologies and paradigms (oops, as an old friend used to say, wait for the word paradigm to emerge and then leave the room really fast)  take time to mature. The problem is, in the meanwhile, 2.0 got hijacked and became something else. Web 2.0 is</p>
<ul>
<li>Young, specifically, generation-X-er. If X-ers do it, it&#8217;ll take the world by storm, and it&#8217;s archetypically good. By default, you are old if you don&#8217;t do it. And of course, the fact that you don&#8217;t do it is bad. Take twitting. You may be just humble enough to know that infinitesimal changes in your state of mind don&#8217;t matter more than the noise of cars in the freeway to others. Or, you may be the kind of person that needs long, quiet, contemplative moments of inspiration and concentration in your daily routine, away from twitts, toots and tettes. Because of any of those reasons (many more available), you don&#8217;t twitt. You are old. You are (like I keep hearing from so many beautiful, 2.0 people) &#8220;so 1.0-ish&#8221;, or &#8220;so 1.0!&#8221; for short.</li>
<li>Anti-restrain, anti-hierarchy, anti-confidentiality, anti-structured. By association, any hierarchically, control-based, structured collaboration system is 1.0. Protection of intellectual property? Corporate liability? Compliance? Management structures? Project management? Accountability? Nah&#8230; don&#8217;t bother</li>
<li>A vague, increasingly threatening, ad-hominem attack, one that is accepted beyond PC-filters and netiquette. You can find it wielded in reverse (as in &#8220;this that I am saying would be just another unproved and unsubstantiated generality&#8230; but wait! I am an X-er, I have been around 2.0 all my life, so I don&#8217;t need to be rigorous&#8221;)</li>
</ul>
<p>And all of the sudden, strange things like &#8220;Enterprise 2.0&#8243; are engendered. You can read postings from very articulate and intelligent people (some of whom I have in my RSS list), who start to fly away from reality and talking about bringing FaceBook into the corporate network, and start announcing the funeral of Office (specially spreadsheets, so structured, so 1.0 <img src='http://www.onshi.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' />  ).</p>
<p>Uhhh? I don&#8217;t know, call me skeptic, or perhaps it&#8217;s that I am &#8220;<strong>so</strong> 1.0&#8243;&#8230; But I&#8217;ve been around a zillion of 2.0-like iterations, seen their fizzle go up and down, and when the dust clears, 1.0&#8217;s are still around, yes, irreversibly changed for the better, but still around. From mainframe to PC to LAN to Client-Server to networked computers to n-tier to &#8230; (can keep going at least for four more lines). Every time, the 2.0 would eliminate the 1.0. Yet, I know that there quite a few PDP-11s still buried in the organic systems running mission-critical applications out there (how about flight control computers? or nuclear monitoring apps?). Don&#8217;t believe it, OK, let&#8217;s replace them with those so-long-ago-extinguished mainframes, or PL1 programs, whatever.</p>
<p>The truth is, not only 1.0 turn out to be much more resilient than expected: 2.0 tend to have quite a lot of weak spots as well (how else would we sustain the next iteration?). Ad so, the 2.0s get looked at, taken apart, deconstructed, resisted, imitated, plagiarized, even perverted, by wise practitioners of the 1.0. In the process, some memes and genetic material gets lose, like a fine pollution, just like polen, and spread around the crevices of the 1.0&#8230; The rest of the ecology parable is easy to imagine&#8230;</p>
<p>So, call me 1.0-ish, but I know that change, REAL change, the one that change peoples&#8217; lives, doesn&#8217;t happen in 2.0 waves, but rather 1.1.17 ripples. Today, tag clouds are as far as it gets, but hey, you can find tag clouds even in mainframe apps. Web services are starting to permeate all existing systems, and now even mainframe apps have gone beyond encapsulating a Cobol routine into WS wrappers. Like tides, each one of those cycles got organically deconstructed, and a few memes and genes stayed around for good</p>
<p>So, I am not interested on disqualifying the old just for the sake of it. I have no presumption that radically new ways of doing things will put the old to rest. I am skeptical as it relates to such profound transformations. Instead, give me concrete, benefit-bound memes that we can insert into every-day people&#8217;s routines. Yes, Office apps are SO 1.0&#8230; but you know what? Hundreds of millions of users use them every day, in most cases not by their own decision. So, can your wonderful, 2.x app do away with the need for Office? That is great, I truly believe it can, and I am sure at some point, many years from now, it may (I even helped conceive a few such apps years ago).</p>
<p>In the meanwhile, PLEASE give me a way to save those hundreds of millions of users headaches when they want to edit an Office document from ANY Web 2.0 app, and I will get really excited as well; I can&#8217;t avoid it, I am very 1.0, and I am growing old&#8230; I just can&#8217;t get off from my mind the thought of giving millions of people a happy second or two. And you will have contributed to the next iteration, Enterprise 1.1.17.b, not an easy feat&#8230;</p>
<p>More important, by not alienating &#8216;the natives&#8217;, we will have managed to increase 2.0&#8217;s chance of growing into an unstoppable tsunami. Remember, I didn&#8217;t say that I don&#8217;t believe in those wonderful 2.0-ish thingies. On the contrary, I am just getting irritated by the irresponsible BS and prepotence that slow them down by creating antibodies faster than infected cells. </p>
<p>Be well, in peace  :)</p>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/07/intelligentsia-20/">Intelligentsia 2.0</a></p>
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		<title>What are the basic elements of Enterprise Collaboration?</title>
		<link>http://www.onshi.com/2008/07/what-are-the-basic-elements-of-enterprise-collaboration/</link>
		<comments>http://www.onshi.com/2008/07/what-are-the-basic-elements-of-enterprise-collaboration/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 20 Jul 2008 22:51:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>CC</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[enterprise collaboration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social networking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web 2.0]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[collaboration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[patterns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[services]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[taxonomy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://onshi.com/?p=29</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A friend asked the question as she started the process of exploring her requirements for collaboration products, which she will use to support a social networking initiative she is about to get going.
