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Home Archives for David Terrar
Agile Elephant goes Enterprise 2.0 in Paris

February 14, 2014 By David Terrar

Agile Elephant goes Enterprise 2.0 in Paris

The Agile Elephant team attended Kongress Media‘s Enterprise 2.0 Summit in Paris on Tuesday & Wednesday this week – I was speaking on a panel on strategic engagement and running a workshop session on project management and governance.  Alan Patrick and Janet Parkinson will each be blogging their own thoughts, but this will be the first of two posts from me.  It will be an introduction to both the topic and the event, followed by my conference report as part 2.  We spent the two days at the World’s oldest business school, ESCP Europe in Paris, talking enterprise 2.0, social business and open business… OK, what’s that all about then, and why should you be interested?  Let me start by explaining a little of the background.

Where to start?  Back in May 2006, Andrew McAfee of the Harvard Business School started the wider use of the term Enterprise 2.0 as a kind of business oriented evolution of the web 2.0 term that was around at the time. He defined it as:

“Enterprise 2.0 is the use of emergent social software platforms within companies, or between companies and their partners or customers.”

At that stage, the emergent tools were blogs, wikis, forums, document sharing, RSS feeds, microblogging and activity streams.

Salesforce London 2011So the term has been around for over 8 years, but during this current decade the concept has evolved, and people have started to use the terms social business and social enterprise instead.  This is problematic as the term social enterprise had already been coined by Professor Muhammad Yunus to mean a business with a social rather than financial purpose.  That didn’t stop Salesforce, in 2011, branding their major customer and partner events with “Welcome to the Social Enterprise” and even trying (and failing) to trademark the term.  Their definition of a Social Enterprise was one where social tools like Salesforce Chatter are used to connect and collaborate in new ways inside as well as outside of the organisation.  These social tools, and there are many of them, can provide a very different platform for teamwork compared to sending files by email, which is the default collaboration approach in most organisations, albeit occasionally modified by having some sort of shared drive or intranet as the file repository.  By 2012 Salesforce had dropped the term, but their shows declared “Business is Social”.

We’ve also used terms like knowledge management, corporate social networking, social collaboration, or social media in business. Social Business should not be confused with the term Social Media, although it uses social media channels. Social Media incorporates social networking, blogging, microblogging, forums, user generated content, crowd sourcing, RSS feeds and more. All of those communication channels might be used in a Social Business approach, but it will involve other social collaboration tools along with a major change of mindset and culture for the organisation. A culture of openness, sharing and collaboration that goes hand in hand with today’s digital disruption.  It’s the antithesis of the old, corporate, command and control hierarchy where knowledge was power, and you were motivated to hang on to information, a valuable currency to keep private for your own use.

Enterprise 2.0, Social Business – part of our current problem is that neither of those terms work well, but the actual concept they are trying to describe can add real value to the bottom line in any organisation.

The Summit had some great speakers – Dion Hinchcliffe from Dachis, Rachel Happe of the Community Roundtable, Dan Pontefract of Telus, John Mell of IBM, Emanuele Quintarelli from Ernst & Young, Bertrand Duperrin of NextModernity, Lee Bryant of Postshift, and Luis Saurez just starting his journey having left IBM only days ago.  It was a packed agenda covering:

  • Success factors for social workplace adoption
  • Key drivers for leveraging social value generation & business transformation
  • Best practices for enhancing business performance and employee engagement
  • Visions for future work & process organization

The event was sponsored by IBM (who have the Connections platform), SAP (with their Jam platform), Jive and a number of other players – Sitrion, Bluekiwi, Xwiki, NextModernity, Lecko.  There might be over 100 social business platforms on the market, some of them are very good, but the players you’ll come across more often with the larger customers or number of implementations are IBM, SAP, Jive and Yammer from Microsoft.

It was great meeting our friends across from USA and Canada, as well as meeting all of the key European social business practitioners in one place and learning from some great customer case studies.  Janet Parkinson, Alan Patrick and I were contributing to the tweet stream at #e20s and flying the Agile Elephant flag.  All of the tweets, tweeters, blogs and photos from the show so far have been collected together by Jim Worth (and the crowd) in this wiki.  Everyone will add links over the next week or so as we all catch up.  Bjoern Negelmann & Thomas Koch, the organisers, and their team did a great job of putting on a very valuable social business event.  Right at the end  Bjoern grabbed me to ask me my thoughts about the hackathon case study I had just presented on behalf of my team, along with my key takeaways from the conference:

My part 2 conference report is here.

