Author Archive

Do you need a webcare team?

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

helpdesk2At the Dutch National Architecture congress (LAC2009) we have given a talk on the organizational and architectural aspects of introducing Web2.0 tools. One of the main issues we discussed was how to support your employees to make responsible use of social media and how to deal with negative responses, complaints or online discussions about your brand that are getting out of hand. One of the interesting approaches companies such as ING and UPC are experimenting with is a webcare team.

A webcare team monitors online conversations on Twitter, blogs and other social media and has a strategy on how to deal with various types of negative responses via social media. When necesary, they can join the conversation, offer support, provide facts or anything else to steer things in the right direction. But it is not just about customer care, the webcare team can also do PR (discovering and preventing issues) and marketing (educating customers or providing feedback to product development).

Why do companies actually care about what is being said in social media? More and more companies realize that, in line with the Cluetrain Manifesto, “markets are conversations”: customers trust opinions of friends a lot more than they trust company websites, and they use information about products and services found on social media to make informed choices.

Who should be in your webcare team?
From the type of work a webcare team has to do, it should be clear that this is not a job for the IT department. Instead, people from marketing and corporate communication should be involved, and maybe even experts on your products and services. Pick your team from people who understand the norms of social media and are able to respond from a personal perspective. As such, your manager PR and corporate communication is probably not a good candidate for the job.

The tools of the trade
Webcare teams get more and more tools to discover what is currently being said about their brand, products and services. Important tools of the trade are Google Alerts, Twitter search, Technorati and Google blog search. These tools are all aimed at discovering relevant online conversations, without having to spend the whole day looking.

What is a smart social media strategy?
Unfortunately, there is no universal recipe for a smart social media strategy yet. Nevertheless, an important starting point is to accept each opinion as such, and not call opinions into question. As with any employee that takes part in an online conversation, the norm is to identify yourself as an employee of the company and behave accordingly. Also it seems important not to be drawn into online discussions: seek direct communication with the person behind the complaint. For more inspiration on social media strategies, I suggest you take a look at the IBM Social Computing guidelines.

I would like to hear your experiences with webcare teams!

The slides of our talk (in Dutch) are available via slideshare:

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Method: bias storm

Monday, November 9th, 2009

The bias storm is a method we apply at the start of collaboration, when the people who have to collaborate come from different backgrounds, cultures or organizations. The method aims to get prejudices they might have about the other in the open. Talking about these prejudices helps to understand the other and clears the road for fruitful future collaboration.

How it works
This method should be used during the initial session of people who have to collaborate. Immediately after the initial round of who is who and why are we here together today, form pairs of people from different backgrounds, cultures, organizations or whatever barrier you wish to level. Ask these pairs to write down on sticky notes what prejudices their colleagues might have against people from the other “side”. It is important not to ask what prejudices they have; as that might result in only the politically correct responses. While they are writing these down, walk around and stimulate them with questions such as: “What did your colleages say when they heard you had this session?”.

After a few minutes, when you notice that “the popcorn stops popping” ask the people from one “side” to read out what they have written down. Write key terms on a big piece of paper. Try to defer any defence (“I would like to react on that…”, “Let me put that straight…”) to the next phase. Then ask the people from the other side to read out what they have written down and collect their key terms on a different piece of paper. Then start the next phase by just asking “Who would like to react?

Our experience is that this method is a powerful starter for cross-organizational collaboration projects.

(c) photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/agharti

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Comparing tools for cross-organizational collaboration

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Since one of our customers would like to experiment with close collaboration across organizational boundaries (discussing information), I am currently comparing a series of tools. The table below represents my findings from testing the different alternatives. The information in the row “User friendliness” is subjective: it indicates how easy I could find my way around the tool. If you see information in the table that you consider to be not correct, please let me know or post a comment. (more…)

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Social media products

Friday, July 24th, 2009

connecting-professionalsBased on our experiences with doing workshops to discuss the social media landscape and facilitating experiments to gain hands-on experience with these tools inside organizations, we are now developing three concrete FWS products around social media:
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FWS track record online

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

FWS_thingyWhile this website shows our trackrecord, we have summarized some of the results we are most proud about in a few slides. Note that more information on the Future Workspaces innovation programme, including this slideset can also be found by clicking on the “About FWS” tab.

