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Aurialie Jublin

A job is just a role that cannot change | Harold Jarche - 0 views

  • The hierarchical organizational structure is outdated. Those outside the organization, including employees after work, have more connections and better access to knowledge than inside. Traditionally, companies have been users of human capital, demanding all intellectual property for themselves. But networks can empower individuals, building upon the strengths of each member. The innovators are moving away from companies and into networks already. Today, most new companies are hiring fewer employees and many existing companies are shedding employees at every opportunity. The newly unemployed often realize their professional networks outside the organization are inadequate. The industrial era social contract between capital and labour is broken. Workers are starting to get more professional value from their social networks than from their companies, especially through open knowledge-sharing.
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    "Social networks disrupt hierarchical structures. Web-based social networks accelerate the spread of new ideas and lay bare organizational flaws. Anyone in a position of power and authority is losing some of that due to the growing power of social networks - doctors, teachers, managers, politicians. Social networks speed access to knowledge and accelerate learning. They allow people to quickly make and change connections. Seb Paquet calls this "ridiculously easy group-forming"."
Aurialie Jublin

New security threat at work: Bring-your-own-network - Computerworld - 0 views

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    BYON is a by-product of increasingly common technology that allows users to create their own mobile networks, usually through mobile wireless hotspots. Security professionals say BYON requires a new approach to security because some internal networks may now be as insecure as consumer devices. Jim Kunick, an attorney with the Chicago law firm Much Shelist, said BYON represents a more dangerous threat to data security than employees who bring their own smartphones or tablets into the office. "The network thing blows this up completely, because it takes the data out of the network the company protects," he said. "There's no way to ensure the security of that data. People are running corporate apps and processing corporate and client data using networks that may or may not be secure.
Aurialie Jublin

The new artisans of the network era | Harold Jarche - 0 views

  • Knowledge artisans are amplified versions of their pre-industrial counterparts. Augmented by technology, they rely on their networks and skills to solve complex problems and test new ideas. Small groups of highly productive knowledge artisans are capable of producing goods and services that used to take much larger teams and resources. In addition to redefining how work is done, knowledge artisans are creating new organizational structures and business models, such as virtual companies, crowd-sourced product development, and alternative currencies.
  • Knowledge artisans are often more contractual, more independent and shorter-term than previous information age employees. Because of their more nomadic nature, artisanal workers will bring their own learning networks. Companies will need to accept this in order to get work done. Also, training departments must be ready to adapt to knowledge artisans by allowing them to  collaborate and connect with their external online networks.
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    Are knowledge workers the new artisans of the network era? If so, can you call yourself a knowledge worker if you are not allowed to choose your own tools? How about managing your own learning?
Aurialie Jublin

Midsize Insider: Think BYOD Is Bad? Get Ready For BYON - 0 views

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    Après le BYOD, le BYON - Bring Your Own Network, qui va poser bcp de question de sécurité. "Do-it-yourself networking allows people to run applications in three different cloud-based environments at one time because they're on their own network, they're on a network that they contracted with, and they're on the corporate network."
Aurialie Jublin

A Network Of Transparent Futuristic Offices Created For The Mobile, Urban Workforce | C... - 0 views

  • The design is basically an updated and more stylish version of an internet cafe, intended to encourage more interaction. The structure is a simple glass wall or cube, so everyone is visible while they work, like in a miniature version of the Apple store on Fifth Avenue in New York City, "As opposed to being tucked away by yourself at Starbucks, WW offers the opportunity to connect with fellow entrepreneurs while being 'out there' and seen by the public doing business," Berdou explains
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    "U.K. design student Julie Berdou has an idea for how to create even more options for mobile work: A network of tiny offices, called WW, that would be spread across a city, offering a spot to stop in for a few minutes and work while you're on-the-go. Her design won a recent RSA Student Design Award."
julien camacho

LinkedIn Best Practices - Key Tips For Marketing And Sales Pros | Blog | Latt... - 0 views

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    LinkedIn is the fastest growing talent network, with 2 new members every second and it has 225M registered members in all parts of the world. 50 percent of all users are decision makers. It's no surprise that sales and marketing pros are looking for best practices to help them optimize their efforts with LinkedIn
Aurialie Jublin