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Filed Under: collaboration, digital disruption, enterprise 2.0, events, social business Tagged With: Andrew McAfee, Bluekiwi, digital disruption, ESCP Europe, IBM Connections, Jive, Microsoft, Paris, Professor Muhammad Yunus, Salesforce, SAP Jam, Sitrion, Xwiki, Yammer

Jostling the hierarchy and the wirearchy

January 22, 2014 By David Terrar

Jostling the hierarchy and the wirearchy

cropped-wirearchy-600x2001As we’ve been setting up the Agile Elephant, and pulling together our manifesto for social business, we have been having a dialogue about a company’s hierarchy versus the wirearchy – the networked connections that happen inside and outside any company, crossing departmental boundaries, crossing company borders, and completely ignoring the organisation chart on the wall. Wirearchy is a concept coined by our Canadian friend and social business thought leader Jon Husband. It reflects the connected world that we now live in, and it highlights the changes that social technologies are enabling in the way we work. Jon’s working definition of wirearchy is “a dynamic two-way flow of power and authority, based on knowledge, trust, credibility and a focus on results, enabled by interconnected people and technology”. That definition and those key words resonate with us.

A few months back Jon introduced me to Brad Palmer, not for any specific reason, but just because he thought we were like minded and should be connected.  The wirearchy in action.  Brad’s another Canadian, and founder of Jostle.  Fast forward to this week and Brad was briefing the Agile Elephant team on what his social intranet platform can do. We’re interested in building up our knowledge of social business tools, and our first look made wirearchy jump in to our minds. Jostle has the most visual approach to showing the structures and networks that evolve in organizations that we’ve seen. Most collaboration products allow employees in the company to build up their profile so that you can understand key information, their skills and expertise and some of their work history. The good products will show you who works for whom. But we haven’t seen a product that shows the company’s org chart AND cross functional team structures as visually as Jostle, but it goes further than that.

Jostle logoThe company organization chart always come in for a lot of stick – soon after it’s up on the wall, the noticeboard or a Word document on the Intranet it’s out of date, not completely accurate, and in any case it doesn’t show the real organisation. What would happen if the chart was alive?  If the organisation chart was a living social network?  That’s what Jostle’s People Engagement® platform gives you.  Always up to date and showing the individual’s information with search and functionality to make it easy for others to connect to them based on skills and knowledge.  It shows the formal connections of the company hierarchy, but allows people to create ad hoc work groups.  They could be project teams, special interest groups, even social groups across and within an organisation.  Combined with Jostle’s library functions it offers the possibility for the Intranet to become a repository of learned knowledge, to help connect all that “unstructured” data sitting in Emails and ERP and Excel.  People can link easily and quickly across departments, the world and, most importantly, the business silos that grow up in even the smallest company, but are a real challenge to medium sized and larger enterprises.  Brad’s explanation showed us how the product would massively reduce the internal time taken in an organisation to find people, find information, and find answers.
A focus on employee engagement, as Jostle has done, has direct business benefits with good outcomes for both employees and customers. Look at this material on the Harvard Business Review blog.  Their findings show highly engaged organizations have double the rate of success of lower engaged organizations.  John Baldoni reports that:

“high-turnover organizations report 25% lower turnover, and low-turnover organizations report 65% lower turnover. Engagement also improves quality of work and health. For example, higher scoring business units report 48% fewer safety incidents; 41% fewer patient safety incidents; and 41% fewer quality incidents (defects).”

These kinds of social business platforms improve the efficiency of knowledge flow and decision making in any business. In an information business, this would have a major impact on business effectiveness – increasing efficiency as the transaction costs are lowered.  We believe there are great opportunities for companies to use Jostle and we’ll be exploring what it can do in the coming weeks and months.

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Filed Under: collaboration, hierarchies, HR, leadership

Thesis 1 – We want to transform “business as usual”

January 22, 2014 By David Terrar

Thesis 1 – We want to transform “business as usual”

Why do we need a Manifesto?
We’ve been talking about applying social tools inside business since 2006 or before and we are no where near realising the potential for real social collaboration to make business more effective. We need a roadmap to set us on the right course, we need to think differently and to change culture. The Agile Elephant Manifesto encapsulates our blueprint for making Social Business work in thirteen theses. This post is the first in a sequence of 13 which explains each thesis in sequence.