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FWS track record

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009
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Business Twitter 101

Monday, July 13th, 2009

twitterIn her blogpost Twitter for Business FAQ, Meryl Evans discusses a range of questions people might have when starting with Twitter for business purposes. Unlike our focus on Twitter inside organizations, she focusses on using microblogging for communication with customers. Nevertheless, we see some similar questions pop up. For instance the question “Do you recommend having separate Twitter accounts for business and for personal use?” was raised in our experiment as well. And we provided a similarly ambivalent answer: in general, it seems better to use only one Twitter account to avoid fragmentation of conversations over multiple accounts and to increase the number of messages per account. However, when you are also microblogging on politics, religion, sports or other emotionally charged topics, it may be smart to separate that from your business account.

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Connecting Professionals with Social Media – Presentation

Monday, July 13th, 2009

connecting-professionalsThe Dutch architecture forum held a symposium on Web2.0 in the Enterprise. As part of the programme, I talked about our experiments with using Twitter to increase cohesion in business teams. Although we performed only two proper experiments, the evaluation questionaire and workshop yielded some interesting outcomes:

 

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Rabo Unplugged klantcase: gebruikte methodes

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

12182008_oostplein_0031Tijdens de Rabo Unplugged klantcase zijn verschillende methoden toegepast. Hieronder staan de verschillende methoden op een rij, om een beeld te geven van onze aanpak.

  • Startmeting. Elke Future Workspaces klantcase begint met een startmeting. Het doel van deze meting is om een ijkpunt vast te stellen: hoe gaan de individuen in het team om met informatie (welke strategieën hanteren ze) en hoe gaan ze om met kennis delen. Verder stelt deze startmeting vast welke typen kenniswerk de teamleden doen en worden persoonlijkheidskenmerken gemeten. Dit laatste is bijvoorbeeld relevant om uitspraken te kunnen doen over de effectiviteit van verschillende strategieën en technologieën voor verschillende typen mensen. Bij wie is de kans groot dat een wiki of een blog aanslaat?
  • Interviews. Aan het begin van de Unplugged klantcase zijn een reeks interviews uitgevoerd met de leden van het Unplugged team. Het doel hierbij was om een beeld te krijgen van de situatie waarin het team zich bevindt, waar quick wins te bereiken zijn en om belangrijke randvoorwaarden voor de interventies boven water te krijgen.
  • Cultural probe. Dit middel heeft als doel om input te verzamelen vanuit het Unplugged team over wat zij op dit moment al echt Unplugged vinden aan hun manier van werken en waar dat nog te wensen overlaat. Bij de cultural probe is een tiental Unplugged medewerkers gevraagd om gedurende een aantal weken foto’s te maken van situaties waarbij ze het gevoel hadden echt Unplugged bezig te zijn, maar ook van situaties die niet bij de Unplugged filosofie passen. Door hiermee bezig te zijn en de resultaten met elkaar te bespreken, begint feitelijk al een interventie.
  • Workshops. We hebben een workshop georganiseerd om de Unplugged leden de resultaten van de cultural probe te laten bespreken en een workshop rond Unplugged samenwerken. Deze workshop diende om ervaringen, tips en trucs rond nieuwe manieren en tools voor samenwerken binnen het team te delen.
  • Inspiratie bieden. Om de Unplugged leden zelf en bezoekers van de Beneluxstaete inspiratie te bieden over de mogelijkheden van innovatieve (virtuele) hulpmiddelen hebben we twee richtingen gevolgd: 1) informeren van de Unplugged leden via e-mail en presentaties, en 2) door concrete prototypes te laten zien op de Werkplaats – de plek waar bezoekers (van binnen en buiten de Rabobank) een kijkje kunnen nemen in de toekomst van Rabo Unplugged.
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Dutch Tax Administration – Cross-organizational collaboration

Monday, July 6th, 2009

belastingdienstThis case is focussed on supporting the Dutch Tax Administration in collaborating with fiscal advising organizations as part of the Horizontal Monitoring initiative. The purpose of Horizontal Monitoring is to come to an effective method of monitoring by the Tax Administration, where trust and openness are key terms. In this pilot we explore the possibilities for innovative shared workspaces to make collaboration between the Tax Administration and a selection of fiscal advising organizations more effective and efficient, while stimulating openness and trust.

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