In this podcast, Len Devanna, Director of Web Strategy for EMC Corporation, gives CIOs a series of key takeaways about deploying social media both inside and outside a company’s firewall.
Devanna has spent the past ten years helping build out EMC’s online ecosystem, with responsibility for the global deployment of EMC’s intranet, extranet, and internet offerings. He also provides general web consulting across the $13+ billion enterprise, and guides selection and deployment of emerging Web 2.0 technologies for the company. Most recently, Devanna oversaw development of EMC ONE, an internal community designed to connect EMC’s global workforce and promote enterprise 2.0 techniques.
EMC ONE grew out of a 2007 effort to find ways social media could help a global workforce of 40,000 employees work more efficiently and become more closely engaged both in their own jobs and with the company as a whole. Devanna says EMC created EMC ONE “from the inside, because it was clear that we’d be better off first understanding how social media worked internally, and how we should participate in a Web 2.0 world. That prepared us to thrive in Web 2.0 outside EMC, because after all, our employees are the voice of our brand.”
Launched in October 2007, EMC ONE today has more than 12,000 active users, and about 10,000 lurkers who follow the conversations. The site includes 8,000 blogs, 10,000 wikis, and 6,000 discussions across 180 communities, as well as individual people pages. The discussions range from competitive intelligence to product marketing strategies to deep technical brainstorming. The site’s virtual water cooler provides a place where employees can speak about anything. EMC ONE generates about five million pages each month.
Devanna says that if he had to develop the site over again, he wouldn’t change a thing. He urges CIOs to start deploying social media inside the firewall. “Social tools are extremely easy to deploy,” says Devanna. “If IT organizations aren’t out in front of this, their user communities will take matters into their own hands, out of necessity. You’ll wind up with hundreds of inconsistent unstructured offerings with no ability to connect and realize the true value.”
EMC’s internal social media policy is relatively straight-forward. Devanna says, “Before we launched the site, we discussed how closely we should moderate the conversations and user content. We decided, instead, to let the community police itself. To date, we haven’t had one single incident of improper conduct.”
Devanna says that metrics for Web site usage, such as number of page accessed, don’t demonstrate the true value of social media. Metrics such as a decrease in travel or a reduction in e-mail traffic provide a more tangible indication of social media’s payoff, but quantifying the real value of social media precisely is difficult to do. According to Devanna, “I can fire up EMC ONE any time of the day and see hundreds of real-time conversations occurring on a global scale. People are coming together to exchange ideas and concepts across geographies, divisions and organizations. The real benefits are more qualitative than quantitative – and they’re preparing us to thrive in an E2.0 world.”
In this podcast, Swaminathan goes into detail about the following:
how four technology trends drive the elastic business model;
what challenge businesses will face deploying the elastic business model among a wide spectrum of different generations in the workforce;
how communication will change from a need-to-know model to a good-to-know model;
and why the workplace of the future will resemble the open source community.
Every year, Accenture, the global technology service and outsourcing firm with $23.9 billion in revenue for 2008, does a thorough analysis to identify the major technology trends that will change the underlying business models and capabilities. In 2009, research conducted by Dr. Kishore Swaminathan, Accenture's chief scientist, identified four major trends that will define the technology landscape over the next five years: Internet computing, data management, mobility, and convergence of unified communications, collaboration, community, and content distribution. He says, "These technology trends will give businesses a new capability that we call elasticity. They will allow every aspect of a business -- from IT to businesses process to how a company innovates -- to be more flexible, and to expand, contract and change, depending on current market conditions."
To derive more revenue and business value from this elasticity, businesses must get all of these four technologies just right. Take Internet computing, For example. Swaminathan says that transformational technology trends often pose a dilemma for CIOs who now face a possible change to their applications, the enterprise architecture, or the business models. "You have several choices: You can commit to a major change that will take much time and money, and you won't see much business value right away. On the other hand, you can ignore the trend or put it aside, and then you can wait until you have no choice but to spend a lot of money and embrace the new trend. Many CIOs need to go experiment and get comfortable with things, such as how to source storage, or software as a service (SaaS). They have to understand the pros and cons."
Swaminathan says that many CIOs he has spoken with have a visceral reaction to SaaS, especially with security and data privacy issues. He adds that the visceral reaction is fine. "Ultimately, CIOs have to make a business decision based on solid empirical data. They have to get Internet computing right in the long run, but for the short term they need to experiment, gather as much data as possible, and learn about the model. Unless they are comfortable with a new technology, they shouldn't put in it on a critical path."
Accenture definitely practices what it preaches about technology trends. In fact, Accenture acquires as much first-experience with a technology before deploying it. Swaminathan says, "We try to determine if we have a successful model or not." Accenture's approach to collaboration mirrors this practice. The company has created a version of LinkedIn, called PeoplePages, where more than 100,000 Accenture employees have already posted their professional profiles. Swaminathan says the site enables employees to find communities or individuals with certain expertise. Meanwhile, the company has begun a project to put its collective knowledge into the Accenture Encyclopedia, modeled after Wikipedia. He says, "We're encouraged by the progress we have made to date." Accenture also has developed its own version of YouTube, where employees can use video to convey difficult concepts and then distribute those videos to colleagues.
Bio Dr. Kishore Swaminathan is chief scientist at Accenture where he defines the company's technology vision and helps to set the company's research and development agenda. He also heads Accenture's Systems Integration research located in the United States, France, and India. Swaminathan joined Accenture in 1990, taking a position in Accenture's Center for Strategic Technology Research. He has a bachelor's degree in technology and aeronautical engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology of Madras and holds a master's and a Ph.D. degree from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He was a Smithsonian Fellow. Media outlets ranging from ABC Evening New to The Wall Street Journal have featured his work.
In this podcast, Marie Hattar, Cisco’s vice president of network and security systems solutions and a social media devotee, talks about some of the company’s key social media initiatives and the benefits they provide; the challenge of dealing with the security issue that surrounds social media; the role of the almost-forgotten Second Life concept; and the types of social media products the company is developing for the marketplace.
Consumer products companies such as Procter & Gamble aren’t the only ones reaping the benefit of social media. A world leader in networking, Cisco Systems isn’t resting on its laurel when it comes to Web 2.0 tools and technologies, especially social media. The company is integrating social media with customer and partner communications. This approach includes using Facebook to leverage the AXP developer Contest and other groups to grow new communities.
For example, the company is also linking Cisco Twitter followers with Facebook, as well as communicating through blogs (Cisco Geeks), cross-promoting social media sites on invitation, banner ads, etc., outreach through YouTube for User/Partner/Sales submitted segments, communications through the LinkedIn Cisco professionals Group, and more. One of the more interesting things Cisco has recently done is launching The Realm, a multi-dimensional, animated webisode campaign that consists of super hero security characters and villains that Cisco developed with well-known Marvel Comics illustrator Mike Mayhew. The characters are linked to real-life Cisco engineers, as well as its products, but uses entertainment to appeal to the Web 2.0 crowd.
Bio Marie Hattar brings more than 18 years of industry experience to her role as vice president of network systems and security systems solutions at Cisco. Under Hattar’s guidance, her organization creates and markets innovative routing, switching and security solutions focused on enterprise and mid-market organizations.
She has been instrumental in building security and network architectures for leading Fortune 500 companies. An industry expert in data communications, convergence, and security, Hattar was previously chair of the Broadband Content Delivery Forum and is co-author of IPServices at the Network Edge (Addison-Wesley). She holds a master’s degree in business administration in marketing from York University and a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from the University of Toronto.