Nobody into your cool collaborative technology that could revolutionize your business if only more people would use it? Learn about frank's top 10.5 barriers to organizational and tech change and how to overcome them. We've got proven tools, tactics and strategies to help. Plus we'll hit the unspoken issues that sabotage sustainable 2.0 success.
Enterprise 2.0 can increase efficiencies and help meet business objectives but it can also generate competitive advantage. To create higher levels of value, the use of web 2.0 technologies needs to be linked to other organizational enablers, eg HR and management practices, organization design, OD interventions, other communication, leadership (communityship), facilities design etc.
Cloud is emerging as one of the key disruptive technologies that had proved itself in the SMB market. Enterprises are beginning to look at the cloud paradigm for operating and development cost reduction. Another disruption has occurred in the higher education arena, where brick and mortal traditional higher education offering has been supplemented by online education programs. This session will look at the case study of adopting a cloud as a foundation platform for deployment of online higher education programs.
Connect, Engage, Empower: How Compuware Corp. Leverages E20 to Achieve Alignment and Transformation In early 2008, Compuware Corporation, a global leader in application performance monitoring software, faced new challenges in engaging its workforce of 6,000 employees spread across multiple continents. The world economy and other market factors forced Compuware leaders to rethink their corporate strategy—uncovering innovative ways to meet tough customer demands, decreasing budgets, and a changing landscape of competitors and potential partners.
To engage employees in this transformational shift, Compuware turned to Covisint, a global leader in on-demand connectivity and collaboration, to develop its Reverb technology solution.
Cloud is emerging as one of the key disruptive technologies that had proved itself in the SMB market. Enterprises are beginning to look at the cloud paradigm for operating and development cost reduction. However, there are number of lingering questions whether cloud is ready serve as a strong technical foundation for enterprises. This session is going to look at the number of advanced concepts related to Enterprise Cloud deployment: Provisioning, Monitoring, Load Balancing, Scalability, Failover and Data Recovery
Will trust and 2.0 co-exist? Gradually, openly exchanging information develops trustworthiness, but 2.0 means generating and sharing information at dazzling speeds. Does that affect your ability to create trust? Research, including Maister's trust equation, suggests certain behavior fosters trust. Does virtual behavior? Come explore trust at the speed of 2.0
Individual business users are leveraging cloud-based solutions, even completely ignoring on-premises software installed by IT to address core business functions. YouSendIt founder Ranjith Kumaran can powerfully address these fundamental shifts, as well as the more recent impact of private cloud development.
Collaboration, social media, Enterprise 2.0 – while all of us forward-looking companies are trying to out-buzzword each other, we’re alienating our potential customers with jargon that only confuse and intimidate. Let’s discuss how shifting our message to focus on solutions and benefits will help drive the adoption of Web 2.0 technologies from the consumer up to the enterprise.
Normal 0 0 1 59 338 2 1 415 11.1282 0 0 0 When it comes to the enterprise, content is king, which is why it’s imperative for businesses to have a way to access, manage, collaborate on and share their files before considering social computing tools and services. Otherwise, simply connecting people isn’t going to get the job done, but instead lead to information overload and worker inefficiency. Come debate where ‘social’ fits in the business world.
Service Experience Management: The Agile Customer Experience Enterprise 2.0 is more than tools and technologies. It is a set of practices, supported by new technologies, which allow for agility, change and decentralized management across support organizations. We will explore how KANA 10, a technology based on a service-oriented architecture and composite applications, supports improved service experiences, tailored to segments of customers in decentralized environments.
Virtual world technology is in the early stages of adoption in most organizations, if they are using virtual worlds at all. This session will discuss various ways that virtual worlds are already being used in enterprise and 10 reasons why your organization should be exploring the use of virtual worlds today.
Taking a somewhat unique approach, MITRE decided to deploy a "business networking" research platform on our DMZ to allow us to network and collaborate both within our enterprise and across sponsor and partner organizations. We are making enterprise customizations to an open source social networking platform (Elgg) to address security, information sharing policy, external user management strategies, organizational scaling, relationship management, and business functional requirements. We are also assessing the business value and new business models it affords.
With unabating buzz over Twitter and enterprise microblogging you'd think microsharing must be new. Tell that to the birds. Or a 3-year old bursting forward nonstop. What’s fresh is how deceptively simple tools connect people and ideas better, farther, wider, faster. Hear what's on the horizon from companies creating enterprise microblogging solutions and how people in organizations around the world are using these tools in remarkable ways. So far, panelists include Timothy Young , @timyoung (CEO & Founder, Socialcast ), Eugene Lee , @eugenelee (CEO Socialtext ) and Gita Gupta ,
The disciplines of knowledge management went through a number of stages during the late 1990s. By 2000, the work of many individual practitioners, consortia like the Institute for Knowledge Management and APQC had derived a set of critical success factors. That set of success facts sounds very much like the factors now being brought up as "new learning" in Enterprise 2.0 deployment:
High-level sponsorship
A network of early adopters
Resources for facilitating communities
Addressing the "ROI" question
The importance of managing culture
and so on. Let's learn from the past and from a bunch of folks who have been there, done that. This panel will bring together some of these practitioners to share early lessons in KM that can be applied to Enterprise 2.0 at the same time that it will speculate about what is truly different about E2.0.
Panelists: Doug Cornelius, Chief Compliance
SaaS and cloud computing represent an evolution in application delivery and usage. The model is maturing as processing power, speed, security and scale reach levels comparable to those of on-premise solutions. Still, moving to the cloud isn't for everyone, nor is it ideal for every aspect of business.