Understanding Fair Labor Practices in a Networked Age - 0 views

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    Internet-enabled technologies allow people to connect in unprecedented ways. Although everyday social practices are widespread and well known, these same tools are reconfiguring key aspects of work. Crowdsourcing and distributed labor technologies increasingly allow companies to outsource everything from mundane tasks (e.g., Amazon Mechanical Turk) to professional services (e.g., oDesk). Sharing economy - or peer economy - tools (e.g., Airbnb) allow people to barter goods or services or get paid for these exchanges outside of the dominant business framework. These services have enabled new forms of contract or freelance labor and reduced risk for companies; however, there is often an increase in risk for the associated laborers. At the same time, divisions between what constitutes work, hobby, and volunteerism get blurred, especially as many organizations rely on volunteer labor under the assumption that it's mutually beneficial (e.g., blogs and journalistic enterprises that republish work or see the offer of a platform as valuable in and of itself). While all of these labor issues have unmediated precedents (e.g., free internships), technology magnifies the scale of these practices, minimizes the transactional friction, and increases the visibility of unpaid and freelance work. Collectively, this raises critical questions about what fair labor looks like in a networked world, where boundaries dissolve and existing mechanisms of labor protection do not address the varied work scenarios now available.
Thierry Nabeth

Workers of the world, log in. (LinkedIn & recruting) - 1 views

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    The social network has already shaken up the way professionals are hired. Its ambitions go far beyond that. ... It is even difficult to quantify the impact of LinkedIn on labour markets so far. In theory, making it easier for people to find better jobs could affect the rate of job turnover within firms: recruiters say they have noticed little impact, and that other factors (such as the economic cycle)-seem to matter more. But no one really knows.
abrugiere

Peer Production Licence : une licence conçue pour les biens communs ? | :: S.... - 0 views

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    Un article de Lionel Maurel sur les licences, mais qui contient en son sein une référence intéressante d'entreprise produisant des biens communs, et rétribuant ses contributeurs. Ce fonctionnement est rendu possible grâce à un système d'Open Value Network : c'est-à-dire un système de traçabilité des actions, et d'évaluation des contributions par les pairs
Aurialie Jublin

What Value Creation Will Look Like in the Future - Jack Hughes - Harvard Business Review - 1 views

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    The value of products and services today is based more and more on creativity - the innovative ways that they take advantage of new materials, technologies, and processes. Value creation in the past was a function of economies of industrial scale: mass production and the high efficiency of repeatable tasks. Value creation in the future will be based on economies of creativity: mass customization and the high value of bringing a new product or service improvement to market; the ability to find a solution to a vexing customer problem; or, the way a new product or service is sold and delivered. Organizational structure will have to change to meet the new reality of creativity as a core component of value and continuous innovation as the mechanism to sustain it. The new organization will include structures that support innovation 24/7/365 and at increasing scale. They will be more like organisms than machines. They'll be structurally fluid - bringing individuals together in creative networks designed to adapt to an ever changing landscape of customer needs and desires, often at a moment's notice. Management will be the job of those who oversee creative economies, ecosystems, and communities; it will be the job of managing innovation on a continuous basis where scale is used to create differentiated products and services to solve problems and meet needs on a customer by customer basis - all in real or near real time.
Aurialie Jublin

L'adoption des RSE et plateformes collaboratives progresse lentement - Entreprise20.fr - 1 views

    • Aurialie Jublin
       
      Résultat de l'étude "évolution de la networked enterprise" : Si l'adoption de certaines technologies et fonctionnalités liées à la networked enterprise sont en hausse régulière, la tendance générale est plutôt à la stagnation ;  - Les bénéfices ressentis au sujet de ces nouveaux outils ou nouvelles pratiques sont plutôt mitigés (surtout liés à la réduction des coûts de communication ou de voyage) ; - Des préoccupations qui se déportent vers des sujets très techniques (accès mobile, sécurisation des données dans les nuages, big data…).
  • Même son de cloche avec l’étude 2013 sur la Social Collaboration en Allemagne, en France et au Royaume-Uni de PA Consultants. On y apprend que les entreprises allemandes et anglaises ont une approche pragmatique centrée sur l’efficacité ou la recherche de rapidité, alors que les entreprises françaises cherchent à améliorer la motivation, l’implication… mais comme ces derniers bénéficient d’un faible niveau d’autonomie, les résultats ne sont pas forcément au rendez-vous
  • Le principal enseignement de cette étude est que des solutions sont déployées, probablement dû à un bon travail d’évangélisation des éditeurs, mais que l’intégration aux outils du quotidien reste à faire. En d’autres termes : on colle des rustines pour faire bonne figure, mais les habitudes ne changent pas forcément à cause d’un déficit de volonté de changement.
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  • Comme pour les études précédentes, si les entreprises se targuent d’un déploiement de solutions modernes (RSE, accès mobile…), elles sont beaucoup moins volontaires pour initier une mutation en profondeur des habitudes de travail. Ce qui manque le plus, comme le démontre ces études, est la mise en place d’une réelle dynamique de changement où la direction et le middle management expliquent, stimulent et participent de façon active à la transformation des outils et processus métiers.
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    Un article de synthèse de quatre études sur l'adoption des RSE et plateformes collaboratives parues récemment.
Thierry Nabeth

