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Blog1084: July 9, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| I found Tom Davenport's discussion of Why 1.5 is Greater than 2.0 by way of Bill Ives in Mixing Old and New School Communication. Davenport talks about the social reasons in favor of a blend between social and traditional approaches. I think an answer to How 1.5, in this context, is Greater than 2.0 is both social and structural. |
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Blog1078: June 25, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
Innovation starts with words, and ways to convey them.
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Blog1066: May 8, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| These case studies are a taste of how ideas and issues turn into action, how tasks evolve from conversations and how boundaries have to appear to disappear for W2.0 ideas to meet E2.0 execution. See you at E2.0. |
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Blog1049: April 14, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank; 1 Attachment |
 Recent posts by Michael Sampson, John Tropea and Thomas Vander Wal converge on the need for Enterprise 2.0 tools to smash the silos segregating content types and isolating workspaces. |
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Blog1048: April 14, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| A tweet from John Tropea identifies our Kuka Systems case study as the "Seminal enterprise 2.0 task based / process solution." THANKS! I can't imagine a better endorsement of a case study, or the product supporting it. |
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Blog1047: April 14, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| This conversation started with Stewart Mader and continues with Bill Ives. While most of our customers run the easy installer and are up and running readily, many benefit from our front end advice as well as more formal professional services engagements. This exchange offers two simple benefits that are strategic to the customers and to the software producer (and, in turn, to the customers). |
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Blog1040: March 30, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank; 1 Attachment |
Last fall, I pointed out an issue of trust as part and parcel of Web 2.0 security (See What Web 2.0 and E2.0 Security Means to Me). When we accept social services like Facebook and Twitter as Two of Three Places for People, we entrust them to manage our data securely, to keep consistent terms (i.e. they don't suck us in and then suck us dry by starting to charge for basic services), and to be there when we need them. Today, I felt muzzled as I was touched by the uptime issue. I got this "over capacity" memo when I went to Tweet an answer to Dave Lamp's Question. I've received the "over capacity" messages several times and will continue, for now, to trust they'll iron things out over at Twitter HQ. |
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Blog1038: March 27, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| I took a long needed vacation last week and came back to the usual firestorm of post-vacation pile-up that makes one pause before entertaining the idea of another break. Anyhow, after meeting a few high priority deadlines, I had time this afternoon to review everything posted to our TeamPage server in the last 2 weeks. |
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Blog993: March 9, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank; 1 Attachment |
Chris Nuzum and I had a chance to speak to the Providence Geeks about what we've done with Traction TeamPage and how "Pages are Crushing Documents." I do a history of our company and transition into a history of communication and collaboration that runs the course from stone tablets to books through email and documents and finally culminates in wikis and blogs. Now that wikis and blogs are becoming the new currency of collaboration and communication, my presentation focuses on how "packaging matters" with particular focus on the ways pages can be re-used and distributed in ways that can improve communication performance and enable innovation like we've never seen it before. Caught on "film" are my talk followed by a video podcast interview. |
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Blog991: March 3, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| Matt Hodgson's the ROI of Being Social at Work points to recent MIT research suggesting 40% of productivity for creative teams is a direct result of communication and employees with the most extensive digital networks are 7% more productive. |
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Blog969: February 24, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| In tough economic times organizations are faced with hard budgeting choices as they weigh the cost and benefit of investing in durable goods, people, marketing and software. Here are some reasons why software should be at the top of the list: |
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Blog950: February 17, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| We've seen our US Government and state level customers seek out and achieve great success as they make their own migrations to "2.0" style collaboration with TeamPage. While "grasss roots" action at the agency level is encouraging, top down involvement and mandates tend to accelerate the proces. With Obama's Transparency and Open Government mandate, perhaps we have it! |
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Blog944: January 30, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| I like what Seth Godin says in What are you good at? Where he talks about the distinction between content (domain expertise) and process (emotional intelligence skills you have for managing projects, visualizing success, dealing with priorities and so on). |
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Blog943: January 30, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| One more data point in line of my Whither Web 2.0 Social Networking Discussion which questions the revenue models of web services (with web social networking as a focal point): An on-line service the scale and scope of Microsoft's Online Services is running into red ink of proportional scale. It lost $471 Million per last quarter. The clear and present issue is not whether a profit may be turned at some even-large scale, but what will change about the business model and how will that affect users? |
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Blog933: January 7, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank; 3 Attachments |
| By moving communication and knowledge exchange to web pages, social software breaks down the walls that traditionally divide e-mail communication and traditional folder based document sharing. As discussed at the conclusion of So, What About Enterprise Social Networking?, this style of interacting online opens avenues for content enrichment and exploitation. |
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Blog931: January 7, 2009; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| Last week's post, Wither Web 2.0 Social Networking? and My 2 Cents., offers my perspective on the murky future of web facing personal social networking, as well as a recipe for its survival. The Enterprise Social Networking market, meanwhile, is growing up more steadily in the wake of its Web 2.0 sibling and, despite some commonalities, faces a different value equation, use cases and market forces. |
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Blog926: December 30, 2008; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| Michael Fitzgerald's MIT Tech Review column Are Social Networks Sinking? summarizes the inevitable deflation (though not all-out devastation) of the Web 2.0 Social Networking market (not to be mixed with the Enterprise 2.0 market - which is growing more steadily in-the-wake-of, rather than in-step-with, the Web 2.0 market) bubble. |
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Blog904: November 24, 2008; Posted by Jordan Frank; 4 Attachments |
| There seem to be conflicting views on what kinds of IT applications and vendors will get hit the hardest in an economic downturn. Will it be point applications like Wikis and Blogs, or Enterprise 2.0 Suites? Or will it be big ticket collaboration platforms from vendors like Microsoft, OpenText and Documentum? |
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Blog871: November 13, 2008; Posted by Jordan Frank; 1 Attachment |
 We're happy to announce that 2008 marks the sixth year of consecutive revenue and customer growth at Traction Software. With the support of our growing customer base, thousands of TeamPage5 deployments, and a product that consistently earns reviews that put TeamPage at the top of the pack, we're able to continue our product and market leadership despite challenging economic times for competitors who charge more and deliver less. |
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Blog840: November 11, 2008; Posted by Jordan Frank; 1 Attachment |
Since TeamPage 4.0 was released in June 2008 we're happy to report that reviewers and customers have consistently applauded the innovation TeamPage 4.0 brings to the market. When you want to be able to use wiki-style collaboration on products, plans and projects - as well as free-form encyclopedia pages - it quickly becomes obvious that you need to be able to distinguish between the 'latest stable version' of a constellation of pages and the 'work in progress cloud' created through collaborative editing. |
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Blog837: November 6, 2008; Posted by Jordan Frank |
| E2.0 technologies must manage a delicate balance between collaborative freedoms they promise with the security, dependability and audit trail requirements that any enterprise has to have to let them in the door. |
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Blog832: October 22, 2008; Posted by Jordan Frank; 1 Attachment |
| At the age of 12 (or so), I tried board-sailing and totally failed. I had no sense for how the mechanics of the sail and the wind worked together to point my board in any given direction. Then I got in a sailboat which, for whatever combination of reasons, made sense of the whole sailing process. |
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Blog828: October 22, 2008; Posted by Jordan Frank; 1 Attachment |
| I don't often get enthusiastic about software (except for Traction TeamPage!) or a device, but my iPhone caught me off guard. |
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Blog806: September 2, 2008; Posted by Jordan Frank; 1 Attachment |
| Sarah Houghton-Jan wrote and excellent paper, Being Wired or Being Tired: 10 Ways to Cope with Information Overload, in Ariadne (a Web Magazine for Information Professionals). It's actually ten general areas for coping, each with about 5 suggestions. Ever since Kid 1 and Kid 2 popped into my life, dealing with every kind of overload (e-mail overload, magazine overload, chores overload, poop overload...) has become a factor in my life! |
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Blog804: August 25, 2008; Posted by Jordan Frank; 5 Attachments |
| On his blog, I'm Not Actually a Geek, Hutch from Connectbeam writes "How Are Enterprise 2.0 Vendors Pitching Web 2.0? Using Wordle to Find Out. Here's another great tool that transforms the problem of having "Too Much Information" to not having enough! |
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 English Abstract: Sumitomo Electric Information Systems Co., Ltd and Applied Knowledge
Co., Ltd have partnered to integrate “QuickSolution Portal” and “Traction TeamPage” in order to promote more effective and efficient
utilization of the TeamPage Enterprise Blog and Wiki platform. |
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“QuickSolution Portal” is an Enterprise
Search Engine that extracts relevant information quickly and
efficiently from a huge amount of data accumulated by any enterprises. Information in databases, web sites or blog sites like Traction TeamPage may be indexed by "QuickSolution Portal." It features a high-speed and full-text searching including similar
results and the natural language question – answering system. |
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With the combined solution, useful results from “QuickSolution Portal" are easily published to “TeamPage” with a unique clipping tool (Traction Instant Publisher - TIP2). Upon publishing, users can add labels to categorize
the results as well as share information with other members on their blog. » Read Full Story (in Japanese) |
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