Posts Tagged ‘Enterprise Collaboration’

“Getting Things Done” in the Enterprise

September 10, 2008

This is cross-posted with ReadWriteWeb where I will be occasionally writing on the Enterprise Channel.

I recently attended the Office 2.0 Conference in San Francisco. The highlight for me was the first session where Ismael Ghalimi interviewed David Allen, the author of “Getting Things Done.” The book and associated methodology highlight the need to capture and organize ideas and tasks in a structured way. The interesting question for me is how to make it work on an Enterprise or company level.

One theory of Getting Things Done (GTD) is that it is impossible to “really” concentrate on more than one thing at a time. Therefore, a system like GTD helps juggle the competing tasks to organize and prioritize them. As you can imagine, the bulk of the conversation centered on Office 2.0 type tools that can help facilitate this process. David is an avid user of Jott for example. He uses it to capture his thoughts while driving so he doesn’t force his brain to keep a running list. What struck me after listening to him in the keynote and subsequent panel is that the tools are actually the least important part of successfully getting things done. Practitioners of GTD in the Enteprise world probably use an infinite number of tool combinations including Outlook Tasks, Jott, iPhones, Text notes, Lotus Notes, etc.; you get the idea. What is fundamentally more important is the discipline and commitment to do it.

We all have different levels of both and our respective individual success will vary. What I find interesting is to figure out how to make a group practice GTD consistently. There is no silver bullet but the following factors need to be addressed:

  • Management commitment - There is no way that an entire group will practice GTD if the management team is not fully committed and emphasizes it every day. Managers (and team members) need to conduct meetings with GTD principles and plan work in the same way
  • Training - GTD is a clever methodology that leverages alot of common sense. However, if a group is going to adopt it and use it in the course of business, they need training. For no other reason, the need to speak the same language with each other is critical. For example, if I tell you I’m going to put that task in my One Week Action List, you better know what I mean
  • Incentives – People must have incentives to adopt this system in a consistent and lasting way. GTD could be baked into employee’s MBOs, team goals, public recognition opportunities, whatever. There has to be incentives and measurement for true adoption
  • Tools - As I mentioned earlier, the actual tools can vary widly. In the panel discussion I attended, there were several vendors (Enleiten, Mindjet, bllist) who utilize GTD concepts in their products and/or methodologies. There is even a GTD plug-in for FireFox. Whatever tool a company decides to use, they must use it consistently and ensure it fits into how people work. Otherwise, I guarantee it will fail

Does your company practice GTD? How does it work?

Another Key to a Vibrant Community

July 31, 2008

It is important to structure group sites that correspond with how people work and what they think about.  In a previous post, I discussed making things very clear for users on where to collaborate on topics.  I’m taking it one step farther and providing a very specific example of how this could work for a common situation.

This site is an internal collaboration site for a software company.  The site started with the sales and marketing teams, and other teams have joined along the way.  The site utilizes SSL and Active Directory integration for extra security.  It has the following groups and permissions inside the site:

  1. Competition – this is a private group for the sales and marketing team to gather information and field stories about the competition.  People can add discussions, emails, and competitive documentation so the team has one place to go for information on the competition.  They could also create a wiki page that lists the most effective points to make against specific competitors that can change over time.
    1. If there are one or two main competitors, you could create separate groups for each one to provide even more focus.
  2. Demonstration Best Practices and Scripts – this is a private group for sales engineers to swap best practices, scripts and other deliverables associated with providing demos during the sales process.  Other groups like Professional Services and/or Support might participate in this group to answer questions to help improve or troubleshoot demos.
  3. Feature Requests – this is an auto-join group where anyone in the site (all company employees) can log and discuss feature requests.  This way, everyone can see what others have suggested and lend their opinion as well.  It also gives the product marketing team an effective way to communicate with requestors and company employees about upcoming features.  It is a great feeder to a more formal product management process.
  4. Healthcare Vertical – this is a public group that anyone can join who either works or is interested in the healthcare industry.
    1. You can have as many of these as you want, depending on your company or products.  You could also have geographic and/or regional groups.
  5. Marketing Newsletters – this is an auto-join group with manager only posting. It can serve as a repository for all newsletters that only marketing can add.  You can post the newsletters as HTML so they will look and read exactly like the customers received.
  6. RFI (Request for Information) Q&A – this is a private group for the sales and marketing teams to contribute RFIs and RFPs they’ve received and submitted.  It is an excellent way to create an easy-to-use repository and add specific questions and discussions.  You can also add a wiki page with the standard company answers for the most common questions, and then adapt and modify them over time as the market or competition evolves.
  7. Sales Administration – this is a private group for the sales team.  It contains policies, procedures and administrative announcements that are relevant to the sales team.
  8. Sales Tools and Collateral – this is a public group for sales and marketing, but other employees can join if they are interested.  It is a manager posting only group so only named sales and marketing personnel can add content to the group.  However, the group is configured so others can reply and ask questions about the content posted.  This group might include presentation templates, white papers, datasheets, etc..
  9. Win-Loss Reports – this is a private group for the sales team to post win-loss reports and discuss them as a team.  It is an excellent repository so people can look for similar customers and situations and learn from their colleagues.

There can be other groups like Company Watercooler, Announcements, Knowledge Base, etc. that are auto-join groups and apply to the whole company or team.

The list above list represents groups closely associated with a sales and marketing team.  You can easily imagine similar kinds of groups if the group were Professional Services (Best Practices, Integration Materials, etc.), Customer Support (Product Bugs, Scripts, Training, etc.) or other knowledge-based teams.  I hope this helps you visualize how using specific groups within a site can help teams and companies collaborate more effectively.

GroupSwim Review on Collaboration Blog

March 12, 2008

A prominent blogger in New Zealand recently reviewed GroupSwim. His name is Michael Sampson. He focuses on Enterprise Collaboration and Virtual Teams in his writing. We really like his material. The two things about GroupSwim he likes the most are our Semantic Engine and Inferred Expertise Identification. Check the post here and let us know what you think.