Social Enterprise – Social Media Club Amsterdam

This week’s SMC Amsterdam theme covered Social Enterprise, this phrase is sometimes used to describe a business that supports a non-profit organisation by its activities, but in this meeting the meaning was something like “a social media-enabled business”.

The first speaker Jurjen de Lange (@jurjendelange) does not believe that enterprise can be social. Given that a big chunk of my day to day work is about social media policies, and building an enterprise social network this was a rather confronting point of view for me.

He explained that “social” for him has meanings around fun, enjoyment, free time, and helping others, while enterprise is associated with corporations, money, profit, greed. Expressed like that there’s not much overlap. You could visualise the two as completely separate spheres.

And the dictionary agrees with him.

Definition of social from dictionary.com
Definition of enterprise from dictionary.com

Sometimes it’s good to challenge your own thinking, and listening to Jurjen speak I realised his description of enterprise doesn’t really represent what happens in the office I work in. While we all work hard there is also fun, laughter, enjoyment and plenty of evidence of people helping each other. So the people are behaving socially, while working in and for an enterprise.

While the defined “social” and “enterprise” don’t appear to overlap, they do have an element in common; people.

So why is it so difficult to build social into an enterprise? Particularly a large, established enterprise – the second speaker of the evening, Edwin van de Bospoort, explained some of the challenges facing large companies.

The number one challenge is that there is no clear owner of the problem; it sits between HR, IT, communications, marketing, and business. If there’s no clear owner then no-one sees it as their problem to solve so enabling a business to become social doesn’t land on anyone’s objectives as a priority. This is certainly true, although in a large company a CIO or Global head of HR with vision can dissolve this pretty challenge rather easily.

Bigger challenges in my experience are around the business culture, if an organisation is to be a true socially enabled then everyone in the company must believe that social tools and behaviours will help them in their day to day job, be willing to share knowledge and trust each other. If you work in a company/industry dominated by regulation and policies this is extremely difficult to change.

Edwin van de Bospoort has done more than just think about the issues facing businesses wanting to adopt social tools, he’s built what looks to be a great tool for finding expertise within a company; Sciomino. It’s unusual for a SMCAdam meeting but he gave a very brief demo of how the tool works, showing how the profile can be built up from Linkedin, how the search and discover colleagues based on their knowledge. Certainly being able to find expertise and shared interests is a huge challenge in large companies, and the audience interest showed how important solving this could be. The idea of finding colleagues based on expertise rather than family name is one of the reasons we’ve been working on an Enterprise Social Network for the past two years. We’re already seeing that people can find each other faster than by the old email chains.

I believe enterprises will be increasingly social; it’s a client expectation. In order to meet that expectation companies are going to have to adopt social tools, processes and behaviours. It makes my work incredibly interesting and challenging.

 

image network

Train connection

I am writing this on a train, racing from Amsterdam to Paris. There is some doubt whether I will be able to post it from the train.

Thalys promises wifi is available on this trip. But the service is intermittent at best. When it does work it’s incredibly slow, and the whole user experience is horrendous.

Here’s what I’d like; a code included on my ticket that gave me access to the Thalys wifi network, the code could be time-limited, so only valid for the time of my journey. If it was really clever it would know when my train had arrived in Paris and only then switch off the wifi access. All the pieces to build this exist, there is no radically new technology in this.

Actually here’s what I’d really like; free open access for the duration of my journey.

What I got:
– option to select country/language
– forced to create an account, which might sound like a great way to collect email addresses except that I gave them my real email address to receive the ticket and now I’m telling them my spam account.
– asked to state my nationality and language preference (I lied)
– asked to give my name and family name (I lied)
– asked to answer a secret question (my favourite colour is green)

Then asked to login.

I got online briefly, and then off, then on, then slow, then off. On top of which I am regularly asked to login again, and if I click refresh while the wifi is not available I am thrown int the portal page… In French. Despite having specified my language preference. Twice. Just for fun something about the Thalys portal regularly crashes the browser (safari + iPad).

Good wifi seems to be very challenging to set up for large numbers of users, and doing so on a moving vehicle even more challenging. But Virgin Airlines do it. At 10,000 metres above the earth.

