Elizabeth Albrycht is a 16-year veteran of high technology public relations practice and co-founder of the
New Communications Forum, a conference series designed to bring journalists and marketing and PR professionals together to learn how to use participatory communications tools. She is a founding advisory board member and is the chair of the research committee for the
Society for New Communications Research: . Elizabeth has authored articles on blogging, RSS and other new tools for a variety of industry publications, and has presented teleseminars and in-person seminars on new communications tools for PRSA and
Ragan Communications: . She often speaks about social media in both the US and Europe, and blogs about PR and corporate communications at
CorporatePR.
Dave Desforges began piloting "Work From Home" solutions over 3 years ago. His role required identifying additional candidate requirements and necessary remote work practices for both employees and managers at Sun Microsystems. His current work encompasses blending appropriate technology, organizational practices, and workplace environments to support mobile and distributed teams.
Jim McGee is currently a Director at Huron Consulting Group. He has spent much of the last 30 years working to understand, design, and apply information and technology innovations in organizations. Before Huron, Jim taught at the Kellogg School and was one of the founding partners of DiamondCluster International. With Larry Prusak, he was the co-author of Managing Information Strategically (Wiley, 1993). Jim has both an MBA and a doctorate in Information Technology, Organization, and Strategy from the Harvard Business School.
Regina Miller has more than 18 years of experience in Organization Development, Human Resources, Leadership Development and International Operations. Regina recently launched a global consultancy called The Seventh Suite which assists growing companies bolster their competitive edge via aligned strategy and progressive people practices. Her last corporate job was as the VP HR/OD for Oskar (Vodafone) which has been dubbed one of the fastest growing mobile operators in Eastern Europe. More info
here.
Giovanni Rodriguez - Through a combination of luck and persistence, Giovanni has worked in the company of some of the most interesting and colorful leaders in several worlds: the law, theater, and technology. Today, he is a principal at Eastwick Communications, a Silicon Valley PR agency, where he advises both emerging companies and market leaders on executive leadership, public speaking, marketing strategy and media relations. He has worked for, consulted and advised numerous businesses and organizations including HP, Stanford University, Fujitsu Computer Systems, Cadence Design Systems, VMware, the American Arbitration Association, and the Unified Court System of New York. He is a graduate of Princeton University (Religion and Anthropology), and he has done graduate course work at the Columbia School of Journalism and N.Y.U.
Jim Ware is a cofounder of the Work Design Collaborative and the Future of Work program. He has over 30 years experience in research, executive education, consulting, and management, including five years on the faculty of the Harvard Business School. He was the lead author of The Search for Digital Excellence, (McGraw-Hill, 1998), and holds Ph.D., M.A., and B.Sc. degrees from Cornell University and an MBA (With Distinction) from the Harvard Business School.
1. kris olsen on October 13, 2005 2:20 PM writes...
I hate to be the first and last to comment to really great posts like this, but what the heck...
You make the following observation: "...those who are charged with implementing collaborative technologies in today's organizations (usually IT/IS departments, functions, etc.) are not natural collaborators and usually don't give a hoot about the company culture, norms and ways of working."
I disagree only to the degree that IS/IT folks are great collaborators - amongst themselves.
Technology is to a developer what a blank canvas is to an artist - they just know what to do with it. This is especially true of collaborative technologies. Not so much the 'social toys' the kids are adopting, but true, web-based collaboration tools.
Non-techies need to be hand-held through the process of understanding and using collaborative tools. Facilitators who know how to 'tee up' a collaborative scenario and proactively mentor users through it are going to be very valuable commodities.
There is typically too much 'talk' about "how we're going to use such and such collaborative tool" and not enough 'walk'.
Organizations are going to have to cherry pick those opportunities to introduce collaborative tools and just do it. No talk about it - just do it. Resistance is inevitable and the plan should revolve around how to address the resistance on a continuous, proactive basis.
Sooner or later the light goes on, people are getting comfortable, and usage becomes second nature.
Less talk - more walk. Just do it.
Permalink to Comment2. Lee White on October 14, 2005 1:11 PM writes...
Kris - Have no fear, I am always willing to put in my 2 cents too...
I have lived on both sides of this equation (IT and Change Management) and I completely agree with Regina. Technology is just the tool, the organizational culture must be willing to accept the change. In addition and in support what Regina pointed out, other factors to look at include:
-The nature of the change effort, if you are trying to implement collaboration, the initiative must inherently be collabrative. Be the change you seek.
-As Kris points out, there is often good collabration within an IT group. I would contend that there is often good collabration where ever trust exists. Closed small groups tend to have higher trust than large cross-functional groups. In my mind the only way to trust in large group settings is through transparency.
-Lastly, as Seth Godin sys, don't focus on the masses, market to the early adopters that also happen to be trendsetters (or as he calls them "sneezers")
Permalink to Comment3. Frank Walsh on October 19, 2005 12:44 PM writes...
Maybe it's just me, but it seems like the comments above focus on a relatively small point because it is personal.
The real focus of the original article in my opinion is that collaboration is HARD WORK, and I couldn't agree more. Tools can only make the actions less invasive or tedious. I also agree completely that asking employees to ADD collaboration to their tool kit without any other priority shifts simply increases the burden of work on that employee.
Collaboration, whether distributed or local, requires a shift in priorities, accountabilities, and responsibilities. No IT tool can provide this shift.
Permalink to Comment4. Ahmad Reyes on October 31, 2006 8:36 PM writes...
kyogtskn
Permalink to Comment5. Ahmad Reyes on October 31, 2006 8:37 PM writes...
kyogtskn
Permalink to Comment6. Elliott Castleberry on November 1, 2006 7:33 AM writes...
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