Like many other practitioners before her, Lisa found that when it comes to enterprise collaboration, there is a huge difference between wanting to [...]<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/07/what-are-the-basic-elements-of-enterprise-collaboration/">What are the basic elements of Enterprise Collaboration?</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: normal;">A friend asked the question as she started the process of exploring her requirements for collaboration products, which she will use to support a social networking initiative she is about to get going.</span></p>
<p>Like many other practitioners before her, Lisa found that when it comes to enterprise collaboration, there is a huge difference between wanting to solve a problem and knowing what specific product features are relevant to your needs. In other words, if you want, say, &#8220;to empower collaboration in order to create alignment between highly distributed teams in order to improve the product cycle&#8221;, how does MySite functionality help you? If you want &#8220;to increase intimacy between partners and internal stakeholders&#8221;, is that something a blog, a wiki or a forum will produce? How relevant is a forms server to collaboration?<span id="more-29"></span></p>
<p>The thing is, it&#8217;s common to start requirement discussions these days and immediately start hearing from stakeholders &#8220;I want a blog/wiki/community/forum/tweeter/your-Web-2.0-buzzword-of-choice-here&#8221;;  everybody wants to jump into it, whatever that is, because the benefits of Web 2.0 technology are presumably very  compelling. The question is, are those benefits the ones you are after? Is your organization ready? And so on&#8230;</p>
<p>It is very rare, however, to get an articulated statement of need that goes from specific use cases to correlating common collaborative patterns inside the organization with the functionality needed to empower it and enable it. Add to that the pressure from vendors to define the field (which is in the middle of a land-grab period)</p>
<p>What Lisa was asking was some sort of basic semantics and ontology to start moving away fro the &#8220;wants&#8221; towards the &#8220;we need&#8230; because&#8230;&#8221;. Basic <strong>thought blocks</strong>&#8230; A basic functional taxonomy.</p>
<p>Of course, there is a ton of pre-digested stuff that I could (and will) point her to, matrices after matrices of basic function points, usually provided or &#8217;seeded&#8217; by vendors in the category, talking about portal management, forms, business intelligence, types of content supported, and so on. I am sure we will get to those at some point, but first we need to agree on basic &#8220;thought blocks&#8221; for us to manipulate and discuss as we approach her requirements.</p>
<p>On the personal side, I find myself going over these basic elements over and over, because this is a very common stage of collaboration projects, so I decided to put some extra work at it and construct a basic  taxonomy to use as a starting point for future requirements analysis with my customers (hopefully, everybody wins). I will improve the taxonomy after I write this article, and use it as a skeleton to tag and classify content in this site as it grows</p>
<h1>The basic framework</h1>
<p>There are many ambiguities in the definition of collaboration-related terms, thanks in great measure to the efforts of vendors to re-define the world in terms that fit their products (as opposed to the other way around), as well as the broad extent to which the term is applied (e.g., intellectual collaboration between several individuals and collaboration between countries). Nonetheless, a common-sense approach to understanding collaboration requirements makes some of those ambiguities irrelevant by</p>
<ol>
<li>looking at how people in a given company have traditionally collaborated, </li>
<li>identifying recent changes that affect collaboration  </li>
<li>extrapolating the above to understand what is needed to support and empower collaboration today</li>
</ol>
<p>To avoid distractions produced by huge hype campaigns, over-anxious vendors and the infinite wave of convergence that produce one presumably revolutionary device every week, each one enabling equally presumed revolutionary collaboration capabilities, let&#8217;s start with traditional collaboration concepts (1960s to 1990s) whose validity is not bound to recent technologies. Once we agree on some basic building blocks for the concept, let&#8217;s keep building on it until we reach a satisfactory &#8220;present&#8221; status, and only then let&#8217;s speculate on what tomorrow will bring. </p>
<h2>The basic concept of collaboration</h2>
<p>As for the word &#8220;collaboration&#8221; itself, let&#8217;s define it for now as an iterative process followed by multiple individuals,  all of them sharing a common goal or mission, in order to:</p>
<ul>
<li>Share their private knowledge and access others&#8217;, which is usually done by sharing and interacting with content (i.e., mediated knowledge, knowledge represented as content) as well as by  communications between individuals conducted via conversations, messages, collaborative editions of documents, etc. (i.e., conversational knowledge);</li>
<li>Explore and discover possible scenarios and alternatives related to the common goal;</li>
<li>Develop consensus about reality and courses of action (usually making that consensus permanent and more shareable by creating new content).</li>
</ul>
<p>The definition above is quite operational, and is particularly effective inside corporate environments because it is generic enough to allow for multiple &#8220;flavors&#8221; of collaboration, from the more structured, control-driven ones (e.g., performance analysis and review sessions) to the more decentralized, socially centered and conversation-focused ones (e.g., strategy brainstorming).</p>
<p>If we were to simmer that definition even more, we should arrive to the fact that <strong>people collaborate by interacting and working jointly on knowledge, both conversational and mediated.</strong></p>
<h3><strong>Simplistic collaboration patterns</strong></h3>
<p>Basic collaboration patterns emerge as soon as you put a group of knowledge workers in the same location (&#8220;working jointly&#8221; used to require being in the same place), make sure they use some set of basic artifacts that most of them are used to, give them intersecting objectives (that is, the success of one influences the success of others), and give them time to develop their own routines.</p>
<p>The individuals will soon reach a balance between individual (<strong>private</strong>) work and <strong>collective</strong> work, the later conducted by <strong>meeting</strong> somewhere, bringing with them the <strong>content and other artifacts</strong> they need for the task at hand, and collaborating (<strong>sharing</strong> knowledge, <strong>exploring</strong> possibilities together, developing <strong>consensus</strong>). Given choices, they will like to maintain close <strong>relationships</strong> between them, so that as new elements come up during projects, tasks, workflows and such, they can address them through <strong>ad-hoc</strong>, further collaboration. </p>
<p>Finally, as they become more familiar with each other, individuals will develop and/or further <strong>multiple types of relationships</strong> amongst each other giving place to a myriad of specialized <strong>networks</strong> and sub-networks (if you like graphs, think n-tuple meshes). As the number of those networks grows, individuals will represent them (besides explicit lists), by attaching characteristics to individuals &#8220;<strong>profiles</strong>&#8220;. In layman&#8217;s terms, the group of Community Sponsors in your company may be represented by a list of the thirty or so individuals in it, as well as a variable in each user profile called Community role, which for those 30 individuals will have the value of &#8220;Sponsor&#8221;. </p>
<p>In that simple context, collaboration happens as those workers start all sorts of <strong>interactions </strong>and <strong>collaborative activities</strong> supported by work <strong>artifacts</strong> (schedules, calendars, tasks, workflows, processes) and in the process consume and create many types of <strong>content</strong> (messages, recordings, presentations, documents, etc.). When they are not meeting, those workers will be working (alone, or in different meetings, on the same artifacts and content).</p>
<p>Personal networks will operate in a somehow &#8220;orthogonal&#8221; yet crucial plane relative to the other elements, by acting <strong>functionally</strong> as a selector (which networks participate in a particular collaboration), but more important yet, acting <strong>structurally</strong> to represent corporate groups participating in crucial corporate processes that are enhanced by collaboration. The  process that matches both functional and structural networks is crucial to the ROI for social collaboration.</p>
<p>The simple collaboration model described so far works only in very constrained circumstances, in which:</p>
<ul>
<li>workers are <strong>co-located</strong> (or near-located). That is, it is simple to move between the private workspace (where they work by themselves) and collective workspaces (where they work with others);</li>
<li>they share a <strong>common contextual understanding</strong> of the task at hand;</li>
<li>the participating individuals have <strong>relaxed agendas</strong>, so that most events can be performed in a synchronous manner (i.e., all participant are available at the same time for mutual interaction – a phone call, a meeting, a conference), as opposed to asynchronously (i.e., participants conduct their own activities at different moments in time – store-and-forward activities such as email, voice mail or any other type of messaging, editions of a document that are performed with persistent locking of versions, etc.).</li>
</ul>
<p><span style="color: #0000ff;">Some of the key concepts identified above are directly correlated to ECP&#8217;s functional layers:</span></p>
<ol>
<li><strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">Individuals and groups</span></strong><span style="color: #0000ff;"> (which will be usually translated to &#8220;users&#8221; of the collaboration platform and &#8220;networks&#8221;)</span></li>
<li><strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">Artifacts</span></strong><span style="color: #0000ff;"> that are used by all individuals, such as calendars, process diagrams and workflows, location and presence indicators, identifiers, etc.</span></li>