So it can not be impossible to have a good consistent service on a train, and it must be possible to improve the user experience of using the wifi while on board.

as predicted I could not upload this on the train, but I might have to take back a previous rant – I’m in a mid-level hotel in Paris which offers free wifi

City Design for People

Living in cities and solving the space issues is becoming more important as the world’s population grows and is concentrated in cities. Here are some ideas that could solve these issues in the not too distant future.

I live in Amsterdam, a small city compared to most world capitals, but one that has adopted some of the ideas in this video, apartments are typically small – although those the new build projects are larger, most people cycle, and there are share car schemes already (Greenwheels and Car2Go for example).

My small apartment already multi-tasks on space use, but I would like to be able adapt my living room so that it became a spare room at the push of a button – as opposed to pulling an airbed out of the cupboard, inflating it, adding bedding, and having it deflate as the guest sleeps.

5 Stars for Hotel Wifi

There’s a hotel that has gone beyond providing free wifi, they’ve built their service model around it. Of course this hotel is not in Europe, where business hotels still charge you as if wifi were a special service – instead of normal infrastructure. (I’ve complained before about European business hotels who charge for wifi.) It’s in the Aloft Hotel in Thailand. (Owned by Starwood Hotels, a US company with a range of global hotel brands).

Not only do you have free wifi, you’re handed a phone that gives you all the controls you need, can act as a local wifi station, and as a local phone – avoiding those roaming charges.

For now it does does mean a separate phone, which means carrying two phones, and the risk that the data of any webvisits and phone calls are handed back to the hotel when you check out. In the future it will be built as an app for you to download according to Fingi the company behind the technology.

If only European hotels would wake up and smell the competition.

My New Favourite Toy

I have, in the past, ranted about the gender divide in toys. Go into any toy store and there are shelves and shelves of lego pirate ships, blocks and machines all packaged in blue and featuring boys at play on their boxes. While in the girls aisle – and you can tell it’s the girls aisle because it’s awash with pink – the toys focus on household tasks, telling stories, dressing up and appearance.

Parents often express surprise at my rants and say that this is what the children want, which isn’t true – or at least, it isn’t true for all children.

I’m not the only one who thinks like this, Debbie Stirling, a young engineer has put a year into building a toy to help girls learn a simple technical concept. She’s the founder and CEO of GoldieBlox, here’s her kickstarter pitch.

Like Debbie, the reason for my concern is that I believe it plays out in the workforce and in the jobs we have. The “build” toys promoted for boys encourage spatial skills and problem solving. Exactly the sort of skills needed in many high tech jobs. I am now  hiring people born 20 years after me, effectively the next generation. The applicants are more men than women by about 3:1, and those applying with a solid technical background are invariably men.

In my ideal world children would have access to a range of toys, and be able to create their own play. In my ideal world girls and boys would learn “soft skills” through story telling and role-playing or dress up games. And boys and girls would learn spatial skills and  technical concepts through building games and toys.

With a young niece I am likely to become one of GoldieBlox’s best customers – I can’t wait to see what they build next.

Hashtag Art

Hashtags look like this; #

Hashtag Art looks like this;

Image from MissPixels via flickr, as part of her Hashtag project.

Hashtags are used on twitter to categorise your tweet, and it’s this frequency of hashtag appearance that leads to the trending topic on twitter. They’re simple to use, just type it into your tweet or post. The use of the hashtag has spilled into other forms of communication, although it seems to be frowned upon by facebook pedants.

People get really creative with the use of hashtags, adding them to tweet about events, conferences, company failures (the infamous #fail), games (check out artwiculate), news and tv programmes. Humourous tags have emerged – such as #FirstWorldProblems

I love the creativity people put into their hashtags, and some have developed into memes (#durftevragen – dare to ask in Dutch is a great example), but MissPixels hashtag project seems to be a rare example of applying the hashtag to the visual. Given the trends of increasing images used in presentations, increasing use of social media and increasing use of text/image combinations I’m surprised. It could be a fun project for a team or group as well.

Image #imagine – fun in the sunset – Hashtag project© /MissPixels/ CC BY-NC-ND 2.0