Social Notworks?
Wed, March 10, 2010 at 01:14PM I was at a business dinner last night and we spent some time talking about the relative merits (or not) of peronally using or allowing our team members to utilise social networks in the office.
This article from AdAge Digital was really timely therefore when I read it (at work) this lunch time. Seems there are really good reasons to be in the enlightened 'allow' camp, But most of the guys last night were in the 'restrict' corner.
Around the table last night were (for the sake of explaining the 'research panel' composition) : 4 Americans, 2 Germans, 4 Brits. All aged 30s or 40s. All either digital, studio or Systems / IT professionals. Most (to my surprise anyway) were dismissive of using social networks (for social network read Facebook as that is the one everyone cited).
Most also didn't 'get' twitter.
Interestingly though, they all used I.M a lot to liaise with team members / colleagues globally (time zones allowing) and also in the same office for instant project chats etc.
One of them did use twitter as it seems I do , namely to get quick updates on trending tech / digital topics, to seek recommendations from industry experts etc. E.g more a work related tool than a purely social / entertainment tool.
So I guess the guys I had dinner with would fall squarely into 90% of Info tech managers who deny or curtail staff usage of social networks. That's the figure from a recent Economist report, as cited in the AdAge article.
So it could be that my Dinner partners' curtailment could stifle collaboration between in-house teams, industry partners, intelligence-gathering from their competitor set etc.
And to my mind it may also stifle intellectual rigour and professional development .
I can't substantiate that - I'm proclaiming that form behind the weight of the Economist and also AdAge - other than to say I've learnt both useful detail and also broad marketing / technology trending insight in the last 12 months or so alone from reading expert blogs and using twitter.
One thing I've done though is switch off tweetdeck and other clients as that was a distraction on my monitor - I actively attend to microblogs or full blogs or Google stuff when I get any down time or when I need to research stuff - but it is at work not just at home.
Some of us in te digital space at work also tried a Wave group from a collaboration point of view (and talked of trying yammer). We also used NING fairly successfully on one initiative. But none ultimately progressed that far. A mix of sharepoint , email and I.M sill seems order of the day as it works well.
What do you think? How do you use twitter at work? Used any in-house / private collab platforms ?
Mark |
Post a Comment |
blog,
social media,
twitter in
Social Media,
Twitter 




