Online Business Portal


Social Business Systems - Success Factors for Enterprise 2.0 Apps

Wednesday, November 23, 2011 by Sterling Raphael
AIIMThere is no doubt that we are all live in a knowledge-based economy and have become acutely aware that social media changes associations, technology and society. Relevant to organizations, as the use of social media is acquired, a massive transformation happens. Individuals and companies are renewed in their thinking and their manner of communication. I recently came across great way to get ideas for your association, that being to check out what others are doing! See AIIM’s research report. AIIM (www.aiim.org) is the community that provides education, research, and best practices to help organizations find, control, and optimize their information.

Michael Brito of Edelman Digital also mentioned the report in his blog noting IBM GM of Social Business Alistair Rennie's predictions for 2012, which included:

1. Social analytics tools will rule 2012.
2. Online community managers will become necessary.

This is great news for us at Avectra, as our Social CRM suite really works to both of those points. We're dedicated to collaboration and Enterprise 2.0, and to that end, here are some key findings from AIIM's research report.

The report noted that 65,000 members use social technologies.  This includes reports co-authored with Enterprise 2.0 expert, MIT Professor, Andrew McAfee and Geoffrey Moore, best selling author of Crossing the Chasm.  

Social Business Systems, success factors for Enterprise 2.0 applications research revealed that only 21% of responding organizations make no use of social business applications including 6% where its use is specifically discouraged, 25% have ad hoc usage, 38% are moving to a enterprise-wide strategy and 18% consider it to be actively used and coordinated across the enterprise – up from 6% in last years survey.

Listening and learning from many of these industry giants, some of the findings I thought intriguing include:
 "51% consider social business to be significant to their overall business goals and success. This rises to 62% in the largest organizations, including 18% who consider it to be imperative. Spending plans in all areas of social business are set to increase considerably with a net of 15-20% of organizations planning to spend more or much more in the next 12 months, particularly on social business infrastructures.

Also, better innovation and shorter project timescales have each moved up the rankings by three places since last year’s report, reflecting more tangible benefits as social business applications are more likely to be included in formal workflows.”

My thought pattern did lead me to diligently review the recommendations outlining some of the challenges found in AIIM’s report:  Undoubtedly, this article will save you time and help you to evaluate what your organization needs to step-up your Social Business. 
A few highlights: 
  • Social systems used within a business environment present a number of unique challenges compared to other enterprise IT applications. There is benefit in prototyping or experimenting with some applications in order to gain experience, but don’t let that be too ad hoc in its objectives and governance.
  • Employees will only participate in social applications if they find them simple, useful, and to an extent, entertaining. Managers and leaders should set scope and style early on.
  • Encourage staff to adopt a business-like attitude to avoid gossip and clutter. If necessary, have a separate social area for birthday congratulations and pet photos.
  • Defining a number of application processes rather than specific platforms will help to achieve early wins.
  • Enterprise Q&A and Open Innovation schemes have shown themselves to be very productive.
  • If there is cross-over as to which applications to use for which purposes or processes, define the scope and set guidance.
  • If you expect staff across the enterprise to take time out to respond to questions and requests for help, set up a measurement mechanism and link it to a rewards system either in status or of monetary value.
  • To avoid the same questions being asked repeatedly, ensure that you have good search and FAQ mechanisms. Consider linking such content into a generic enterprise search portal or ECM system.
Needless to say, as with many of us, these recommendations provided much insight and actually started a buzz in my head relative to business staff and our customers.   I began to consider new social features which could potentially cause an upward shift affecting our current systems with ‘special eyes’ on  ultimately maximizing customer satisfaction and results (the lifeblood of every organization!).

In my consideration, I am convinced that small businesses face different challenges and don’t necessarily have to employ the modus operandi of huge corporations. The basics are vital, but the road to success may be shorter to travel until success dictates operating on a larger scale.  As AIIM’s research suggests, as with all “enterprise” technologies, wall-to-wall coverage does not happen overnight. For small organizations it takes time to understand the technologies and build a business case. For larger organizations, enterprise-wide deployment is likely to take considerable time and resource.

Adding to this thought, I think that there is an underlying "fear" that when Social Media is incorporated within the business format, executives tend feel the need to "protect their turf."  There is a definite  prerequisite to be educated in this arena, especially as it pertains to organizational formulas, privacy, confidentiality, etc. so as not to lay themselves exposed to the media. 

So now, along with AIIM’s questions, allow me to pose the following inquiries for your consideration:, and please let us know what you are doing to incorporate social business application within your organization!
  • If you are connecting with technology partners how are you enhancing security restrictions?
  • Are your employees intensely trained using a social business system?
  • What has been your experience as you entered E2.0? 
  • Have you tried and failed and are you ready to try again?

Online Communities ♥ (heart) Social Networks!