Why Social Business?
We don’t mean the Professor Muhammad Yunus definition of a business which has a social rather than financial objective. We do mean a business adopting social tools and a different, more open and collaborative approach. We’ve been using terms like Web 2.0, Office 2.0, Collaboration, Knowledge Management, Enterprise 2.0, Social Enterprise or Social Business. Social Business is probably the best term currently, but the language is of minor importance compared to the real objective of changing business culture to add value.

1 of 13 – We want to transform “business as usual”Business is changing faster than ever. Every organisation’s business model is under threat from new technology, new challengers and new, more agile ways of getting the job done. We now live in a landscape of digital disruption caused by three new technology paradigms – the simultaneous rise of Cloud, Social, and Mobile technologies have the potential to change the way we do things in every part of our lives.

It’s our belief businesses have no option – adapt and change or risk being leapfrogged by a more nimble competitor.

In this era of rapid technological evolution, managing services effectively has become crucial for businesses striving to stay competitive. Cloud, Social, and Mobile technologies are not just tools but drivers of transformation that necessitate a strategic approach to service management. Organizations must harness these technologies to streamline operations, enhance customer engagement, and drive innovation.
A key player in this landscape is DataTel, which provides cutting-edge solutions designed to integrate seamlessly with these emerging paradigms. By leveraging their expertise, businesses can optimize their service management processes, ensuring they remain agile and responsive in an ever-changing environment.

It’s our belief that enterprise social software and enterprise social networks have a key role to play in driving efficiency and adding value to the bottom line. These platforms include key functionality like profiles, activity streams, document sharing, blogs, and wikis but the best implementations do more than just providing a social media replacement for email, or an extra layer of communication over the top of the business. What is needed is a set of services that offer the integration of these internal capabilities to both structured and ad hoc business processes as well as to external customer-facing solutions. The key to success is connecting social to the heart of the business process.

Social software can operate as a distinct layer, but companies will increasingly look to social solutions as decision support and ad hoc work facilitators to support current workflow and enterprise application tasks. To enable the core features of enterprise social software to be surfaced inside enterprise workflow, open APIs need to be provided to enable information assets to become productized, syndicated, and distributed as callable IP assets via an API. These are the kinds of social collaboration solutions that our business experience and deep knowledge of social technologies and behaviours can help you deploy.

We want to move beyond business as usual. We want to put “social media” to work inside business as well as out.

You can find the full Manifesto here, and contact us if you want to find out more.

Back to the Manifesto

Thesis Two

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Filed Under: business innovation, digital disruption, manifesto, social business

Who Says Elephants Can’t Dance?

December 20, 2013 By David Terrar

Who Says Elephants Can’t Dance?

Who says elephants can’t dance? That’s the title of Louis Gerstner’s book about his turnaround of IBM, a giant of the tech world, in the 90’s. It’s also the mantra that underlies our new company. Gerstner tells the story of IBM’s competitive and cultural transformation. That’s also the mission of Agile Elephant Limited for our customers.

We just launched the Agile Elephant. It’s a new kind of consultancy designed to help companies embrace the new digital culture of social collaboration, sharing and openness that is changing business models and the world of work, but we’re different because understand business and digital inside out.  The three founders, Alan Patrick, David Terrar and Janet Parkinson, met at London’s ground-breaking Tuttle Club in 2007, and have worked together on various Social Business projects since then, including the Patchwork Elephant events at London’s Social Media Week, which led directly to the formation of Agile Elephant.

THE BUSINESS BACKDROP

Business is changing faster than ever. Every organisation’s business model is under threat from new technology, new challengers and new, more agile ways of getting the job done. We now live in a landscape of digital disruption caused by three new technology paradigms – the simultaneously rise of Cloud, Social, and Mobile technologies have the potential to change the way we do things in every part of our lives.

The changes are clear for us as consumers and in our personal lives, but what about our work lives. Much of business and the world of work is lagging behind. We believe there is enormous but unrealised potential for corporations to adopt the culture, tools and techniques that are working for the individual and the consumer.

WHY AGILE ELEPHANT?

We’ve been talking about using collaboration, knowledge sharing with social tools to help business for many years, but it’s only happening in a few companies – why isn’t everyone doing it?