<li><strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">Content</span></strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">, which are documents and other file-based representations of knowledge used by individuals</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #0000ff;">Channels of</span><strong><span style="color: #0000ff;"> communication</span></strong><strong><span style="color: #0000ff;"> </span></strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">between individuals and groups</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #0000ff;">Interactions</span><strong><span style="color: #0000ff;"> </span></strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">between individuals and their common and private </span><strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">knowledge</span></strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">.</span></li>
</ol>
<p><strong>More realistic patterns</strong></p>
<p>Enterprise workers today work in conditions that rarely include collocation, social integration and synchronous collaboration; rather, enterprise workers today&#8230;</p>
<ul>
<li>Are <strong>hyper-connected to data networks</strong> (more frequently, to more networks, with higher bandwidth) and they use it to generate <strong>massive amounts of content</strong>;</li>
<li>Have lots of computing power to spend for <strong>assistive technologies</strong> (like most of those in Smart Phones);</li>
<li>Are (increasingly) <strong>used to technology-mediated interaction technologies</strong>, as well as devices and modalities, and have relatively low resistance to behavioral changes required to incorporate them;</li>
<li><strong>Multi-task </strong>intensely, and are usually involved in a multitude of projects, each one in connection with different groups, objectives and processes;</li>
<li>Find themselvesy <strong>distributed</strong> across geographies, time zones, even languages;</li>
<li>Are<strong> NOT</strong> <strong>socially integrated</strong>,<strong> </strong>but are instead increasingly <strong>process-integrated</strong> by <strong>back-office corporate applications</strong> (this is equivalent to saying that knowledge workers now interact not only with other knowledge workers, but also with applications and automated processes);</li>
<li>Use an <strong>increasing number of devices</strong>, as different combinations of connectivity, memory, processing power, storage and interaction bandwidth are brought to market in convergent devices;</li>
<li>Generationally, growing number of knowledge workers are increasingly subject to<strong> &#8220;Web 2.0 expectations&#8221;</strong>, which project current experiences with convergent devices, mobility and other interaction technologies to predispose them to try technology-assisted collaboration (and accelerate adoption in the process).</li>
</ul>
<p>These circumstances represent both challenges and enablers to collaboration, and have been at the root of many industry movements to address them (knowledge management, business process integration, content management, document management and more). ECPs are therefore not radical, new technologies, but rather a confluence of older technologies and infrastructural conditions that were not present before, and which come to be known as Web 2.0.</p>
<h3>Challenges to collaboration</h3>
<ul>
<li>Geographic distribution and thin time slices mean that synchronous activities require a lot of assistance from technology in order to still take place, this time in virtual <strong>workspaces</strong>, whether it be a web-based conference or a presence-enabled call that is automatically routed;</li>
<li>Personal availability for synchronous activities is reduced by orders of magnitude, and scheduling becomes proportionally harder. As a result, <strong>multiple modalities of asynchronous knowledge interaction</strong> emerge to replace synchronous ones (each of them creating its own management and integration challenges) and <strong>presence management</strong> becomes critical for communications;</li>
<li>Group maintenance activities become overwhelming when the number of working groups multiplies; even keeping in mind the context of each group becomes almost impossible. As a result, the <strong>administrative functions</strong> related to collaboration grow more and more complex;</li>
<li>Collaboration becomes yet another activity mediated by applications (collaboration platforms), creating resistance (&#8220;I already don&#8217;t have enough time, don&#8217;t ask me to do something else&#8221;) and confusion (too many interfaces between systems and individuals);<strong> extreme ease of use and seamless functional integration</strong> will become crucial to avoid failed deployments;</li>
<li>Teams are rarely socially integrated, which means that each project has the potential for participants needing to re-develop basic trust and capabilities understanding. As a result, assistive technologies for <strong>relationship management</strong> become more important (still a very immature science, reduced to basic reputation management and relationship initiation support);</li>
<li>The <strong>massive scale</strong> of most global enterprises, the content they create, and the number of individuals they involve requires innovative discovery, sharing and consumption mechanisms for knowledge and individuals.</li>
</ul>
<h3>Enablers of collaboration</h3>
<ul>
<li>Ubiquitous networks make location more irrelevant, facilitate most virtual meeting interactions when combined with presence and other assistive technologies  (synchronous advantage)</li>
<li>Convergent, and more intelligent devices make it easy for workers to utilize time slots that would otherwise be wasted, interacting in relatively new but highly productive modalities;</li>
<li>Lots of extra computing cycles can be &#8220;wasted&#8221; in assistive technologies, such as voice, natural language, semantic layers, rich presence and location, and so on;</li>
<li>Many routine activities related to tasks, auditing, record-keeping, and more can now be performed by systems without human intervention;</li>
<li>Content integration brought about by Web 2.0 makes it easier and easier for workers to collaboratively create content and weave into it personal interactions of all sorts, reducing process friction and at the same time empowering richer, more complex documents (but at the same time contributing to the &#8220;content avalanche&#8221;).</li>
</ul>
<h3>In a nutshell</h3>
<p>When we factor these new constraints and enablers into our definition of collaboration, out definition of what a collaboration platform needs to support do not significantly change. Collaboration platforms will still need to manage users, groups, artifacts, content, communication channels and knowledge interactions; however, in order to address the challenges above, collaboration platforms will need to:  </p>
<ul>
<li>deliver many different types of virtual workspaces on demand and in an ad-hoc manner, </li>
<li>facilitate the discovery, sharing and utilization of knowledge resources, </li>
<li>enable streamlined and unobtrusive communications via multiple channels and modalities and </li>
<li>support collaborative activities across all workspace activities, which requires making collaborative services available to back-office applications as well. </li>
</ul>
<p>However, collaboration platforms need to support those elements in a manner much more agile than traditionally done,</p>
<ul>
<li>leveraging technology and networking to replace physical proximity and laxer time availability, </li>
<li>creating assistive technologies that improve management of groups and networks (i.e., social networking),</li>
<li>automating administrative tasks via shared calendars, project management, tasks, etc., and </li>
<li>addressing the issues created by the massive quantities of individuals, knowledge and interactions involved.</li>
</ul>
<div><span style="color: #0000ff;">Factoring these conditions into our previous definition adds two essential elements to be supported by collaboration platforms:</span></div>
<div>
<ul>
<li><span style="color: #0000ff;"><strong>Virtual Workspaces</strong>, the &#8220;place&#8221; where interactions between individuals and knowledge take place, </span></li>
<li><span style="color: #0000ff;"><strong>Integration</strong> <strong>points and services</strong>, to allow collaboration practices and activities to become part of the workplace, as opposed to &#8220;yet another thing to do&#8221;. </span></li>
</ul>
</div>
<h1><strong>Factoring patterns into meaningful functional blocks</strong></h1>
<p>The challenges and opportunities above have created the conditions for solutions that enable modern knowledge workers to collaborate productively, which we will call Enterprise Collaboration Platforms (or ECPs for simplicity).</p>
<p>From a <strong>functional</strong> point of view, ECPs consist of several crucial components, which together deliver the experience of collaboration as introduced in the beginning of this article, and which can be described as conforming a layered functional pyramid:</p>
<h2>Core Services</h2>
<p><span style="font-weight: normal;"><strong>Core services</strong> unify and standardize (to different extents) knowledge workers&#8217; access to all the core application behaviors, metaphors,  involved in creating the user experience. In terms of the succinct definition of collaboration that we developed in the beginning of this article, core services do most of the &#8220;heavy lifting&#8221; needed to support </span><span style="font-weight: normal;"><strong>users </strong>(i.e., knowledge workers who can access the ECP), <strong>artifacts</strong> (by containing and/or integrating to the servers that allow those artifacts to be discovered, created, shared, modified and managed) and <strong>groups </strong>(i.e., multiple typed relationships between any number of users)</span><span style="font-weight: normal;">:</span></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>User Management</strong> – All services that allow knowledge workers to access and use the ECP, including user authentication, administration, user directories, Single Sign On, etc.;</li>
<li><strong>Group Management – </strong>The creation, modification and maintenance of groups of any number of users, related by a common typed relationship (e.g., &#8220;is a participant in Project X&#8221; or &#8220;all content moderators outside of the company&#8221;, and such), and surfacing of those relationships via <strong>rich </strong>user profiles and attributes;</li>
<li><strong>Artifact Infrastructure – </strong>Servers (or interfaces to servers) that enable users to create, instantiate and use artifacts such as calendars, schedules, workflows, structured data (databases), phone calls, instant messages, and other objects of collaboration that are not directly correlated to files.</li>
