Participating in social media has become a business imperative. More than 70 percent of organizations operating around the world are now active on social media. Many are finding significant benefits and unexpected risks along the way.
KPMG surveyed more than 1,800 managers and 2,000 employees at organizations in ten major markets and found that - in many cases - there remains a significant gap between expectation and reality when it comes to social media.
It is a 100 page PDF describing scenarios for the future of work:
Scenario 1: Global product creation in a networked company
Scenario 2: E-professionals in ad-hoc self-organising teams
Scenario 3: Coordinating distributed work of individual worker
Scenario 4: Community-based collaborative workspace
Scenario 5: Mobile workplaces in a collaborative business network
Scenario 6: Mobile competence workers in global supply chain
As the global economy emerges from the Great Recession, many organizations continue to experience its far-reaching effects, but it is not the only force at play as organizations continue to evolve.
Technology, demographics, shifts in work relationships, regulatory environments, and globalization exert themselves to reshape work. And many uncertainties remain about the future of the work that
will affect the structure and practices of the work experience.
Im Artikel werden auf Basis von aufgestellten Grundanforderungen gängige WikiLösungen vorgestellt, die für den Einsatz in Unternehmen oder anderen Organisation geeignet sind. Anhand bestimmter Features werden sie verglichen und bewertet, inwieweit sie für die Anwendung im Bereich Wissensmanagement geeignet sind. Die Wikis werden in Bezug auf Benutzerfreundlichkeit, Recherche, Strukturierung und Validierung von Wissen verglichen
Summary: "Most teams underperform. Yours can beat the odds. If you need the best practices and ideas for superior team building--but don't have time to find them--this book is for you. Here are 10 inspiring and useful perspectives, all in one place. This collection of HBR articles will help you: boost team performance through mutual accountability, motivate large, diverse groups to tackle complex projects, increase groups' emotional intelligence, reverse the fortunes of a struggling team, prevent decision deadlock, extract results from a bunch of touchy superstars, fight constructively with top-management colleagues, and ensure productivity in far-flung teams."
Summary: "The scores of successful virtual teams the authors examined didn't have many of the psychological and practical obstacles that plagued their more traditional, face-to-face counterparts. Team members felt freer to contribute--especially outside their established areas of expertise. The fact that such groups could not assemble easily actually made their projects go faster, as people did not wait for meetings to make decisions, and individuals, in the comfort of their own offices, had full access to their files and the complementary knowledge of their local colleagues. Reaping those advantages, though, demanded shrewd management of a virtual team's work processes and social dynamics. Rather than depend on videoconferencing or e-mail, which could be unwieldy or exclusionary, successful virtual teams made extensive use of sophisticated online team rooms, where everyone could easily see the state of the work in progress, talk about the work in ongoing threaded discussions, and be reminded of decisions, rationales, and commitments. Differences were most effectively hashed out in teleconferences, which team leaders also used to foster group identity and solidarity."