Posts Tagged ‘Trends’

Focus on user adoption, not software features

November 12, 2008

This is a blog post from ReadWriteWeb, where I occasionally contribute.

I sat through a very interesting presentation at the OpenAir User Conference. The key takeaway was a statistic on achieving enterprise software success.  Contrary to most of what we cover on blogs, marketing, demos, etc., effective user adoption is the absolute best predictor of enterprise software success.

According to a study done by the Sand Hill Group and Neochange, the most critical factor (70% listed as number 1) for software success and return-on-investment is effective user adoption. Software functionality came in at 1% surprisingly, with organization change at 16% and process alignment at 13%. This is a remarkable result. You can have the best software in the world, with the most sophisticated features, analytics and integration, blah blah blah, but if people don’t use it, it isn’t going to add value. I can’t tell you how many RFPs and software selection processes I’ve been involved with in prior lives that focus almost exclusively on tiny little, “knat’s ass” features that few people if at all will ever use. This study shows that focusing so much on features is missing the boat entirely.

This finding is very interesting for all kinds of applications, including consumer applications.  Features very rarely make someone take to an application or not.  Moreover, I doubt most software companies really take user adoption as a holistic approach into account when designing their applications.  If this trend is accurate (and my experience tells me it is), then I think it has very interesting ramifications on how software should be designed, sold and implemented.  User adoption is typically something that comes at the end of a cycle.  This says it should be one of the most important elements of the entire process.  Please share any opinions or war stories that either confirm or refute this conclusion.

Reaction to OpenSocial

November 2, 2007

We at GroupSwim see tremendous potential in the power that the OpenSocial Project will offer both developers and consumers of social applications. GroupSwim is dedicated to initiating and supporting open standards that emerge in the social application and community space.

With Google taking the lead, and generating impressive industry support, we see both positives and negatives as a potential supporting developer. Read/Write Web has a nice, concise piece on the pros and cons of a Google led initiative in this area. We are less concerned about the 3rd point that Marshall raises about lack of IT support and questioning why we don’t use micro-formats and existing standards. To that last point, the existing standards and micro-formats have not been sufficient to create a powerful, yet easy user experience.

What we like about the OpenSocial Project is it puts a stake in the ground TODAY. We are not going back and forth in committees, arguing personal agendas. This can go live (as Plaxo proved) today if you are interested. This point of immediate availability needs to be tempered by the questions Marshall raises in his Read/Write post. The issues of Google control and a write-only API need to be addressed as the list of partners begin supporting the spec.

GroupSwim will support the OpenSocial Project in a future release of our product. We are cautiously optimistic that the OpenSocial Project will be one of many open initiatives that will continue to allow users to take charge of their information across many different environments.