</ul>
<p><span style="font-weight: normal;">End users do not typically &#8220;see&#8221; or interact with the core services layer, but those services permeate the complete platform, and enable </span><span style="font-weight: normal;">all users </span><span style="font-weight: normal;">to access and use the same artifacts and services (user differentiation based on function access is implemented at a higher functional layer) as they collaborate. </span></p>
<p><span style="color: #0000ee; text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/ec1.png"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-36" title="ec1" src="http://onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/ec1.png" alt="Platform services" width="499" height="373" /></a><br />
</span></p>
<p>As you advance towards your requirements document, you will find that this functional block contains most of the IS- and IT-oriented use cases and requirements. Depending on your internal power structure, you may see systems that exceed the requirements in every other functional category being &#8220;shot down&#8221; because its core services don&#8217;t align well with IT&#8217;s environmental vision. </p>
<h3>&#8220;Rich&#8221; Relationship Management</h3>
<p>Collaborative relationships are characterized by very large number of possible types of relationships, potentially as many as there are nuances that are important for people to relate to other people. From &#8220;people who like bicycles&#8221; to &#8220;taoists&#8217; to &#8220;commuters&#8221; to &#8220;married&#8221; people to&#8230; the list is obviously close to never-ending: users of a collaborative space are connected by a very large of &#8220;typed&#8221; relationships (it&#8217;s not just a single type of relationship). If you were to represent it as a graph on paper, you would probably end with nodes (points, little circles) connected by a massive number of lines of close to infinite lines, of almost as many different kinds (e.g., colors).  At this point you would be approaching a &#8220;mesh&#8221;, a complex graph of very specialized properties.</p>
<p>There is line I don&#8217;t want to cross in this article, that of discussing architecture (I am not qualified), but the fact is that the traditional representation of using records representing users, with fields for different types of relationships (e.g., &#8220;Likes bicycles&#8221;) AS THE ONLY WAY to represent social relationships very quickly breaks down in implementation, as the records in question become &#8220;wider&#8221; (i.e., the number of relationships increases).</p>
<p>We will visit the specific requirements that can separate simplistic relationship management from rich relationship management in a separate article. For now, let&#8217;s state that there is a fundamental difference between true relationship management and the simplistic association of a few relational attributes to users.</p>
<h3>What about Document Management?</h3>
<p>Depending on which vendor you ask, the core of EC will contain more or less support for desktop applications and the documents they produce, in the form of Document Management; Microsoft, for example, with a vested interest in making MS Office even more of a standard than it already is, and pushing other technologies into the enterprise into the process (both valid competitive aspirations), has a heavy bias towards tight integration of MS Office applications into the Enterprise Collaboration platform (SharePoint WSS and MOSS), and thus has made document management the core of their EC product, because given the dominance of Office, that really means Office-document Management.</p>
<p>But such close relationship between desktop documents, eminently private in their creation, storage and management, and Enterprise Collaboration need not be the case. In &#8220;pure&#8221; Web 2.0 collaboration scenarios, all documents can be online documents with shared access (a wiki page, a posting, or a whole wiki), and full-blown collaboration can be reached without the user ever touching a copy of Word or Excel, or if she does, leaving the detailed document management outside of the scope of the collaboration product through common attachment mechanisms.</p>
<p>Which side you sit on, it&#8217;s a matter of opinion and religion. My recommendation to practitioners is to consider document management as complementary, but external to the collaboration system. I do that for two reasons:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong>Manageability: </strong>Because of the need to guarantee availability, resource consumption, application provisioning, compliance problems, and a million other reasons, desktop documents are much more of a management problem than online documents, with little added benefit. Further, collectively created content is usually much richer in context and knowledge than ultra-formatted private documents that contain only one brain&#8217;s output. Call me an optimist, but I believe that IS and LOB managers will realize these facts and increasingly move to online documents, as opposed to desktop ones;</li>
<li><strong>Vendor tie-in:  </strong>I always recommend to customers to reduce vendor tie-in, not to increase it (which is a particular case of a higher end rule, that of not sacrificing independence of opinion and choice unless there is an absolutely life-or-death reason to). As a consequence, I always recommend on the side of keeping Document Management outside of the realm of EC (and proprietary document formats as well), building seamless conduits for documents to make it in and out of the collaboration platform, and avoiding private desktop documents as much as possible. That means that yes, you will occasionally need to import into your EC environment a few files that are part of special processes (e.g., mechanical design) or that are used as interface between your organization and others (the usual spreadsheet or slide deck), but most other documents should be kept as richer, shareable, continuously updated web content.</li>
</ol>
<h2>The three pillars of collaborative workspaces</h2>
<p>The three columns introduced below each take care of three key collaboration objects: knowledge, communications and content.</p>
<p><a href="http://onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/ec2.png"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-37" title="ec2" src="http://onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/ec2.png" alt="The three pillars of workspaces: content, knowledge and communications" width="499" height="373" /></a></p>
<h3>Knowledge Management</h3>
<p><strong></strong>This group of functions allow individuals and groups to <strong>represent, access, integrate, share, publish and consume knowledge, by leveraging different models of interaction and organization</strong>, whether it be wikis, blog, forums, micro-blogging, shared-note-taking, application-sharing, white-boarding, co-creation and co-edition, or any combination thereof, whether executed synchronously or asynchronously.</p>
<p>Knowledge is increasingly represented by meshes of objects (nodes and users) and large numbers of typed relationships between them; to accommodate this representation, this layer also includes knowledge management artifacts such as taxonomies, semantic tagging, synonym and glossary management, topic maps and ontologies.</p>
<p>Also critical to knowledge management is the representation of individuals&#8217; trust and expertise, as a critical qualifier of knowledge; therefore, the knowledge management layer also includes (or in some cases <strong>should</strong> include) assistive technologies such as reputation management, network mapping and analysis automated relationship management for users. </p>
<p>Typical functionality delivered by the knowledge management column include:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Content interaction models</strong> – Asynchronous models reign today (Wikis, blogs, forums, chat, twitting, mobile note-taking), but synchronous modalities are also being explored with interest (e.g., simultaneous co-editing, white-boarding, others). Regardless of the results, the list will probably keep growing, as different interaction modalities are explored, and standards for the core models will emerge;</li>
<li><strong>Knowledge representation and discovery services </strong>– Semantic tagging, tag clouds, smart tags, topic maps, ontologies and other abstraction technologies  that improve on the limitations of flat text and links by automatically (or collectively) creating metadata about content, and thus facilitating its management;</li>
<li><strong>Expertise location</strong> – Assistive technologies that assist in finding not only the right piece of knowledge, but rather the right resources that may be used (i.e., instead of finding an article on item XYZ, find the person who writes the highest rated articles on XYZ and semantically related concepts).</li>
</ul>
<div>Knowledge is the currency of collaboration, and thus the specification of requirements for this phase is crucial to long term success. Elements like reputation management, metadata management, conduits to relational data, light workflow support, and such, will be hard to bring about in use cases unless the requirements team has deep experience in other knowledge management projects; that is the case because otherwise many use cases will be created in too simplistic terms. For example, unless you have had previous experience with communities, the need for users to be able to rate and qualify every component of the platform, from files to documents to layouts to people, may seem a nice to have; however, as volumes grow, such reputation management mechanisms are absolutely indispensable to implement collaborative filtering, which allows highly rated (i.e., high quality as chosen by the community) elements to &#8216;float&#8217; to the surface, and poor ones to get &#8216;buried&#8217;).</div>
<h3>Communications Services</h3>
<p><strong></strong>Support for fluid communications between knowledge workers and/or themselves and/or applications, utilizing transport-based channels operating in both synchronous (VoIP, chat, conferencing, IM, etc.) and asynchronous (email, SMS, RSS feeds, streaming, faxing, multicasting, etc.) modes. </p>
<p>In the previous paragraph, the inclusion of applications as participants in communications is not accidental, but rather crucial, as more and more components of corporate knowledge is managed directly by automated systems: the capability to integrate those information channels into the collaboration system is a crucial capability for collaboration (e.g., your group may want to make sure that data from your SAP or Oracle applications can seamlessly integrate into collaboration processes via web services, and that setting up such flows is as simple as possible).</p>
