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The Future of Enterprise Computing and Collaboration by Alan Cohen

Gran Canaria - Pozo de las NievesIn the recent past, you would remember I have been putting together a number of different blog posts on various video interviews that John Chambers, CEO of Cisco Systems, has been doing at several events where he has been sharing some further insights on the future of collaboration, knowledge sharing and, specially, Enterprise 2.0 or Social Computing within the corporate world and beyond. So I thought I would go ahead and share with you folks another interesting video interview I bumped into from another executive at Cisco Systems.

Check out the YouTube video "Alan Cohen, Cisco VP Enterprise Solutions, on Enterprise Strategy" where you will see an interview with Alan Cohen himself, Vice President, Enterprise Marketing, that lasts for a bit over four minutes and which touches base on a number of different topics related to the future of Enterprise Computing and Collaboration, as he has written over at the blog Collaboration – The Workplace: A New World of Communications and Collaboration. Plenty of very interesting and juicy insights on where we are heading with all of this social networking in the business world.

My favourite parts of the video? A few of them eventually, but here are a couple of them worth while mentioning over here as well:

  • The changing nature of our workplace, moving away from the traditional concept of the physical office, where we are now more mobile than ever (With a great set of choices in mobile devices to chose from!); where our work spaces are defined by who we are and how we get connected regardless of the place and the time; where we, knowledge workers, get to define and establish our own "offices" no matter our location or environment to carry out our own tasks. Remember that great quote from Thomas A. Stewart? Yes, that one of "A knowledge worker is someone who gets to decide what he does each morning". Well, it would fit in here rather nicely, don’t you think? 

    And talking about reminders, this trend of thought reminded me of a recent great blog post put together by Corbett Barr on that very same topic: 10 Digital Nomads to Learn From (Check out, by the way, the interesting survey Corbett is about to embark on and which I do hope to be able to contribute as well very soon… But that would be the subject for an upcoming blog post).

  • Knowledge Management and / or / vs. Social Computing: very thought-provoking remarks as well trying to associate each of these movements with the generations being exposed to them; resulting in baby boomers driving Knowledge Management and Gen Yers driving Social Computing themselves. And right in between is us, Gen Xers, acting as bridges between both groups and becoming the glue that will help connect both strategists and doers within the corporate environment trying to drive innovation, knowledge sharing and collaboration into a new wave of open, public and more transparent interactions!

    I guess that when the always creative James Governor called my good friend Andy Piper a social bridger he was probably thinking about something like this in similar terms and I suppose we are just starting to witness how that role of the social bridger, the Gen Xers, is perhaps going to be a bit more important than what most folks thought about so far.

Like I said, a short, but rather interesting video interview with Alan Cohen sharing some very innovative thoughts of what’s expecting us in the short term in the current knowledge economy we live in.

Exciting times, if you ask me…

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Lost Generation

Gran Canaria - Puerto de Mogan's BeachI know that plenty of people out there do not buy into the digital divide; I do realise that plenty of people out there do not think there are various generations at work trying to understand one another in getting the job done, while each of them follows their own ways of doing things; that there isn’t such thing as generation X, or generation Y, or the baby boomers themselves adding further up into that divide; that it is all part of that increasing buzzword bingo game we all get exposed to every now and then when we go to conferences, attend workshops, talk to customers, etc. etc.

But then again, the magic of serendipity kicks in, and you bump into one of those video clips that will certainly make you think about things twice; that eventually questions those disbeliefs, demonstrating that there may well be something out there that we keep missing or ignoring and that we know is going to hit us back soon enough. That we are closer than ever to witness that transition into the Social Computing realm within the corporate world and beyond; that we are already living it through; and that those younger generations surely know what lies ahead, what changes and what challenges they are facing, and how they see themselves, and those around them, in their own near future within the enterprise.

Yes, through that serendipitous knowledge discovery process, last week, over in Twitter, I kept bumping into what has been one of the most inspirational videos I have watched in a little while! It lasts for nearly two minutes and it comes under the intriguing title of "Lost Generation". The video clip itself is well worth watching it through all the way and it will surely remind you that there is something to be said about how the younger generations feel not only about their working relationships, but also about their personal lives, their hopes, their expectations, their way of life, their everything. And if not, coming pretty close. Not going to say much more about it, other than encouraging you all folks to have a look and watch it. It will be worth your time. Even better, it will make you think about all of these things with a different view / perspective.