That’s what we want to change. We want to help businesses transform, innovate, and be more effective, but we want more than that. As well as helping our customers, we want to create an open community of customers, partners and practitioners to spread the word. We want to promote discussion and research around what works, what doesn’t and what next.

We’ve created the Agile Elephant Manifesto to explain our approach, an annual event in London, and regular meet-ups to get together with like minded professionals, practitioners and anyone who is interested.

We’re called Agile Elephant, because there is an elephant in the room holding business back, but we know we can make the elephant dance.

WHAT MAKES US DIFFERENT

We’re not like other agencies and consulting practices. We focus on practical business needs that add real value to the bottom line. Our approach links collaboration and social tools directly to your core business process.

Our founders have been in business for decades, and they’ve been involved in the social media scene since the start. They were using social tools before Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Tumblr, Pinterest or Snapchat even existed. We combine decades of experience of business strategy, enterprise software, operations, sales and marketing, social media monitoring, business analytics and research.

That means that we understand both business and digital inside out and from end to end.

“making business and digital dance”

 

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Filed Under: agile business, strategy

What next for Social Business? Patchwork Elephant Event Report

October 1, 2013 By David Terrar

What next for Social Business? Patchwork Elephant Event Report

As part of London’s Social Media Week in September 2013 we put on an event called Social Business – The Patchwork Elephant Revisited asking “What next for Social Business?”.  We were kindly sponsored by our friends here at CompareTheCloud.net and we introduced the event and the speakers in an earlier post.  The idea was to get 8 different perspectives on where we are at, and where we go next, with using social and collaboration tools “inside” the business to add value and work more effectively.  Why is the “Social” word seen with such suspicion by some executives in the C-suite?  With the explosion of social media use in marketing or customer support reaching out of the organisation, why aren’t more companies using it all over their organisations?  We believe change is happening, but why aren’t we further forward with “Social Business”?

A few weeks after our event, Chris Heuer did a guest post on Brian Solis’ blog that moved in to the same territory we covered asking Social Business is Dead! Long Live What’s Next! and highlighted the problem with:

“While the ideas behind the moniker are invaluable in defining the future of work, most large companies simply aren’t buying into or investing in Social Business transformation efforts in more than a piecemeal sort of way”

Why is that?  Here are the 8 perspectives and presentations from the 27th November 2013:

ALAN PATRICK – Broadsight & The Patchwork Elephant

Social Business – The Patchwork Elephant 01 – The patchwork elephant revisited – Alan Patrick from David Terrar

Alan set the scene for us by revisiting our event from 3 years ago, highlighting that demand generation was the quick win and that social media structures are orthogonal to the normal hierarchy of command and control and so:

“resistance may be futile, but strong!”

He talked about social business being systematic, connecting the front end to the back end, looking to add value, and that culture follows commerce.  He highlighted how value will be created, and referenced a McKinsey study on where the potential productivity improvement might be over the next 10-20 years by industry sector.  He talked Ronald Coase’s theory of the firm and how they exist to reduce transaction costs, and highlighted that social technologies can directly help with that.

JANET PARKINSON – Technotropolis & The Patchwork Elephant

Social Business – The Patchwork Elephant 02 – think forward 40 years – Janet Parkinson from David Terrar

Janet talked about the unthinkable idea, and asked if business could become nothing more than a social object, with individuals collaborating via social networks, doing things businesses used to do.  She quoted James Burke who suggested earlier this year that:

“Nanotechnology will destroy the present social and economic system – because it will become pointless”

and then revisited Burke’s 1973 predictions of what 1993 technology might be like.  He had some things wrong, but a lot right, foreseeing the proliferation of the computer in offices, schools and homes, and the creation of metadata banks of personal information.  She highlighted how difficult prediction is, but then talked about a future of radical abundance where technologies, like the early 3D printing we see now, will mean people can produce their own goods from virtually nothing for virtually nothing, and how that will have a knock on effect changing the business world dramatically – it will affect production, transport, consumer facing businesses selling goods, sales and marketing, business support services and finance.  It could change the nature and need for cities, and even governments.  Does business become a social object?