<p>Despite the fact that today&#8217;s commanding communication modalities are text-based, a <strong>quickly growing</strong> number of technology-assisted interaction modalities and channels will almost certainly change that, balancing text-based interactions with other types, most of them mimicking person-to-person interactions, but some of them originals in their own ways (e.g., twitting). Each modality in turn carries with it artifacts of its own (filters, feed subscriptions, buddy lists, etc.), which can make channel proliferation more of a problem than a solution.</p>
<p>Functionality that falls in the communications layer includes:</p>
<ul>
<li><span style="line-height: 12px;"><strong>Synchronous channels</strong>: Chat, desktop conferencing (voice, video and converged);</span></li>
<li><span style="line-height: 9px;"><strong>Asynchronous channels</strong>: Email, RSS, notification services, unified messaging, etc;</span></li>
<li><span style="line-height: 9px;"><strong>Web services</strong>: Capabilities required for integration of application data into collaboration processes;<br />
</span></li>
<li><span style="line-height: 7px;"><strong>Contextual communication artifacts:</strong> Ability to initiate multiple possible channels of communications with specific individuals wherever mentions of those individuals is made (e.g., contextual menus in Outlook wherever a recognized user smart tag is displayed, including calendar info, telephone numbers, presence information, email addresses and such, all of them &#8220;live&#8221;). Also, unification of multiple communication modalities under &#8220;smart client&#8221; applications, in order to reduce the complexity introduced by too many communication channels to master and control;</span></li>
<li><strong>Other artifacts and services</strong><strong>: Additional services that are needed in order to maximize the contribution of communications to collective knowledge, such as recording, playback and podcasting, participation and delivery tracking, filing, conversion and indexing, subscription and filtering, channel convergence and switching, and much more.</strong></li>
</ul>
<p>Since communication is so crucial to creating knowledge, it would be expected for a corresponding level of support by Enterprise Collaboration products and platforms. Unfortunately, that is not the case: even for mature channels such as email artifact management is very poor and spotty. That creates several adoption and implementation problems, as users have to learn and internalize different gestures and usage patterns for different channels, as if they all were different processes, when in reality they are ultimately all producing the same transfer of information across space and time. That is probably the reason why, for example, a very valuable communication mechanisms such as NetMeeting was part of Windows for years with minimal usage and impact (now in the process of being removed and replaced by a more generalized set of services).</p>
<p><span style="line-height: 7px;">There seems to be increasing awareness about this problem in the part of vendors, as reflected by the hype around unified communications, unified messaging and such, as well as by early awareness about possible &#8220;interaction platforms&#8221;. Unfortunately, vendor interest is almost certainly more related to gaining a seat in the banquet devoted to devouring the spoils of analog telephony (a.k.a. &#8216;unified communications&#8217;, UC2, etc.) than produced by an interest to advance the state of the art in communication standardization.</span></p>
<h3><strong>Content Management</strong></h3>
<p><strong></strong>This functional block supports all activities and workflows related to <strong>content discovery, access, creation, storage, sharing, modification, distribution, archival, publishing, and consumption</strong>. I use the term <strong>content</strong> with its generic meaning of &#8220;contained information&#8221;, making no explicit distinction between on-line or desktop containment, structured and unstructured, single- or multiple-file. Such wide definition follows my approach to this taxonomy: when people collaborate outside of the Enterprise Collaboration platform, they may use a statistical table, a picture, a beautifully formatted document, or a piece of music to collaborate. The same should be possible in enterprise collaboration.</p>
<p>As with communications channels, the coverage of different types of content by different content management functions is quite uneven: while 70% to 90% of corporate content is said to be unstructured, only structured data stored in database enjoys wide coverage. But the movement to standardized levels of management regardless of content type (i.e., towards the &#8220;content platform&#8221;) is being fueled by more and more stringent compliance requirements, and hopefully will become reality sooner than the &#8220;interaction platform&#8221;.</p>
<p>While waiting for the emergence of a unified content platform, there is one distinction between types of content that remains highly disruptive for collaboration platforms, that which separates <strong>desktop-stored</strong> content (from office documents to sound-casts, video, multimedia, collaboratively created content, CBT, and more) – which reside usually in individual computers – and <strong>online</strong> content (e.g., wiki pages, blog posts) that reside on servers. The characteristics of both types of content are very specific: while desktop-stored content is private, application-specific (and in many cases proprietary as a result), of linear flow and using fairly elaborate formatting, online content is shared, somehow not-application dependent (through the use of common tagging languages such as textile and its derivatives), possibly enriched by strong hyperlinking and non-linear flow, and simpler formatting. The distinction is quite important to the product selection process because Microsoft collaboration product, SharePoint, puts special emphasis on Office documents as the unit of content, whereas other collaboration vendors such as Atlassian, JIVE, and others excel at managing sophisticated and rich online content (with IBM somehow in the middle). </p>
<p>The distinction, however, will grow increasingly blurry, as desktop alternatives emerge that deliver the best of both types and are identical across the desktop-server divide (See &#8220;<a title="Evernote: Further blurring the line between desktop and online content" href="http://onshi.com/2008/06/what-is-your-workspace-vision/">Evernote: New collaboration modality?</a>&#8220;), <strong>without</strong> the need to preserve proprietary differentiations. </p>
<h2><strong>Column Dynamics</strong></h2>
<h3>Convergence</h3>
<p>We have said that the core of collaboration is people sharing, accessing and interacting with each other, as well as with each others&#8217; knowledge; in real life, those activities are closely intertwined, and in some cases indistinguishable. For the same reason, the lines between the three functional blocks above sre not always clearly delineated: the three categories keep weaving into each other and converging into each other. Because of that convergence, some services, tools and infrastructure components participating in ECPs are hard to classify, and will become increasingly so. Particular examples are conferencing (collaboration and communications), presence services (communications and collaboration), unified messaging (Content and communications), etc.</p>
<h3>Channel proliferation</h3>
<p>As channels and collaboration modalities keep proliferating (and in most cases entering the enterprise via sneaker-ware – consumer adoption by its knowledge workers) collaboration platform vendors are faced with the need to integrate management of the new channel or modality into their products or leaving it outside of the collaboration process. This makes the planning process increasingly difficult; in general, the best response is to avoid single-vendor lock-in and favor standards-based approaches (easier written than done, unfortunately).</p>
<h2><strong>Context Services</strong></h2>
<p><strong></strong>Context Services is the functional block most visible to users, and a visible differentiation between enterprise collaboration products; this layer creates maintains for users a workspace metaphor that anchors those users&#8217; experiences into a certain context, or perspective. Those contexts are equivalent to views into a database: many virtual views can be implemented based on the same core data, all of them different. That is particularly the case with EC products (which are, after all, database applications), because the context or metaphor used for collaboration is highly influential upon the type of collaboration that will result (if any).</p>
<p>Workspaces are the experience of virtual spaces presented by ECP&#8217;s to users, as a way of providing a physical metaphor that can both make the collaboration experience more intuitive <strong>and</strong> at the same time anchor other services (and specially the artifacts that represent them) in a common metaphor. For example, in social-centric workspaces usually favor views of the system centered about the user looking at them, her previous activities and her choices for the things she wants to be presented with. In document-centric workspaces, preferred views are those of sites where lists of documents, users and/or artifacts are presented, and collaborative-content-centric views favor rich views of content available for access. Finally, future &#8220;workspace 3.0&#8243; work currently going on (the term is mine, and arbitrary) is creating virtual reality workspaces where the commanding metaphor is physical, and where artifacts somehow try to leverage physical metaphors as well: the artifact for a phone connection in such a workspace is the 3D representation of a phone. These &#8220;views&#8221;, just like database views, are totally independent and arbitrary, and not usually exclusive.</p>
<p>For example, if the main &#8220;view&#8221; (or context) for a given system is implemented as activity- and project-based workspaces, with strong ties to task management, calendar, GANTT charts, and milestones, that project-centric view will influence strongly how users leverage the system, and will to a great extent determine the user interface as well, which will become technical, centralized, hierarchical, with lots of controls (many attributes are important in project management) and unforgiving as it relates to lack of precision. A conversation-centric workspace, on the other hand, will clusters its functionality around relationships, friends, conversations, discussions, issue discussion and consensus, and such. The user interface may become much simpler, and the view for the user will be almost certainly self-centered even when still concerned with her activities, contacts, on-going tasks and so on. In one, the user will feel part of a structure, in the other she will feel the center of the space.</p>
<p>Considering that enterprise collaboration products are still quite immature, the current state of affairs as it relates to supported collaboration contexts seems to be either-or. It is common to read and hear from practitioners that &#8220;SharePoint is document-centric&#8221;, &#8220;Clearspace is conversation-centric&#8221;, &#8220;Confluence is wiki-driven&#8221;, &#8220;Connections is activity-centric&#8221;, and so on.</p>
<p>Today, when most collaboration products are benefitting from the hype surrounding collaboration to fight for territorial expansion (as many customers as possible, as fast as possible), each vendor touts the success of its selected context as proof that it is THE context that makes sense&#8230; but is that necessarily the way to go? Couldn&#8217;t or shouldn&#8217;t all collaboration products support ALL of them?</p>
<p>I believe (but have no way of supporting the opinion) that ultimately all collaboration products will support ALL contexts for collaboration, including some that are not generally available yet outside of specialized domains (e.g., virtual reality worlds used for online games).  I take my clue, again, from the way normal collaboration works: supporting only one modality would be equivalent to a person saying &#8220;No, I am sorry, but unless we follow strict project management methodology i will not let you help me wash the dishes&#8221;.</p>
<p>Some of the key functional categories delivered by the context layer include:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Workspace management</strong>: The ability to instantiate new workspaces in an ad-hoc, planned and/or automated manner, populate them with adequate artifacts, communications channels, workflows and content resources, and maintain them for as long as needed, preserving their state across time in the process;</li>
<li> <strong>Templates, workflows and components</strong> for quick initialization of particular types of workspaces, based on the purpose of the collaboration (i.e., team meeting, light project management, consensus-building discussions, documentation writing, etc.);</li>
<li><strong>Best practices</strong> to enhance collaboration around common functions and processes;</li>
<li><strong>Roles and responsibilities support</strong>, through the automated creation of content structures and personal workspaces that reflect common needs of users with well known </li>
</ul>
<p><span style="color: #0000ee; text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/ec3.png"></a><a href="http://onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/ec3.png"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-38" title="ec3" src="http://onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/ec3.png" alt="Managing the context of collaborations" width="499" height="373" /></a><br />
</span></p>
<p>The contextual layer is the &#8220;magic&#8221; one in the collaboration stack, because it creates the &#8220;illusion&#8221; of co-location and synchronicity, even if individuals are continents and time zones away from each other. The trick doesn&#8217;t need to be detailed and immersive from a virtual reality point of view: we are all familiar by now to the intense emotions that can be experienced while reading a posting in a discussion forum or wiki, even if we have never met the other person, or know much about her: to the reader, she is present while he reads, no more or less than if they were in the same room.</p>
<p>However &#8220;magic&#8221;, it&#8217;s important to note that virtual workspaces are just starting to evolve; by any standards, today&#8217;s workspaces are primitive and cumbersome to use, based mostly on text, and mostly serial in workflow. Most of these limitations are caused by the limitations of today&#8217;s &#8220;universal&#8221; thin client and the lack of vendor commitment to &#8220;playing by the rules&#8221; of already available standards (specially for communications, such as XMPP, SIP, SIMPLE, etc.). As those limitations are eliminated in the next ten years, workspace metaphors will:</p>
<ul>
<li>Abandon today&#8217;s myopic attachment to emulating narrow-band interactions (just like the traditional example of building over-dimensioned steel bridges that sank under their own weight, just because all engineers knew was how to build with wood);</li>
<li>Deploy assistive technologies and artifacts in standard ways that may become intuitive to all (as opposed to having to hunt all over the user interface to find the correct widget for the interaction modality that the user has in mind). </li>
</ul>
<p>At that point, EC products will start to realize their very unique potential to give birth to<strong> massively distributed collaboration, </strong>supporting collaboration at a scale, scope and demographics that are not nearly possible in co-located cases (i.e., &#8220;massively distributed collaboration&#8221;, a term coined by Mitch Kapor). I personally believe that, despite all the energy and attention wasted by the early hype on the transformational power of the Internet, massively distributed collaboration does have the potential for significantly transforming culture and society, and ECPs will carry those transformations inside the enterprise as well.</p>
<h2><strong>Collaborative Application Services</strong></h2>
<p>Despite the strong focus on end-user services, the &#8220;golden pot&#8221; of ECPs is the integration of collaboration services into back-office enterprise applications such as SAP, Oracle Apps, etc. I have already described as an attribute of the content layer the ability to bring into collaborations data from those app: this functional block reverts the direction and makes it possible for collaborative workflows and services to be intertwined into the operation and workflow of back-office applications, creating in the process hybrid applications.</p>
<p>The power of such hybrid collaborative applications was validated many years ago, as IBM rolled out Lotus/Notes as the first true enterprise collaboration product. Soon afterwards, users started leveraging and implementing Lotus/Notes integration into back-office apps: according to recent industry surveys are one of the most critical barriers to switching to other collaborative platforms for most users still holding to Lotus/Notes, despite willingness to do so. Not surprisingly, Microsoft&#8217;s is very busy promoting similar integration capabilities in their Collaboration Platform, and trying to create IBM-to-Microsoft migration scenarios in which the collaborative services of one are replaced by those of another.</p>
<p>The collaborative Application Services (CAS) later is defined in terms on<strong> integration points, API&#8217;s and web services</strong> that can be used to selectively invoke collaborative processes from other applications, using multiple client types. Thus, the important attributes of this layer are programmability, architectural separation and customizable behavior, transforming the individual components and services of the EC product into a toolbox to be leveraged by other enterprise applications.</p>
<p>Effectively, the CAS functional block marks the dividing line between enterprise collaboration products and enterprise collaboration platforms, because this layer makes it possible for collaborative activities to become part of the workspace, regardless of process or activity, as opposed to a distinct activity that users conduct.</p>
<p><a href="http://onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/ec4.png"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-39" title="ec4" src="http://onshi.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/ec4.png" alt="The whole stack" width="499" height="373" /></a></p>
<h1>Summary</h1>
<p>The result of this exercise is a first-order taxonomy that looks as follows:</p>
<p>Enterprise Collaboration</p>
<ul>
<li>Core Services
<ul>
<li>User Management</li>
<li>Group and Relationship Management</li>
<li>Artifact Management</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Supportive Services
<ul>
<li>Knowledge
<ul>
<li>Content interaction models</li>
<li>Knowledge representation and discovery</li>
<li>Expertise and resource location</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Content
<ul>
<li>Integration</li>
<li>Discovery</li>
<li>Access</li>
<li>Creation</li>
<li>Storage</li>
<li>Sharing</li>
<li>Modification</li>
<li>Distribution</li>
<li>Archival</li>
<li>Publishing</li>
<li>Consumption</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Communications
<ul>
<li>Synchronous and asynchronous channels</li>
<li>Web services</li>
<li>Contextual communications artifacts</li>
<li>Other artifacts and services</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Context Services
<ul>
<li>Workspace Management</li>
<li>Templates, pre-defined workflows and components</li>
<li>Best practices</li>
<li>Roles and responsibilities</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Collaborative Application Services
<ul>
<li>Standards</li>
<li>APIs</li>
<li>WEB Services</li>
<li>Protocols</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
<p>In a coming article, we will take it from here into more detail. Also, the writing of this taxonomy made me realize how immature the collaboration market is (and my understanding of it as well): I found it infinitely more difficult to try to create an abstract taxonomy than addressing the need with a pre-defined scenario in mind, as when I go over requirements for a collaboration deployment with a customer. As a result, I expect the taxonomy above to go through several improvement passes, and I would welcome your input in the matter.</p>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/07/what-are-the-basic-elements-of-enterprise-collaboration/">What are the basic elements of Enterprise Collaboration?</a></p>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Jul 2008 21:33:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Carlos Caballero</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Sorry, I got targeted for spam by some moron, and in the process of deleting the 200 or so junk comments y deleted all previous VALID comments. At some point I&#8217;ll recover them from backup, but I am very busy right now.
My apologies
Post from: Online shared intelligence; copyright &#169; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.Comments [...]<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/07/comments-succumbed-to-spam/">Comments succumbed to spam</a></p>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sorry, I got targeted for spam by some moron, and in the process of deleting the 200 or so junk comments y deleted all previous VALID comments. At some point I&#8217;ll recover them from backup, but I am very busy right now.</p>
<p>My apologies</p>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/07/comments-succumbed-to-spam/">Comments succumbed to spam</a></p>
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		<title>Enterprise collaboration: huge advances, some confusion</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 13 May 2008 22:55:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Memory lane on enterprise collaboration: many years went by, buzz-words getting old and refreshed, problems have not changed much: a hierarchical corporate culture of control and power<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/05/enterprise-collaboration-huge-advances-some-confusion/">Enterprise collaboration: huge advances, some confusion</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have worked for the last eleven years on collaboration-related endeavors, working for early enabling vendors, exploratory startups and practitioners, and seen the field of collaboration go through a decisive evolution, from fuzzy-warm-feeling-term to widely adopted, hugely transformational product category. A balance after these years has to include:</p>
<ul>
<li> Huge advances &#8211; Not a buzzword any more, collaboration will be one of the most important IT concerns for 2008, and has fierce grass-root adoption at the consumer level;</li>
<li>Confusion &#8211; Now that it&#8217;s proven as a valid concern, collaboration has been wrapped together with too many other concerns, specially some coming from the communications side, and it&#8217;s easy to lose perspective of what is real (collaboration) and what is fodder (the always-hyper-connected workforce, communicating in twenty different channels and modalities at the same time, and at the same time having time to collaborate productively).</li>
</ul>
<p>Here goes a timed perspective, from my eyes and memory, of some of what has happened in these last eleven years.<span id="more-25"></span></p>
<h2>1997 &#8212; Technical Collaboration&#8230; uhhh?</h2>
<p>In late 1997, as a VP of Marketing for Starbase, I remember customers&#8217; and media&#8217;s skepticism and resistance when we &#8220;audaciously&#8221; used the new term of <strong>technical collaboration</strong> to describe StarTeam; &#8220;Since when is source control a collaboration issue?&#8221;.</p>
<p>People who were not users, and did not &#8220;get&#8221; StarTeam, would look at the threaded discussions that were part of the product, and their eyes would glaze, trying to understand what the heck was a discussion doing in the middle of so much source code. Some times, we could tell those people &#8220;Look, you can tie together the source you produce and change, with your discussions and comments about it, then you can use those discussions as threads to understand changes&#8221;, and in one out of five cases people would get it.</p>
<p>The same would happen with tasks, project management, and other &#8220;superfluous&#8221; team collaboration mechanisms that were surfaced through the product&#8217;s user interface; people expected a technical product to be&#8230; well&#8230; <strong>technical</strong>, and &#8220;collaboration&#8221; was not something techies did. Then again, that was 1997, and &#8220;techies&#8221; were just coming out of generations of changing applications using COBOL, one copybook at a time&#8230; Perhaps all that was needed was time to go by?</p>
<h2>2000 &#8212; Communities and Reputation Management</h2>
<p>Fast-forward to 2000; collaboration had become hot, <strong>specially between developers</strong>. During a very short six months or so, I was assigned to try to help create one of the first hosted development environment for corporate and open source developers (yes, the two terms don&#8217;t make sense together, and that&#8217;s probably why it didn&#8217;t work out); the venture was a spin off Starbase, located in Scotts Valley.</p>
<p>Think about it, collective, hosted, collaborative development, all very progressive concepts, just at the dawn of open source&#8230; Who would say that collaboration had not arrived? </p>
<p>Just before jumping on board of the new venture, I had been dabbling with my friend Pierre on the issues of Communities and Reputation Management (through a couple of early community portals called VoteZone and Grapevine respectively, both of them experimenting with community and reputation management strategies, both of them piloting the user-centered approach to content that has now come to be called social networking).</p>
<p>In the process, I had become first seduced by the potential of massive collaboration portals, then nauseated by the asinine waste of energy produced by anonymity and large clouds or flaming bozos and robots, and finally elated by the capability of good reputation management to maximize the first by controlling the second; all that remained was just for massive collaboration (now called social networking) to start happening, and new wonderful things to evolve from it&#8230; It didn&#8217;t take a rocket scientist to understand that reputation management was a basic pre-requisite to civil behavior online, in the way to online virtual societies&#8230; Right?</p>
<p>So, I thought that it would be a good idea to bring reputation management into the hosted development environment&#8230; It just made so much sense, considering the social outlook of hosted collaborative development!</p>
<p>Did the acceptance of technical collaboration bring about tolerance and understanding for reputation management? Did social concepts pile up neatly as bricks, or did each brick need to be justified on its own? Did I succeed? You would think so, but you couldn&#8217;t be further from the truth if you tried.</p>
<p>I remember bringing Pierre to our offices, so that he could discuss with the two leading technologists in the company (let&#8217;s call them Jason and Jeff, to simplify)&#8230; J&amp;J, bright and progressive as they were, two bright kids who believed themselves to be ahead of the pack as it related to collaboration, cooperation, and the social potential of the Internet, spent two hours fighting against the idea, and never gave themselves a chance to understand it.</p>
<p>It was a really sad meeting to attend: for Pierre and I, having experienced the power of reputation management first hand, the discussion was not about whether it made sense, it was just how to make it happen as fast as humanly possible; a total no-brainer!  Anything else would be equal to a world where everybody uses the same mask, the same voice&#8230;</p>
<p>But J&amp;J didn&#8217;t even want to understand what reputation management was about; collaboration was a sticky buzzword, anybody could see that it was a good thing, but nobody wanted to get into the details of how to enable it, and this reputation management thing sounded like it required true discipline and thinking&#8230; <strong>Collaboration</strong><strong> couldn&#8217;t be that hard, could it?</strong></p>
<p>In other words, collaboration had undergone a long journey, but only the buzzword had established itself as something that &#8220;made sense&#8221;. A few practitioners had developed working, vivid experiences, but they were at that point just anecdotal book material, stuff &#8220;that other people do&#8221;; nobody disputed the power of collaboration, but some people were still fired for trying to get it to work&#8230;</p>
<h2>2005 &#8212; Communities, wikis and blog &#8212; The practitioners&#8217; challenges</h2>
<p>Another fast forward to 2005. As a brand-new consultant for a $1Bn software company, I am asked to put together a business initiative for a platform and business process to support a &#8221;cloud&#8221; of external user communities (with a projected maximum number of over a hundred individual communities, most of them for users of a specific product, others clustered around specific industry issues important to the company&#8217;s customers).</p>
<p>The initiative was clearly articulated (I will summarize the most salient points in a separate posting), approved after 30 minutes of review by the executives&#8230; and then <strong>buried two or three levels below anybody who could give ANY meaning to the phrase &#8220;executive sponsorship&#8221;</strong>, the sine-qua-non of successful communities. </p>
<p>Not surprisingly, while buried, not much progress was made in the communities front; but a few things started happening in a parallel front,<strong> internal collaboration</strong>, where I was kept busy  rolling out an internal R&amp;D collaboration platform, using <a href="http://www.atlassian.com">Atlassian&#8217;s</a> <a href="http://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/">Confluence</a> wiki platform and <a href="www.microsoft.com/sharepoint/default.mspx">Sharepoint</a>.</p>
<p>Sputtering, with many vacillations, internal collaboration started to happen; many content structures and workflows were started, some of them dwindled, but some prospered, and soon the &#8220;breeze could be felt&#8221; as we moved towards the tipping point. Having been involved in several such projects in the previous few years, I must say that despite the lack of an internal collaborative culture, budgetary support or executive sponsorship, this tipping point came much faster, with fewer hiccups, and in an obviously more sustainable manner than previous ones, <strong>even when the preceding ones were better positioned in those three critical fronts</strong> (internal culture, resources and sponsorship).</p>
<p>Pure luck? Perhaps&#8230; After all, I always preferred to be lucky than good. But the key component, which was not there before, was the awareness about collaboration and web 2.0 on the part of the users, and a desire (almost an impatience) to give it a try. Collaboration had already sneaked into their collective subconscious, it wasn&#8217;t just something that <strong>could</strong> be done and was good, but rather something that <strong>was being done</strong>, and why shouldn&#8217;t they? I must clarify that  I am not talking about a leading bunch of bleeding-edge developers of web 2.0 platforms, but rather average corporate developers, mostly developing database applications, and IT operations management tools: as representative a sample as can be asked of the median US developer population. </p>
