Openpedia.org > Visualization: Wikis in the enterprise - Trends in the Living Networks

[Trends in the Living Networks] Ross Dawson, April 21, 2009 3:52 PM US PT. Today we are continuing our series of visual representations of social media tools inside organizations, taken from our Implementing Enterprise 2.0 .

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[Uploads from Ross Mayfield, tagged wiki] InformationWeek Covers Enterprise 2.0 on Flickr - Photo Sharing!: icon to see all public photos and videos tagged with web2.0 web2.0 · Click this icon to see all public photos and videos tagged with socialtext socialtext · Click this icon to see all public photos and videos tagged with enterprise enterprise · Click this icon to see all public photos and videos tagged with wiki wiki · Click this icon to see all public photos and videos tagged with press press. Show machine tags (0) Hide machine tags (0) .

[Wiki That!] Wiki That!: One Wiki Vendor's View of the Market: My biggest focus is on creating a process for small businesses to use wiki's and not get bogged down. Yes, wiki's grow organically and that's awesome but there must be a guiding charter on how to get the most out of wiki's for business use.

[News] One on One with Ross Mayfield of Socialtext - FierceContentManagement: Today we have expanded enterprise-class Wiki and weblog offering to become a powerful social software platform. We added Socialtext People for social networking and Socialtext Dashboard to manage attention with OpenSocial standard-based widgets and mashups.

[Ross Mayfield's Weblog] Ross Mayfield's Weblog: The Wiki Effect: According toJohnston, resistance from the IT team stemmed from misgivings aboutoverhead costs, the delegation of control to users, and the fear thatwikis were a fad. However, the wiki (built on an open-source platform)quickly proved to be an effective means of saving time and effortpreviously dedicated to the task of distributing and storing corporateintelligence.

[Enterprise Resilience Management Blog] Enterprise Resilience Management Blog: Capitalism and the Net ...: Prahalad, a University of Michigan Ross School of Business professor and author of the influential book The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid: Eradicating Poverty Through Profits, argues that the poor should be seen as consumers, not charity cases. Their basic needs can best be addressed by businesses that are attuned to dealing with them.

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