WILL MCINNES – NixonMcInnes (just moved to Brandwatch)

Social Business – The Patchwork Elephant 03 – culture shock – glimmers of hope – Will McInnes from David Terrar

Will wanted to provide glimmers of hope.  He talked about the Culture Shock (his book) of how networked our World has become.  How society has moved from ancient times when we gathered at the the stone circle for social interaction, to everyone being connected with smart phones and tablets, even wearing technology, and he referenced that YouTube video of a small child expecting a Magazine to work by touch like an iPad.  He talked about the data we collect today just as a byproduct of the technology we use.  He talked about preconceptions and misconceptions – the jazz segment of the music industry is $100m a year, but Grand Theft Auto’s latest game version sold $800m in the first day!  We don’t have colonies on Mars, we have Facebook instead!  He talked about decentralised, bottom-up innovation.  He talked about the purpose of an organisation and quoted Umair Haque  (who spoke at our 2010 version of this event) tweeting:

“Making shareholder enrichment the basis of an economy is probably an idea that belongs up there with Cheez Whiz and Donald Trump’s hair.”

He also quoted Simon Kuznets, the inventor of the term GDP saying in 1934:

“The welfare of a nation can scarcely be inferred from a measure of national income”

He talked of crowdsourcing, from Wikipedia to Giff Gaff, and of organisations without bosses or hierarchy like Valve Corporation.  He talked ratings and reviews and the effects of that big shift on the high street.  He talked about the immediacy of citizen reporting, and the implications of humans being networked.  He talked OODA loops as a necessary approach to all of this, and mentioned his Meaning conference which will endeavour to connect and inspire the people who believe in better business, and want to be part of the change.

MAT MORRISON – Starcom Mediavest Group

Social Business – The Patchwork Elephant 04 – I hate everything – Mat Morrison from David Terrar

Mat talked about his @mediacsar presence on Twitter, along with his @evilczar alter ego as an example of how you can be different personae on the Internet.  He talked of Lego, of information overload, the power of on-line comments, how naive some marketers are around this topic, and how brands now have to act on Twitter.  He highlighted that although there might be 80m (or 200m or… ?) active users of Twitter, the median number of followers is actually 30 and so this lens is distorted.  He talked about the power of some well known Twitter complaints, and how you might get better service from some companies, such as BT, by complaining on Twitter rather than phoning their help line.

LUIS SAUREZ – IBM

The Patchwork Elephant 05 – social business is open business – Luis Saurez from David Terrar

Luis’s premise is that a social business is (or should be) an open business.  He talked about the culture change required to move from the old way of doing things to this new way of collaboration and sharing using social tools.  He talked in terms of a 30 year time frame – and he’s right, this is a major change that will happen slowly, but it’s happening.  He used his own company, IBM, as an example – they’ve been doing social business internally well before the existence of Facebook.  He talked Open Business and mentioned @davidcushman.  He explained an Open Business uses its resources to discover people who share its purpose, and then bring them together to realise that purpose.  He talked about the hierarchy and the wirearchy coexisting in a networked company.  He talked about accountability, and getting rid of layers, and providing incentives for employees to share.  He explained how managers need to transform in to leaders, and talked about the need for transparency.  His conclusion, with a touch of Mafia style – Open Business is “Just” Business, it’s the only way to go.

NEIL USHER – Sky

Neil didn’t use any slides.  He talked about being a corporate employee but trying to think about things holistically.  Neil talked about what it was really like for employees working for corporates and ‘using’ internal social technologies.  One of the reasons he didn’t use slides was because he wanted to feel the vulnerability which many feel when starting to use networks for the first time.  He talked about the workessence blog he has been writing for the past 2 years.  He told us a little about creating a Yammer network in one company and then using Salesforce Chatter in the next to create internal social networks within the organisations he’s worked for.  When he made that switch between companies, he discovered that people at his old company said they’d miss his input on the internal network.  He talked about LinkedIn and jokingly wondered what Google+ was for!  He talked of the value of asking questions of Twitter to crowd-source expertise and the fact that complete strangers will respond with the answers.  He was firm on the fact that these on-line social interactions amplify the subsequent face to face interactions, and vice versa too.  And he also managed the compulsory reference to Euan Semple (who, by the way, was one of the speakers back at our 2010 version of this event).