<p>On the external collaboration front (communities), after months spent customizing <a href="http://www.jivesoftware.com">JIVE</a> <a href="http://www.jivesoftware.com/products/jive-forums">Forums</a>, doubtlessly the best community product available (and the one with the most robust reputation management functionality), so that it could manage hundreds of independent communities, things were still sputtering.</p>
<p>This was 2007, and I was asked to help revive the project; by then, ten years after we used &#8220;technical collaboration&#8221; at Starbase for the first time, and with collaboration shining always brighter and brighter, you could expect both projects (external and internal) to have been smooth sailing, mostly routine&#8230;After all, these <strong>are</strong> the times of collaboration, right?</p>
<p>Of course, you would be wrong again if you were too optimistic; but not by as much as before. Sure, &#8220;executive sponsorship&#8221; ended up becoming &#8220;lukewarm tolerance&#8221;; &#8220;hundreds&#8221; of communities shrunk to &#8220;a handful of very small groups&#8221; as soon as it became obvious that communities required corporate, executive and participant commitment; and most people didn&#8217;t even get it: just as I right this post, as an example, I got an email from somebody inside the company who has worked all along in the communities initiative, asking me to clarify &#8211;for the hundredth time in three years &#8212; when do people use a wiki, a blog, a forum, why, and what for&#8230; </p>
<p>Yes, it wasn&#8217;t as great as expected. But on the other hand, thousands of page views a day on the knowledge base, close to a hundred individual contributions a day to the wiki, healthy metrics in all communities, and such, meant that <strong>despite apathy, internal politics and lack of direction</strong> people who want to collaborate found a way to do it, once they had the right tools and infrastructure.</p>
<p>One thing is for a company to have a &#8220;friendly&#8221; environment, another totally different is for it to have a &#8220;collaborative&#8221; one. But one thing is certain: take a friendly environment, make a few good collaboration tools available, and some collaboration hotspots WILL appear. And they did: pockets of collaboration started happening, brewing and interacting amongst themselves; collaboration<strong>s</strong> started taking place, and nobody was surprised when it happened (or, more critical yet, challenged because of it).</p>
<p><strong><span style="color: #ff9900;">Nota Bene:</span></strong><span style="color: #ff9900;"> On the subject of &#8220;</span><strong><span style="color: #ff9900;">friendly vs. collaborative</span></strong><span style="color: #ff9900;">&#8220;, I believe that one of the most insidious challenges faced by enterprise collaboration is that executives in &#8220;friendly-culture companies&#8221;, who know nothing about collaboration, somehow believe that people in their company </span><strong><span style="color: #ff9900;">already do</span></strong><span style="color: #ff9900;"> collaborate (&#8220;After all, this the most friendly company I know&#8221;), and because they think so they quickly reject the idea of investing on it (more on this in another posting).</span></p>
<p>In any case, between 2005 and 2007 I saw collaboration become part of the workplace landscape; actual people, inside a normal, perhaps just slightly more conservative environment than could be expected in a large company, where using collaboration day in and out as intuitively as they would use a phone. Just something you do, and of course, something you want to do with the best tools possible.</p>
<p>In those three years, I also grew the realization that *enterprise* was more than just a qualifier for collaboration, that it is its own thing, something related to collaboration but not just a flavor of it (I will write about that later). I saw many companies going through the process of implementing collaboration inside the enterprise, collaborated with several of them, and realized that it was just a matter of time (actually, a year or two) before it became as accepted as email is today&#8230;</p>
<h2>2008 &#8211; The target keeps moving</h2>
<p>This year (i.e., 2008) should be a record-breaking year for collaboration; everywhere I turn, I talk to companies where collaboration is the next big roll-out, taking place *now*, in 2008. </p>
<p>Knowledge architects, managers and executives in companies that used to call me every few months trying to fetch new arguments and to convince themselves to get going, are now in advanced deployment of collaboration platforms and tools.</p>
<p>Collaboration went from niche activity (only for techies) to visionary business goal, to tolerated &#8220;fuzzy investment&#8221;, and it&#8217;s now entering the status of *basic need of all knowledge workers*. But somehow, in the process of becoming a standard fixture, it got a little fuzzier.</p>
<p>At first collaboration was about getting people to <strong>*work together*</strong> across geographic fractures, time zones and systems, *working together* was just that, sharing a few artifacts, creating temporarily permanent spaces where to contain the results of their work (even if it was a directory in a file server), looking at a common page together and calling it &#8220;state of things&#8221;.</p>
<p>Then, web 2.0 platforms such as forums (JIVE Community Server), blogs (WordPress), wikis (Confluence), social networks (Clearspace) started to hit, and collaboration started to be characterized by workspaces (permanenet or ad-hoc), &#8220;where&#8221; teams would collaborate (there is no real &#8220;where&#8221;, but it&#8217;s a &#8220;where&#8221; nonetheless), would create content together, discuss, enact simple workflows, log activities, perform simple GTD or small-group-agile-task-management, where attachments could be the report you were looking for, and you would find them by navigating a tag cloud, or by locating with some degree of effort the expert on that subject covered by that report, and so on.</p>
<p>The issue moved from <strong>what</strong> collaboration was <strong>to how to better combine</strong> all the different ways that knowledge workers do collaboration.</p>
<ul>
<li>Is it a blog, a forum, a wiki, a page, a portal or a database? <strong>YES</strong></li>
<li>Is it social, reputation driven, profile enabled, expert-locating, intranet, extranet or medianet? <strong>YES</strong></li>
<li>Is it work, is it play, is it conversation, is it social, or is it just a waste of time? <strong>YES</strong></li>
<li>Is it unified collaboration, unified communications, or unified collaboration and communications? <strong>YES</strong></li>
</ul>
<p> Not surprisingly, the soup is confusing. A ferocious hype storm, fed by the chance to reap a chunk of the trillion dollar telco market by reinventing (retro-inventing?) telephony as data, is now converging with the very legitimate running train of collaboration.</p>
<p>The results of this hype confluence is, of course, more hype, more confusion, people talking about huge stacks of software, servers, network components and telephony layers as if they were <strong>a system</strong> (which they are not, they are just a soup of systems, but not organic in the sense that telephony has learned how to be).</p>
<p>Not surprisingly, early adopters will be burnt severely because of their optimism, but in the whole nobody cares, because the hype storm is raging.</p>
<p>It is dangerous for collaboration, a market that has grown slowly for so many years, solely because of its own merits (there were no IBM&#8217;s, Microsoft&#8217;s and Ciscos pushing wikis or collaboration up to 2006, were there?). It is dangerous because it is been attached to grandiose big-bang visions of complete technology stacks that go from the hardware all the way to the apps actual people use, and in all directions in the organization, to encompass all activities they conduct today (or may dream to conduct in the future).</p>
<p>Grandiose, all-encompassing visions are usually the fruit of megalomaniac egos (personal or corporate), just another twist in the world domination fantasy. Those small groups that laboriously, sometimes almost clandestinely, managed to create collaboration hot-spots, may see them extinguish as many IT drones fall under the seduction of &#8220;automatically managed presence&#8221;, &#8220;VoIP network self-optimization&#8221; and the like, and those drones start implementing pervasive and intrusive communication channels that few people need across all layers, start intertwining them with back-office applications (so that you can now have the immense pleasure of talking to a voice enabled server to try to explain to it that your access to some system is blocked), start bothering the hell out of everyone in the name of collaboration.</p>
<p>But it could be good, also, if communications modalities that people <strong>do</strong> <strong>use</strong> get seamlessly integrated into their collaboration workspaces. After all, clicking on my name where it appears under a posting of mine on a wiki, to send me a message immediately, seems to make sense, doesn&#8217;t it? It could be good if those that have not even given a chance to collaboration (those that reply with an email to a voice message <img src='http://www.onshi.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' />  all of the sudden find themselves doing it, not even knowing they are doing the collaboration thing.So, it&#8217;s confusion time. The right ingredients are there for hugely successful collaboration efforts, and also for huge failures (which will probably be blamed on the &#8220;inmaturity of collaboration&#8221; when boards need heads to chop after them).</p>
<p>Considering how much is at stake, I&#8217;ve decided I will start writing more posting about this issue, hopefully one a day, to try to clarify my own confusions and in the process help somebody as well. For now, let&#8217;s leave it at this precariously optimistic point, where eleven years of trying to enable and foster collaboration seem to start bearing fruit&#8230;</p>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/05/enterprise-collaboration-huge-advances-some-confusion/">Enterprise collaboration: huge advances, some confusion</a></p>
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