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Social Networking at the Office

In mid-January Facebook hit the headlines with (and receivedĀ decidedly mixed reviews on) the announcement of their ā€œFacebook at Workā€ offering,
which is essentially a walled-garden version of Facebook with access restricted
to those in your company. Aside from that important distinction the list of
features seems pretty much on a par with the larger Facebook we all know.

With this product offering Facebook joins an enterprise
social network marketplace that already contains some big names: Microsoft,
IBM, Cisco and SAP amongst them.

I can see the benefits of these platforms in terms of
collaboration, messaging, and the like ā€“ but Iā€™m certainly glad that my
responsibilities donā€™t include the realization of those benefits for my
company. The scope of the behaviour change required to make the most of those
tools falls into the category of ā€œculture shiftā€ in my mind, and that stuff is simply
not where my expertise lies ā€“ itā€™s a task that goes way beyond technology and
business process folks like I.

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Where I work, weā€™re now on our second enterprise social
network. Weirdly, the first one hasnā€™t actually gone away ā€“ everyone has simply
stopped talking about it (and we all stopped using it long ago). The
implementation of the first one ā€“ I feel ā€“ was probably driven by technology
folks. I say that because from a technical perspective it works great, but
nobody ever told me what it was for. Apparently Iā€™m not alone in my confusion,
because it never really saw any significant usage.

Things are looking a little better for the new one. For one,
itā€™s integrated into our enterprise learning environment. At first that seemed
weird to me, but now that I think about it that makes perfect sense: learning
and development in the modern enterprise is increasingly something you do at
your own pace (to a certain extent), in your own office with the door closed
and headphones on. Itā€™s crying out for something to bring back some of the
social aspects that are lost now that technology has begun to make
classroom-based training sessions a thing of the past, and I hope our training
teams pick up this ball and run with it. Additionally, thereā€™s a movement
underway to build on our corporate culture and do a better job of leveraging it
for the benefit of our customers. Open, social communication that transcends
our geography is an important part of that cultural evolution too. The time is
right, then, for a platform to make this happen.

Nevertheless, people were burned by the failure of our
previous platform to gain traction, and thereā€™s a healthy amount of skepticism
out there. Again, nobody has really told me what the new platform is for or
given me examples of how I could use it to my benefit.

A quick conversation with my boss about this last week
brought me to an important realization. Why am I waiting around for someone to
tell me what this platform is for? Iā€™ll decide what itā€™s for! Iā€™m even starting
to think the lack of guidance and instruction might be a deliberate choice made
in the interests of organic growth and buy-in fuelled by self-realization
(although, frankly, I still think itā€™s the wrong choice if thatā€™s the case).

I plan to encourage my team to shift some of our non-time
sensitive group communication out of Outlook and into the social space, and I
sincerely hope it catches on. I think that would be a good starting point for
us, and as I said at the top, I really do see the benefits of a platform like
this. Iā€™m putting my own skepticism firmly aside in the interests of trying to
steer my group toward the realization of those benefits that this platform
could represent. Weā€™ll see how it goes!

Hopefully I wonā€™t be around to see the
introduction of a third enterprise social network. I wonā€™t be so generous if I
am.