Register your interest in joining The 2.0 Adoption Council in the Asia Pacific #intranet #e20

What is The 2.0 Adoption Council?

The 2.0 Adoption Council is a member-driven peer forum of business and IT leaders from large organisations intent on sharing concrete experiences, examining business implications, learning from peers and creating and capturing value from the emergent, unstructured data associated with Web 2.0 / Enterprise 2.0.

Cross posted from the Headshift Australia blog (where you will find details on how to register). Do you work for a large organisation based in the Asia Pacific and consider yourself to be a champion for or are directly involved with promoting the adoption of social business inside your organisation? Then please register your interest in joining the new Asia Pacific regional Council.

Don't take our word for it... see what Samuel Driessen had to say about his experience of being part of the Council community:

 

I was humbled to be part of a group of enterprise 2.0 practitioners that are seen as the leaders in this space. Some had many more years experience than I did. You wonder what they get from the Council? Well, that's one of the great things about these communities: we're all in it to learn and help each other. And that's exactly what happened. Even though some have been in this space for a long time, we're all still just getting started... So, if you're working for a large(r) company and experimenting or responsible for enterprise 2.0 roll-outs, I wholehartedly advise you to join the Council.

 

Gov 2.0 and what it means for federal government departments - Canberra 5/2 @ 2pm

What is Government 2.0 all about? And how can Knowledge Management help staff in government agencies to meet its objectives?

The Federal Government sponsored Government 2.0 Taskforce presented its final report at the end of 2009 - see http://www.finance.gov.au/publications/gov20taskforcereport/index.html

As part of the Taskforce's consultation process, they commissioned the creation of Online Engagement Guidelines and a Web 2.0 Toolkit. This was designed to provide guidance to government agencies using web 2.0 tools and provided a recommendation for a toolkit of web 2.0 technologies that agencies can use based on principles of shared services and re-use.

James Dellow will provide a briefing on:
* The Government 2.0 Taskforce
* An overview of the new Online Engagement Guidelines and Web 2.0 Toolkit
* How you can make use of it
* How your Knowledge Management skills and practices can contribute to enabling Government 2.0

James will then facilitate an open discussion on the topic, using a conversation cafe style format.

Thanks to the ACT KM community and Brad Hinton at AusAID, I'm taking advantage of the fact that I'm down in Canberra this weekend for BarCamp Canberra by running this session tomorrow (Friday) about Government 2.0, with a focus on the Online Engagement Guidelines I helped to write for Taskforce Project 8.

What intranet tribe are you? #e20 #intranet #sharepoint

I'm wondering if you've noticed this...

One way or another I've been involved with intranets for over a decade and I've seen some changes in that time. Back in the past the world of intranets was quite simply - generally speaking, you could divide the world into three intranet tribes: those that were run by IT, others by HR and most of the rest by corporate communications. Sure, there were always a few exceptions (like me).

But since then two significant things have happened:

  • SharePoint arrived; and
  • Enterprise Social Computing was definied... aka Enterprise 2.0.

Some people have migrated from the old world to the new world of Enterprise 2.0; but SharePoint - which is still closely associated with the old world - has also created a brand new tribe through the force of numbers, sucking in new people but also many intranet converts (forced or voluntary).

The problem is, I get the feeling that the new world of Enterprise 2.0, the spin-out tribe of SharePoint and already divided tribes of intranet aren't really talking to each other. A good indicator of this divide is the conference circuit, but it is also evident on Twitter (for example, compare the conversations and people using #e20 to #intranet) and more broadly across the social Web.

However, is this a good thing or bad thing? From a knowledge management and innovation perspective I think it is a bad thing. Even for those people focused on 'traditional' intranets and SharePoint who say they are too busy with today to worry about the future, I think its pretty sad to hear endless conversations about the best place for the news link or if weather widgets are a good idea. We have over of decade of experience with intranets, collaboration etc, but continue to re-invent the wheel, when we could invest that time in what is happening next.

But what do you think? Where did you come from and what intranet tribe are you part of today?

Photo Source: UN Flags (CC: Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic)