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The Case for Blogs in Business

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Provides a project diary. Single point of access for group documents, files and even ideas ... Phone Calls = Lost. E-mail = Lost. Weblogs = Archived. Source: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Case for Blogs in Business


1
The Case for Blogs in Business
  • Matt Goyer Jennifer Schachter
  • November 13, 2003

2
Agenda
  • What is a weblog?
  • How can a weblog benefit my corporation?
  • What concerns must be addressed before
    implementing a weblog in my business?
  • Whats the next step?

3
What is a weblog?
  • Formal definition
  • A weblog is a hierarchy of text, images, media
    objects and data, arranged chronologically, that
    can be viewed in an HTML browserA weblog post
    has three basic attributes title, link and
    description. All are optional.
  • Dave Winer, Harvard Berkman Fellow

4
What is a weblog?
  • Characteristics
  • Searchable
  • Distributed within an organization
  • Simple
  • Archived by date
  • Categories
  • Syndication

5
Weblog Example
6
Here to Stay
  • Popularity growing
  • Over 1,000,000 (Technorati)
  • Over 4,000,000 (Bloglines)
  • Google acquired Blogger
  • AOL Journals
  • Wide variety
  • Political
  • Presidential candidates
  • Paul Martin
  • Educational
  • Prof. Ragde (CS251)
  • Harvard
  • Celebrities
  • Journalists
  • Even students

7
Weblogs in Corporations
  • Microsoft
  • Eric Rudder (Senior Vice-President)
  • Chris Brumme (.net Architect)
  • Robert Scoble (.net Evangelist)
  • Jupitermedia
  • Analyst weblogs
  • Google
  • Used internally
  • Disney
  • Used internally

8
Microsofts Robert Scoble
9
Jupiter Analyst Weblog
10
Beyond the Browser
11
Benefits
  • Weblogs can benefit different aspects of your
    corporation
  • Knowledge Management
  • Marketing and Public Relations
  • Project Management

12
Knowledge Management
  • Knowledge Management
  • capture and organize the knowledge contained by
    employees within a company
  • Vast amounts of knowledge generated daily
  • Problem How do you capture and organize this
    knowledge to make it available for employees to
    leverage in the future?

13
Knowledge Management
  • Current Solutions
  • Knowledge Management Systems
  • Complicated and inflexible!
  • Corporate Intranet
  • Today employees have the intranet. It is the
    data dumpster. Everything is there but you can't
    find what you want. Much of the content is old
    and no longer relevant. What employees want is a
    current view on some topic. They want to find
    what the experts are thinking so they can
    leverage that experience. The corporate
    webblogs will become the source.
  • Personal interview with John Patrick, October
    20, 2003.

14
Knowledge Management
  • Better Solution Weblogs!
  • A Blogger-like system is the lowest common
    denominator to putting stuff up, which may be its
    benefit.
  • Evan William, the creator of Blogger

15
Knowledge Management
16
Knowledge Management
  • Weblogs as a KM tool
  • Information from different applications can exist
    in a single location
  • Take information once limited to an individuals
    use and open it to the organization
  • Easy to search
  • Reduce information overload

17
Marketing PR
  • Conversational Marketing
  • Better feedback
  • Faster access to information
  • Informal language
  • For one, our execs get better feedback due to
    conversational marketing efforts (er, weblogs).
    For two, our customers get better information so
    they can give even better feedback and make
    future product plans based on real information
    rather than guesses and rumors.
  • Robert Scoble, Weblog

18
Marketing PR
  • Brand Awareness
  • If its a blatant pitch for marketing it
    wouldnt work. But if youre really giving your
    innermost thoughts and good information, people
    read it and share it, and in the end more people
    know about the company.
  • Alan Meckler, Chairman of Jupitermedia Research

19
Project Management
  • Traditional Project management software
  • Tracks calendars, tasks, to-do lists
  • Complex, expensive and inflexible
  • Increasing number of companies are employing
    weblogs for project management
  • A lot of people use weblogs to keep up-to-date
    on projects.
  • Evan Williams (Google)

20
Project Management
  • Weblog as a project management tool
  • Team weblogs
  • A simple means to improve communication between
    project members
  • Different voices within a team can emerge
  • Provides a project diary
  • Single point of access for group documents, files
    and even ideas

21
Concerns
  • Legal and regulatory
  • Libel
  • Disclosure
  • Control
  • Confidential information disclosed
  • People can write what they want

22
Concerns
  • People have been fired

23
Addressing the Concerns
  • Address weblogs before they are a concern!
  • Do not start them
  • Might not be legally enforceable
  • Company policy
  • I.e. Groove Networks
  • Start a conversation with employers
  • I.e. Microsoft

24
Addressing Concerns at Microsoft
  • Robert Scobles personal guidelines
  • I always think about how I'm going to justify
    what I'm talking about to
  • My wife (she'll be the first to have to explain
    it to if I get in trouble).
  • My boss.
  • Steve Ballmer (metaphor for executives).
  • My co-workers.
  • My readers.
  • Every time I post, I think about these five
    groups/people. Every time I post, I think about
    Microsoft's strategy, its legal exposure, its
    place in the marketplace.

25
Getting Started
  • Finding weblogs
  • http//www.weblogs.com
  • Google
  • Tools
  • Blogger
  • http//www.blogger.com
  • Moveable Type Typepad
  • http//www.sixapart.com/
  • Traction Software
  • http//www.tractionsoftware.com/

26
Summary
  • Weblogs can transform the way people within your
    company communicate
  • Some concernseasily addressable.
  • Weblogs will revolutionize the way your business
    works!

27
Communications Efficiency
  • Time Spent
  • 20 Phone Calls 1 Day
  • 200 emails 3-4 Hours
  • 50 Weblogs 40 Minutes
  • Finding Information
  • Phone Calls Limited to voicemail inbox
  • E-mail Limited to personal e-mail, limited
    search
  • Weblogs Search fast, entire corporation
  • Departing Employees
  • Phone Calls Lost
  • E-mail Lost
  • Weblogs Archived

Source John Robb
28
References
  • Ashley, C. 2002. Weblogs, part II A Swiss Army
    Website?
  • Bausch, P. et all. We Blog Publishing Online
    With Weblogs. John Wiley Sons, August 8, 2002.
  • Fitchter, D. Blogging Software for Intranet
    Applications. Online, volume 27, issue 1
    January/February 2003.
  • Olsen, S.
  • Blog On. News.com October 21, 2003.
  • OShea, W. New Economy The online journals known
    as Web logs are finding favor as an efficient way
    to communicate within the workplace. The New York
    Times July 7, 2003.
  • Osterman, R. 2003. Firms find way to avoid
    getting blogged down. Chicago Tribune.
  • Ozzie, R. 2003. Ray Ozzies Weblog.
  • Personal interview with John Patrick, October 20,
    2003.
  • Scoble, R. 2003. The Scobleizer Weblog.
  • Suitt, H. 2003. A Blogger In Their Midst Harvard
    Business Review. Boston Sep 2003. Vol. 81, Iss.
    9
  • Swartz, J. 2003. Worker blogs raise some company
    concerns. USA Today.
  • Technorati http//www.technorati.com/ Accessed
    October 19, 2003
  • Tepper, M. 2003. The Rise of Social Software.
    ACMs netWorker. Pages 18-23.
  • Weidlich, T. 2003. The Corporate Blog Is Catching
    On. The New York Times. Page 12.
  • Winer, D. 2003. What makes a weblog a weblog?
    Weblogs at Harvard.

29
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