In short, it will provide you with a smashing start of the week with a truly inspirational message indicating how we are witnessing that change in the corporate world that probably doesn’t have a way back out of it. And, eventually, we shouldn’t!

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The Younger Generations & Their Impact on the Corporate World – Sacha Chua & Andy Burman

As we are starting to wrap up the summer and as I am getting started myself with another round of business travelling (Starting this week with a trip to Rotterdam, The Netherlands), I thought I would share with you folks a reflection that I have been pondering about during the course of the last couple of months and which keeps coming back. Over and over again.

To my surprise and amazement, it looks like time and time again a number of different articles keep popping up on how the younger generations, while entering the workforce, are surely changing the way the corporate world operates and perhaps not in the best of terms. I am sure you may have been reading one of those articles lately which would possibly make you wonder where things stand with such generation and yourself (If you have got one of those links to those articles, feel free to go ahead and share it in the comments section! I would love to read some more on the topic!).

Most of those articles seem to be portraying a real threat from such generation for the rest of the workforce, possibly including you and me, when I am actually thinking it is going to be quite the opposite. It’s going to be a huge opportunity for us all. We just need to grab it and here is why.

As a starter, however, I surely am glad to point out there are also a number of really good and thoughtful articles, fortunately, that certainly hint how we can best get the most out that younger generation of knowledge workers and how we can engage with them from the first day they enter the workplace! Nevertheless, I am going to take another approach and share with you my story on how I have been getting involved with such younger generations as it would highlight some of that potential and amazing talent they bring with them!

If you have been reading this blog for a while, you would know how for the last few months I have been following a new reality of mine, which has been giving up e-mail at work, and instead use various social software tools to collaborate and share knowledge with other knowledge workers. However, very few people know, unless you have attended live one of the various conference events I have participated in over the last few months, that one of the main sources that inspired that blunt move were actually the several folks belonging to that younger generation that I have been working with all along.

Yes, that is right! That younger generation inside the company I work for, IBM, that I have been exposed to over the last couple of years, taught me how it is ok not being obsessed with (Or addicted to!) e-mail (They just don’t use it! At least, not as much as the rest of us have been doing all along!); how there are hundreds of other (Social) tools out there that make interactions happen much easier and much more efficient and effectively. And faster!

They surely have taught me through the hard way, in most cases, how content is no longer key, more than anything else, because as soon as you hit that save / publish button it is already out of date! Instead, they have taught me how you can get so much more done by nurturing the relationships of those folks you connect with. Yes, those social networks, those communities that provide a strong sense of belonging, ownership and responsibility for getting things done in a proper way. They have brought a new meaning to the concept of social capital; perhaps the one that should have been there from the very beginning when Knowledge Management started talking about it over a decade ago! Yes, that kind of social capital that has been neglected over the years by most businesses.

They have been the ones who have made me understand that playing political games while at work, through the use, and abuse, of .CC and .BCC, is not only a waste of time, but also of energy and effort with the immediate consequence of deteriorating relationships incredibly fast! In short, they have shown me how collaboration and knowledge sharing happen, in most cases, faster than ever, in real-time; how content is not the end goal behind sharing what you know, but who you share it with and what gets done with it afterwards!

For the last few years, that has been the kind of interactions I have been exposed to all along. And in most cases throughout the summer! Yes, that’s right! Summertime, for me, is one of the busiest times of the year. Why? Because I keep getting approached by a good number of those folks from younger generations who are doing their PhDs, while at IBM, around the topic of social software, social computing and Enterprise 2.0, and how they are all changing the way the corporate world operates through them.

And, instead of turning them away, because, you know, we are all busy people, and, after all, they are just interns or people working on their PhD (They will go away!), I prefer to stick around and learn about what they will be working on. Main reason being me getting the opportunity to get an exposure on how they think and how they work, and, most importantly, how they connect with others! They are the new blood of any other smart company listening up out there and whoever is turning away that opportunity from finding out more about who they are, they are just missing out big time!