Report IPTS: Assessing the Benefits of Social Networks for Organizations: Report on the... - 0 views

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    The first phase of the SEA-SoNS ("Assessing the Benefits of Social Networks on Organizations") project aimed to analyse the current market situation for a limited number of social media stakeholders, to identify and analyse best practices for these selected stakeholders, and to define and prioritise relevant policy options. While social media technologies present several potential benefits to organisations, there are considerable challenges and bottlenecks affecting their adoption that may warrant policy intervention. To accomplish the objective of developing suitable policy options, the project undertook a range of research and data collection activities, including a review of the literature, a scoping workshop, semi-structured interviews, an on-line 'animation' of stakeholders, and a brainstorming workshop. The main results were presented at the Digital Agenda Assembly (DAA) 2012.
abrugiere

Technology Is changing The Working Habits Of Young People (With Infographic) - 0 views

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    80% of college students want to choose their own devices for work. 33% of employees are using at least 3 devices for their jobs. 68% of employees and 71% of college students think that devices at work should be used for social networking and for personal use
julien camacho

L'énorme potentiel de LinkedIn, le "Facebook sérieux des pros" - Le Nouvel Ob... - 0 views

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    Avec ses 225 millions de profils et ses deux nouveaux utilisateurs chaque seconde, LinkedIn est le réseau social professionnel à la plus forte croissance. Selon une étude intitulée "LinkedIn, the serious network" publiée ce mardi 2 juillet par faberNovel, LinkedIn représente "un géant sous-estimé de la technologie, avec un énorme potentiel".
hubert guillaud

Du social graph au work graph - Entreprise20.fr - 0 views

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    La collaboration sociale, via les fameux réseaux sociaux d'entreprise, est une pratique peu couru dans les entreprises françaises. Certes, imposer des modules sociaux ne suffit pas à faire collaborer les gens. Mais trop souvent on a proposé aux entreprises un réseau social d'employés, plutôt qu'un réseau social d'intérêts. Comme l'explique Wired - http://www.wired.com/opinion/2013/10/its-time-to-focus-on-the-work-graph-not-social-networks-at-work/ - une bonne partie de nos journées de travail ne sont pas consacrées au travail, mais à des tâches connexes. Dans ce contexte, les réseaux sociaux d'entreprises ne sont d'aucune utilité, car ils ne permettent pas de réduire le nombre de réunions ou d'e-mails. La raison est que le social graph est souvent développé à la place du work graph, consistant à mettre en relation un réseau d'entités en rapport avec le quotidien des employés (idées, taches, objectifs, processus, clients...), des informations à propos de ces unités de travail (documents, conversations, statuts, données...) ainsi que les interactions qui vont avec (alertes, commentaires, notifications...). Pour Cavazza, l'entreprise a surtout besoin d'outils complémentaires...
Aurialie Jublin

Motivation des salariés : le Job Crafting, donner du sens au travail - 0 views

  • Concrètement, qu'est-ce que le Job Crafting ? Traduit littéralement, cela signifie peu ou prou « travail façonné par la main », autrement dit c'est la manière dont le collaborateur adapte, modèle, sculpte, transforme son job afin de le rendre plus attrayant, moins routinier, moins rythmé par les mêmes tâches répétitives, donc moins ennuyeux...
  • Le Job Crafting, dont l'objectif est de remobiliser continuellement les talents, consiste à laisser le collaborateur libre de réorganiser son travail, par exemple en passant moins de temps sur une tâche rébarbative pour se consacrer davantage aux missions qui l'enthousiasment et lui procurent du plaisir. Cela suppose l'autonomie et la polyvalence des salariés. 
  • L’architecte de son propre réseau est appelé Network Crafter. En créant du lien pour s’épanouir dans leur poste, il utilise les réseaux internes et externes comme outils de travail. L’idée est de développer les relations humaines pour mieux appréhender la personnalité et le rôle de chacun au sein de l’organisation. Le Network Crafter propose par exemple, un échange de poste pour comprendre les différentes missions de son interlocuteur interne. Ainsi les demandes sont mieux orientées et les réponses deviennent plus efficaces. Ce gain de temps contribue à l’efficacité de son travail.
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    "Le Job Crafting est l'art de laisser le collaborateur libre de « façonner » son travail pour le rendre plus attractif. Cette démarche responsabilisante qui implique l'assentiment du top management, fait baisser le taux d'absentéisme et de turnover."
Aurialie Jublin