Wednesday, October 12, 2011 by Sterling Raphael
I Hear Social MediaHere at Web 2.0 Expo in NYC (#w2e), there's a lot of talk about utilizing external Social Networks to create communities. In this "Community with Purpose" blog series we mostly highlight internal/branded communities. However a private community can't be your only source for connecting with your audience. Online Communities  (heart) External Social Networks! So let's look why utilizing external social networks can enhance and augment your private online community. 


But wait... why can't I just use Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter as my ONLY community network? I get this question often. 


Here are a few reasons not to go "all in" with only the external networks:

  1. They own the user experience. Though Facebook claims you YOUR content, it doesn't allow you to control permissions or own content on a granular level for your audience. Not the best scenario when your managing employee or customer support communities.
  2. The permissions, privacy and features can change on a dime... we've seen this happen with Facebook many  times. You don't want to exclusively bet on their feature roadmap for your organization's community efforts. 
  3. They don't integrate with your CRM, HR System or ERP. You should integrate business rules to your community permissions (see graph below). This is a big concept in Social CRM
  4. They want to monetize YOUR users. Your business models are not aligned. You can't control or monetize the advertising to your users. 
  5. Once your users get all your value on the external network, your value proposition is dilluted. They can then self organize there without you.

This graph demonstrates the relationship between your own community, your databases, and your external social networks. Again, a big part of Social CRM.
Social CRM

SCRM

So how do you leverage external social networks?

  • Awareness > Engagement > Conversion (thanks to @PeterKim for these steps): Use external sites as a way to create awareness and engage your audience. Have conversations with your users and when appropriate, bring them in to YOUR private community where you can deliver more relevant value and have a more appropriate interaction with them. Then focus on conversion. A tool like HootSuite.com can help you monitor and publish with social networks.
  • Social Sign On and Registration. Allow your users to sign on using their Facebook or other accounts. The web is now ubiquitous and users should be able to go from site to site without authenticating each time.
  • Use Facebook Ads & Pages to market your network. Facebook Ads let you target very specific niche users who may be interested in connecting back to your own branded community. Your Facebook Page is an portal that should include photos, news, conversations and energy. 
  • Be where your users are! Chances are your audience uses LinkedIn, Twitter, Google+, YouTube, Flickr, Foursquare, Meetup and more... Maybe you don't want to create a presence on Match.com if your audience is there, but ya never know! It could work. (watch for a future blog on this topic).

In summary, your community represents more than just the site you have branded that integrates with your website. Work with the external social networks, not against them. And at the same time, the external social networks should not be your exclusive community platform.

View more from @PeterKim here or on Slideshare.net

Speedy Business Cycles and What it Means for Your Association's Technology

Wednesday, March 10, 2010 by Ray van Hilst

More and more, we live in a "need it now" society. 

  • Want a specific bit of information? Google it and get all your answers.
  • Want to listen to a song? Download it from iTunes right away.
  • Need a book? Buy it from Amazon.com and it ships today (or for faster service, just add it to your Kindle)
  • Need something printed? Send a PDF to a printer and they'll run you 100 digital printed copies and deliver it tomorrow morning.

So let me ask you this -- when a new member joins, how long until they get a welcome package or membership card? When a member orders a product from your website, how quickly does it take you to process the order and ship it to them?

What technologies do you have in place to fullfill these member requests and orders? Are you running an integrated eCommerce platform and association management software system? Or are they two systems that don't talk to each other so you can pull up that member's information and ship that book right away?

Last week, I had the pleasure of speaking with Mike Guerrieri from the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) about how they have used our netFORUM association management software to improve their business operations. Here's a bit of what he said:

“ One [improvement] that’s really telling is that if we take an order from our customer from our online store, that product is shipped to our customer if it’s in by 2 o’clock that day. And that is all a result of business process improvements that netFORUM enabled.”

“Our member card fulfillment.  netFORUM enabled us to get member cards out the next day so if someone pays their dues today, tomorrow their member card will be shipped to them. That was something that took us a long time because we had to outsource that before and we can do it all internally now ...”

Over the course of my career I’ve worked with a number of associations that custom built fulfillment systems or eCommerce portals. Through my work here at Avectra, I see more and more how important it is to have all of these systems talking to each other so that you can serve your members with the same speed as they have come to expect from all the rest of their transactions.

Our advice? Run your eCommerce through the integrated eCommerce functionality that is built into netFORUM. Not only can you track all of the purchases and set prices, but can quickly tie all the purchases to a members’ record. Also, with our recent release of netFORUM Pro you even have detailed inventory tracking and fulfillment capabilities which will help you manage your inventory and account for these costs of goods.

So the next time you are buying a book from Amazon.com ask yourself, can your association attain fulfillment times like this? If not, it might be time to take a look at your processes and technologies.