That’s why in most cases I get to interact with them making use of everything else than just e-mail. We hang out in Facebook, in microsharing sites like Twitter, Last.fm, ma.gnolia, Slideshare, blogs, wikis, Skype, etc. etc. Not even mentioning the plethora of Enterprise social software tools we have got inside IBM and which I have been mentioning over here somewhat over the last couple of years.

This year I have been engaging with various folks from that younger generation of the workforce and the fascinating thing from being able to participate in their PhDs is that this year I have been working with folks from Germany, France, UK, the U.S., Sweden, The Netherlands, Switzerland, amongst several others, and let me share with you one single tidbit I have learned all along: the potential differences you may be thinking about with that group of folks from all over the place are just not there! To them it is all about part of that global village, where most of their friends and connections are scattered all over the place, but still within the same kind of work environment: The Global (Integrated) Enterprise! Their globally integrated enterprise!

And guess what? We will have to decide whether we would want to be part of it, or not, because if there is one thing coming out very obvious from them is the fact that they are not stopping for us to catch the bandwagon, We better do it or, if not, we will see how they move on faster than we can breathe in and out!

Want to see an example? I have got one for you. Two actually.

Check out Sacha Chua. Sacha is one of those millennials, one of those Gen Yers (I cannot believe I am using such term at this stage of the blog post! heh) who has recently entered the corporate space, in this case, that one of IBM, and way from the beginning she has been making quite an impression  difficult to forget! She is incredibly smart, with one of the most extensive social networks I have seen (I wish I had the kind of in-depth from hers at her age!!), very committed towards getting things done for everyone with a huge boost of their own productivity. She has got a passion for her job that I find it very difficult to surpass it on other folks, even to the point where it is contagious! And big time!

And, if you don’t believe me, check out the following blog post she put together under the title "Squee! Won Slideshare’s Best Presentation Contest!", where she mentioned how she made it through and won the Slideshare Best Presentation Contest Category for "About Me"!, which, not sure what you would think, but seeing the panel of judges, is quite an achievement on its own! Here you have got the reason why she won the contest:

Hello, I’m Sacha Chua!

View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: sketches self)

(Here is a bonus tip on another presentation she has put together which will help you understand where they come from and where they are going …)

And if Sacha’s example is not enough proof of it, here is another one with which I am going to end this, rather long, weblog post. Check out Group Persona Visualization. This is a recent new entry into alphaWorks, which will also be appearing in IBM’s Technology Adoption Program (a.k.a. TAP), that enters in full force the realm of Web 2.0 visualisations. Here is an excerpt of what it is:

"Group Persona Visualization builds a foundation for analysis of group interactions. The service collects and interprets randomly distributed data from individuals to create a summary of a group’s overall feelings, perceptions, and activities. Group Persona Visualization is intended to inspire communication and collaboration among groups in which status information is often fragmented across a wide variety of Web locations.

The service interprets the status and activities of groups by collecting data from a range of social networking sources. Users create groups on the Web site and put in the sources where they personally express their thoughts, feelings, and activities (blogs, twitter, instant messaging, etc.). The software then pulls information from those feeds, interprets it according to defined standards, and displays an overall conclusion of the group’s status."

Some pretty amazing and interesting stuff, right? Well, let me share with you that such project came together over the course of the last three months under one of the BizTech teams, in concrete the one from the UK, where Andy Burman and a few other college students have been doing some stunning piece of work in helping understand usage of 2.0 by visualising it in very powerful ways to improve and increase collaboration and knowledge sharing amongst knowledge workers.

Yes, indeed, if you still think that these younger generations are wasting their time goofing around in their favourite social networking sites with their friends and connections while at work, think again! It is not happening now and doubt it would ever do. They are smarter than that and the couple of examples I have mentioned above, Sacha Chua and Andy Burman’s team and their efforts, are just a tiny proof of the kind of talent that is changing the way the workplace has been operating all along. And not sure about you, but I just can’t wait for it to take place!

There is just so much for us all to learn mutually from one another!

Ever thought about introducing reverse mentoring at your company? Now it may well be a good time for it!

(I am hoping as well that over the next few days I may be able to share with you some of the really good stuff that those folks I have been helping out during the summer have been doing and which they are almost wrapping up in most cases … Stay tuned!

And get ready for next summer when they come over to your door and ask for your participation. Take the challenge!)

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