LinkedIn s'associe à Evernote pour faire entrer les cartes de visite papier d... - 0 views

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    LinkedIn et Evernote annoncent la signature d'un partenariat stratégique. Les abonnés du réseau social pourront accéder aux services d'Evernote (notamment la numérisation de cartes de visite) et inversement. A l'ère d'Internet et des réseaux sociaux, on pourrait penser que les cartes de visite papier sont en voie de disparition. Et pourtant. Elles constituent toujours l'un des traits d'union le plus répandus entre professionnels, notamment lors d'événements de "networking". LinkedIn, leader des réseaux sociaux professionnels, veut faire entrer les cartes professionnelles dans l'ère numérique. Il avait acheté la start-up Card Munch, spécialiste du "scan" de cartes de visites, en 2011, Mais c'est sur un autre partenaire, Evernote (un bloc note digital, bien plus populaire), qu'il s'appuie pour étendre cette fonctionnalité. Le service Card Munch sera d'ailleurs fermé en juillet prochain.
hubert guillaud

Laisser les contenus des ados "privés" sur Facebook, ne les protégera pas - T... - 0 views

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    La sociologue danah boyd qui publie "It's Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens" réagit dans une tribune pour le Time a la volée de bois vert des associations de défense des enfants face à l'annonce que Facebook voulait introduire pour les jeunes de 13 à 17 ans la possibilité de partager des contenus avec tout le monde, publiquement, et pas seulement avec leurs amis. "Mais pourquoi les jeunes ne devraient-ils pas être autorisés à participer à la vie publique ?" questionne danah boyd. C'est justement l'un des enjeux de l'adolescence : apprendre à être confronté et à participer à la vie publique. Pour eux, Facebook n'est pas et n'a jamais été un lieu privé. La décision de Facebook ne vise pas à exposer les jeunes à danger supplémentaire, mais à leur faire prendre conscience que le site est un espace public comme un autre. Plutôt que de chercher à protéger les jeunes par devers eux, imaginons plutôt les moyens de les intégrer de manière plus constructive à la vie publique. Et pour y parvenir, la clé n'est pas de créer des technologies limitatives, mais de fournir aux parents et aux adolescents les informations et les mécanismes nécessaires pour prendre des décisions sains.
Aurialie Jublin

Amazon Is Building An App To Let Normal People Deliver Packages For Pay - 0 views

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    Amazon is apparently enlisting everyday humans in its network of endless online shopping delivery. The WSJ reports that the ecommerce giant is working on an app internally that would allow the average consumer to make a little cash by picking up Amazon packages at various retail locations and dropping them off at their final destination.
Aurialie Jublin

11 Things To Know About Abstract Labor - 0 views

  • Living labor can be understood as identity-making effort (in the absence of traditional prescriptions); it is the productivity of open-ended potentiality. You can be whatever you want (and you will have to work to become it!) Abstract labor is the quantification of that effort, conforming it to pre-existing measuring tools that allow for its commodification. It’s a matter of having oneself fitted to the yardstick. All the work of being someone can be converted to dollars.
  • A fundamental problem for capitalism: how to maintain a supply of workers who are (a) flexible, creative, and motivated to be social (work cooperatively with others to produce value) at the same time they are (b) manageable, controllable, and predictable. It must be able to extract “living labor” — the work of belonging socially — as “abstract labor” amenable to rationalization, measurement, and control and freely deployable on whatever opportunity will yield the most profit.
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    "To recap: Social media are ways to contain and recapture the productive and potentially disruptive energy of the cooperation engendered by the capitalist production process, which depends on bringing workers together, dividing labor among them, and generating/capturing the surplus that emerges from their effort to work together. Cooperative efforts - sociality - are captured by social media and made into data: that is, they are made fungible, abstract, countable. This data then sets cooperative workers back into competition with one another, now competing over and in terms of measurable influence, attention, contribution, network links and so on. The struggle comes to seem like the very struggle for personal identity, but it's just the opposite; it's the struggle to render what is personal about oneself into something that is generally exploitable to whatever company wants it."
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