Title: Networks, communication
1Networks, communication technologies
- Rodolfo Baggio
- Master in Economics and Tourism
-
- Dondena Center for Research on Social Dynamics
- Bocconi University, Milan, Italy
- rodolfo.baggio_at_unibocconi.it
2By using real-time and context-specific
information such as location, proximity to
transport services, journey purpose, time of day,
calendar entries etc. - a trusted travel
assistant could plan each journey, and then
co-pilot the traveler along his itinerary,
alerting him whenever there is an interesting
opportunity, a problem or a choice to be made.
3Main keywords
- Collaborative effort
- stakeholders operational business processes
- inter-organizational models
- forms of cooperation
- Intensity and quality of communications and
interaction modes - partner/partner
- user/partner
- user/user
4Hence it is evident that the state is a creation
of nature, and that man is by nature a political
animal. And he who by nature and not by mere
accident is without a state, is either a bad
man or above humanity.
Aristotle (384-322 BC)
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8A complex world
- Large numbers of different interacting elements
- All interacting with environment
- Collective behavior emerges from the
contributions of its parts - A complex system is
- non-linear, non-deterministic
- dynamic
- self-organizing
- error-tolerant
- most basic functions preserved under errors and
failures
No analytical solutions Need models and
simulations
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10Network anatomy
Structure affects function(s)
- e.g.
- topology of a computer network affects
capabilities to access information - topology of social networks affects the spread
of information
11Networks processes
12Not only theory
13Organizational structures
Formal organization
Social organization
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16Communication, information
One of the effects of living with electric
information is that we live habitually in a state
of information overload. There's always more
than you can cope with. Marshall McLuhan
17The limits
- How Much Information is There in an Economic
Organization and Why Can't Large Ones be
Optimal?De Vany, A. (1998). Brazil. Electr. J.
Econ. 1(1)Economic organizations represent
order and structure. They may be characterized as
coalitions of agents bound by multilateral
contracts. When a new organization is formed, new
information comes into being. ... - An "impossibility" theorem is stated which shows
that "large" organizations cannot be optimal and
realizable in finite time.
18- No one knows everything,
- everyone knows something,
- all knowledge resides in humanity.
networks
Adapted from Lévy 1997
19The advantages
- On the advantages of information
sharingLachmann, M. et al. (2000). Proc. R. Soc.
Lond. B, 2671287-1293 - During the evolution of life, there have been
several transitions in which individuals began to
cooperate, forming higher levels of organization,
and sometimes losing their independent
reproductive identity. Several factors that
confer evolutionary advantages on higher levels
of organization have been proposed. - In this paper we highlight one additional factor
the sharing of information between individuals.
Information sharing is not subject to the
intrinsic conservation laws that characterize the
sharing of physical resources. A simple model
will illustrate how information sharing can
result in aggregates in which the individuals
both receive more information about their
environment and pay less for it.
20Structure, creativity and innovation
A
B
Teigland 2003
21It is not the strongest species that survive, nor
the most intelligent, but the ones most
responsive to change.
Charles R. Darwin
22Shifting sources of value
- Competitive advantage is increasingly based on
an organizations ability to change and adapt - Adopting open business models
- competitive advantage through leveraging
external resources - definition of effective efficient dynamic
communication standards protocols - permeable organizational boundaries
- redefinition of acceptable sources of value and
knowledge - Recognizing environmental sources of value
- users as organizational resource
- value created by user interactions with
organizations through user-generated contents
23gt 1 billion Internet users
24The emergence of social media
- A powerful global conversation has begun. Through
the Internet, people are discovering and
inventing new ways to share relevant knowledge
with blinding speed. As a direct result, markets
are getting smarter - and getting smarter faster
than most companies. - The Cluetrain Manifesto (1999)
25When the rate of change outside an organization
is greater than the change inside, the end is
near.
Jack Welch
26Benefits from social media (or is it all hype?)
27Besides that
Trust reciprocity are essential for knowledge
exchange and business in social networks
28Cutting-edge technology Open dynamic
collaboration Different stakeholders Clear easy
rules Each stakeholder has advantages Users play
important role
29Excellence is achieved by the mastery of
fundamentals.
Vince Lombardi
30Thank you for your attention