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Posts Tagged ‘Enterprise 2.0’

How has Premier healthcare alliance lowered cost of care and improve quality with StreetSmarts®?

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009 by info@streetsmarts.com (Dave Batt)

Today we announced a press release demonstrating how StreetSmarts® helps lower the cost of health care delivery whilst improving quality across the Premier healthcare alliance of more than 2,200 hospitals 63,000-plus other healthcare sites working together to improve health care quality and affordability. The sharing of on-demand knowledge and collaboration and best practice amongst community members has helped them instantly share clinical knowledge and experience across their community. Premer Inc have also taken the solution wider and now we are pleased that the platform is being used across multiple intitiatives both at home and overseas. You can read the press release here

The Wild World of Web 2.0 in the Enterprise

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009 by davebatt

I read a highly interesting article by Dion Hinclliffe today on the 14 Reasons why Enterprise 2.0 Projects Fail . Whilst talking to our own prospects and customers and examining their challenges, they seem to corroborate the top level findings mentioned in Dion’s blog.

The key challenges for organizations that we hear about are how to scale initiatives that start at a work group, team or department level, usually independently of IT and how organizations usually end up creating yet more silos of information rather than unifying knowledge across silos. And of course there are security and compliance concerns associated with Web 2.0 initiatives for an enterprise. For example, who is the owner of content? What is deemed as authoritative information? And how is information kept relevant and up to date? All of these factors need to be considered when considering initiatives that are enterprise caliber. Tom Reilly is a leading Learning Leader in the Chicago Area and CLO for a leading financial institution.

Watch his insightful video about Web 2.0 in the Enterprise .

ASTD video on training reinforcement for sales professionals

Monday, August 17th, 2009 by info@streetsmarts.com (Dave Batt)

Brian Lambert, Director of Sales Training Drivers for the American Society for Training and Development (ASTD) shares valuable insight in his video on how they enabled knowledge automation and encouraged informal learning and collaboration for sales professionals and sales training professionals for their training reinforcement and sales effectiveness initiatives. He discusses how his organization looked to unify information across their knowledge silos to ensure that information was distributed with agility and speed in a manner that sales professionals like to consume. Brian also discusses how they ensured content was of quality and relevance to their users, how they overcame traditional IT and operational concerns during deployment and also outlines the speed of deployment of the StreetSmarts® solution. View the video at http://www.streetsmarts.com/solutions/training-reinforcement

What Every Organization Ought to Know About the Millenials and Knowledge Management

Monday, July 27th, 2009 by davebatt

I read an interesting article by Steve King on the New Knowledge Artisans.  The article succinctly summarizes some of the changes happening in the workforce today, driven by the growth of the Millenials or GenY and their need for knowledge collaboration in the workforce. This is particularly relevant considering the baby boomer generation are approaching retirement age and taking with them key knowledge, expertise and insights gleaned through years of experience. What does that say to organizations that are looking to build true learning organizations and believe that the true area of sustainable advantage lies in the knowledge that lies within an organization? If that knowledge is walking out the door as a generation of the workforce approaches retirement, how best do organizations retain this key knowledge and impart that in a manner that is going to prove meaningful to the next workplace entrants?Millenials

The Milennials are more demanding, more collaborative and have grown up accustomed to the use of technology. They actually have access to more sophisticated technology outside their working environment and feel limited and even restricted with anything less. So the question remains, how do organizations best appeal and engage with the new young talent entering the workforce and how do they appropriately manage and map to their motivations and provide them the best tools to learn and collaborate on the job to retain and grow intellectual capital?

Facebook is a really interesting public facing social tool, not only because it has amassed a large follower audience but how it has appealed to this new demanding generation. What makes Facebook so interesting is how it draws people in to constantly throughout the day. It’s a platform that draws people in and through the power of collaboration and community and is like a drug to many. Now imagine the typical organization software application and the usual challenges with growing user adoption. Many a software company could well learn from the Facebook example when it comes to user adoption, use and reuse. So what’s the real point of this? Learning within organizations is in a state of flux. This is being driven by an entirely new demographic who have different needs. To thrive in this new world order, organizations need to rethink how they appeal to this new talent and how they capture and disseminate knowledge in a manner that appeals to the collaborative thirst of these NetGens. But they need to do this in a manner that appeals to the organizational requirements as well. Organizations have to strike the right balance between nurturing the free form collaborative nature of networks yet continue to maintain the quality and accuracy of knowledge that is created and disseminated. It’s a fine line and not all social web 2.0 tools are applicable to an enterprise as a result. At the end of the day, enterprises are toiled with seeking ways to drive higher organization performance through their talent, motivating and nurturing them to improve themselves and their organizations as well and develop the till now the informal learning that has been so challenging to address, until now.