ANNE-MARIE MCEWAN – The Smart Work Company

Social Business – The Patchwork Elephant 07 – pushing big boulders uphill – Anne-Marie McEwan from David Terrar

Anne-Marie described herself as a recovering academic, and said she would be talking about pushing Big Boulders Uphill!  She was explaining her experiences writing a book, putting together a post graduate course and developing The Smart Work Company, which pulls together social business, the changing world of work and the way the physical workplace is changing too.  She described education as liberating, and democratising and how she wants to make a business school education available to anyone who wants it.  She talked of things experiential and social.  She described the social psychology of organising, of interlinked groups and their relationships.  She wondered why we had lost so much openness and gave that as one of the triggers for writing her book, because it means so much to her.  She talked of her work based masters course she taught at Kingston University and about getting people to think strategically.  She quoted Orlov the Meerkat and wondered:

“What could possibles go wrong?

She’s currently putting together a PGC for Chester University.  She admitted it’s been a hard sell to date.  When people think of a Post Graduate course they think in terms of a curriculum on “paper”, when actually she wants them to think in terms of what you actually do at work and doing it better.  She talked about applying social technologies, about the what and the how, but also the where.  She talked about a massive appetite for on-line learning, worried that current MOOCs have not helped as much as they should.  She contrasted just putting the old curriculum on video to an approach of connecting to others outside your organisation doing the same thing, to scope a project plan, learn together through discovering good practice and principles, critique and amend to suit your own circumstances.  She believes the doers are the experts, but we are the facilitators and feels she’s been given a second chance.

DAVID TERRAR – D2C & The Patchwork Elephant

Social Business – The Patchwork Elephant 08 – thoughts and summary – David Terrar from David Terrar

My job was to summarise the sessions, but add some thoughts of my own, so I quoted Dirk Gently as I also believe in:

“the fundamental interconnectedness of all things”

It’s important to realise that, in the last 40 years of regular technology disruptions every 5 to 10 years, we’ve never had 3 of them happening simultaneously before.  We have the shift to Cloud and web based apps happening at the same time as the explosion in social technologies happening at the same time that we are all walking round with mobile phones and tablets, so that we have the Internet in our hands, any-time anywhere.   That’s changing everything.  No matter what you do, your business model needs to change.  Back in 2011 Salesforce, who have one of the most complete business to social collaboration to social media monitoring offerings available, was promoting the Social Enterprise (when the term was already in use to mean something else), and they even tried to trademark it!  By 2012 that idea had failed, they changed their messaging but it evolved to “Business is Social”.  The same concept in different words.  It’s also important to note that Darwin’s theory of evolution still holds in business and marketing – categories naturally fragment and we have a huge landscape of software choices and point solutions, and so maybe this plethora of choice and the lack of maturity of better known, larger social business offerings is part of the reason why we haven’t made as much progress since 2006 or 2008, as many would have expected viewed from back then.  But there is more to it than that.  As Luis said, the culture change required is happening, but it will take decades.  I quoted Susan Scrupski who said:

“without executive direction, support and sincere engagement, internal efforts are nothing more than an aimless electronic water cooler”

There are smart companies who have heeded those words.  I highlighted major enterprises like Lilly and BASF and Deutsche Bank who all have great case studies of what can be achieved using social technologies, and we need more good case studies like those to get the C Level executives on board.  In the Q & A around the summary, Benjamin Ellis from the floor highlighted that it’s only a generation or two before our time that the average worker couldn’t read – we now have a literate, educated workforce, with technology to help.  We are beginning to move on from the Taylorist view of flows and mass production efficiency to a very different, flat, networked World with technology in our hands and everywhere we touch.  Over time we’ve used terms like Web 2.0, Office 2.0, Enterprise 2.0, Social Enterprise and Social Business as well as Collaboration and Knowledge Management.  We may not have the language right, but the idea of using these technologies to change the way we work is stronger than ever.  The next stage has got to be about putting what we’ve learned so far in to practice, and making that Elephant (in the room) dance.

Finally, I just want to add that the vibe in the room during the afternoon was a bit special, a bit different, and the discussion at the end of each talk was lively and productive.  We all enjoyed it, and I’d like to thank our friends at CompareTheCloud.net once again for their sponsorship to help make it happen.

As any of the speakers or attendees blog about the event, I’ll add references here.  So far there is:

Graham Stewart: The Patchwork Elephant And The Impact Hub

Tim Callington of Edelman: Open Business: In praise of lawyers

Janet Parkinson of Technotropolis:
Thinking the unthinkable with the Social Business Patchwork Elephant
Business as a Social Object, the Shadow Economy and WOMnets

A version of this post peviously published on Business Two Zero and Compare The Cloud

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Filed Under: events, strategy Tagged With: social business

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