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College, DCTC, education, future, internet, marketing, Minnesota, MN, sales, social networking, Training, Twin Cities, university
By Barb Mosher Zinck
The Water Cooler Goes Virtual
There are two things employees do at a water cooler (aside from drinking the water):
- Talk about their life outside of work
- Talk about their work.
It’s funny how those two things really can go together. And when technology supports the ability for employees to be both people and colleagues, innovation can happen. Now does that mean the enterprise social network is the answer? I think that depends on the question being asked.
Pisoni believes that the enterprise social network will subsume the intranet, but he said many of Yammer’s customers are already there making Yammer the hub of the company. Why? Because the traditional intranet is a static paradigm and the world is slightly less static (okay more than slightly). Traditional intranets are one-way communication tools that don’t encourage — or often even support — participation or collaboration.
Okay, I think everyone knows that the traditional intranet is pretty much a dinosaur and that changes are afoot, but does that mean the intranet is really dead and the social network is the new intranet? Pisoni says yes.
He says that the enterprise social network (ESN) enables employees to get work done, and it’s self-organizing, which means groups can form naturally around common work and/or interests. But Pisoni’s idea of an ESN is not your regular social network.
The New Intranet is the Cloud
Bet you weren’t expecting that heading, but that is what Pisoni (and Yammer) believe. He says the new intranet is the glue that holds together all the cloud apps employees bring in to help them do their jobs. It needs to be both a layer across that helps people find the resources they need to do their jobs and a place to find and share information directly.
Today it’s about social, content and the activity stream. Content means many things in this context including both official corporate and HR communications and work based information, as well as links to resources located elsewhere. The homepage is evolving as well, becoming a place where you find important company updates, relevant resources and also relevant information on work you are doing.
A Balancing Act
Pisoni believes that heavy content approvals are in the past, but where it’s required, there are other tools to support those requirements. Which also means that Yammer isn’t trying to replace your content management systems, but rather integrate with them and centralize the information you need within the ESN.
He says it’s a balancing act between being prescriptive and top down, and adaptive and collaborative. With the functionality coming out in Yammer, they are trying to find the right mix. But he does believe that being too prescriptive quells innovation and keeps people from finding the best way to work.
What About SharePoint?
Yammer will not replace SharePoint for what SharePoint does, it’s not an application development platform. The SharePoint platform contains a number of modules that make it suited for an intranet, but Yammer was designed and built specifically for many of these intranet use cases and at a much cheaper cost.
Pisoni says that Yammer has a fundamental belief that the customized intranet will go away. He believes that a highly customized solution is not adaptable or able to improve over time. This, he says, is why consumer applications/site are not customizable — they need to change to suit the needs of an ever changing marketplace.
