Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF

by Elizabeth Lupfer on November 10, 2011 · 20 comments

Last week I had the pleasure of speaking at and participating on a panel at the Social Workplace Conference in London, England. One of the last sessions of the day was where the panelists discussed and decided on the “Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization.” Participating in this conversation with me was David Christopher, Social Media Business Leader, Oracle EMEA; Lee Bryant, Co-founder, Headshift; and Benjamin Ellis, Social Technologist & Founder, SocialOptic.

I, unfortunately, was not able to personally take note of the seven habits that the panel discussion came up with; however, Jenni Wheller, Internal Communications Manager, SSP UK, wrote her observations and takeaways. Below is an excerpt from her blog post.

Original source: http://jenniwheller.wordpress.com/2011/11/01/the-7-habits-of-building-a-social-workplace/

  1. Employee behaviour and organisation culture
    Changing the culture and behaviours was a big take away from the day. There were several comments made about using tools to engage people and change a culture and it became clear that the culture needed to be there in the first place before the tool – the tool simply facilitates the conversation. As the old saying goes, you can take a horse to water but you cannot make it drink. It is easy to go back to old habits when something is different and whilst forcing someone onto a social tool is wrong, you have to take the time to let people adapt to change. It is not going to happen in a few months – you can expect to wait 3 years for the change in culture and the business needs to understand this. Users of social media at work should not be seen as time wasters… they are working together to better the business
  2. Prepare to fail
    Organisations are never happy to admit they have failed, and likewise people don’t like to stand up and say they got something wrong. With social media, we have to accept some element of failure is likely. Most projects like this fail because people stop believing but you have to stick with it. The social tools are only part of the change in culture and changing something that has been the same for over 50 years is going to take time and you may fail along the way
  3. P.O.S.T
    A well used theory but one that needs to remain top of mind: People, Objectives, Strategy and Technology. So often a business will choose a tool before looking at the people and the reasons why first.
  4. Use social when it is appropriate
    Social technologies allow the break down of barriers like geography but it is not right for all companies. The fastest way to collaborate is to talk face to face in a room with flip chart, so if that is how you operate, don’t feel pressurised to change. There are some tools that are right for an organisation and the way we form relationships is key in understanding why Facebook is not the right tool for business.
  5. Make it human
    For so long technology has been about the tool, the system and the change it can bring. Now it is all about humanising the experience. Social software depends on the community. A team is not a community and most organisations have an audience which isn’t the same as a community
  6. Network for the greater good – break down the hierarchy
    Organisational design will play a great role in the use of social tools in the business. Our traditional models of business don’t fit with the way we operate today and having IT in the command and control centre that they are now is not sustainable. There was a great view that in the future we won’t have Microsoft installed on our computers, instead we will choose our computer and what enterprise applications we want to use. Social tools need to be integrated with the system tools inside a business.
  7. Understand what social is
    There was a nice test to see if your tool was social and I put this as the final habit as, after today, I’m convinced we confuse conversation with social. So check: Is it about people rather than data? Is it learnt rather than taught and is it going to make a difference? If so it’s a social tool.

 

{ 20 comments… read them below or add one }

Roger Hadgraft November 10, 2011 at 8:07 pm

Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/0Uj8UWzV via @zite

Reply

Beauchamp & Scroggin November 10, 2011 at 8:10 pm

7 Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization: http://t.co/jQenNKHw #swconf #socialbusiness #socialmedia

Reply

Karen Chastain November 10, 2011 at 9:09 pm

Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/8y3ACQ6Q via @SocialWorkplace

Reply

Anonymous November 10, 2011 at 9:09 pm
Dana Carr November 11, 2011 at 4:06 pm

RT @socialworkplace: Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/9dg0Y36p

Reply

Venkat Gullapalli November 11, 2011 at 5:55 pm

Love #5 – Make it human! Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/r9vLKr6o #sociallearning

Reply

Edward Ford November 11, 2011 at 11:02 pm

RT @gullapalli09: Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/lbvMNcb3 #socbiz

Reply

Daniel Watts November 13, 2011 at 8:02 am

RT @gullapalli09: Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/lbvMNcb3 #socbiz

Reply

Marc Bramoullé November 14, 2011 at 9:20 am

Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/MGjXtGAV via @SocialWorkplace

Reply

insight_hrc November 14, 2011 at 12:25 pm

Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF – http://t.co/OY7ff3MP

Reply

Scalable Social November 14, 2011 at 3:03 pm

Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/Ng9feXiP

Reply

iGo2 November 14, 2011 at 9:11 pm

RT @essencebc: RT @gullapalli09: Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/oCZbafgh #socbiz

Reply

Alex Hall November 20, 2011 at 2:16 pm

Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF – http://t.co/25hvK8rQ

Reply

Jenni November 21, 2011 at 12:16 pm

Thanks for the link – was great to meet you there as well. I’m still jealous of your shoes!

Reply

Igo Tan November 23, 2011 at 2:30 am

Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/dIRwf0fS RT @karenychastain #socbiz

Reply

Ernest Buise November 23, 2011 at 9:16 am

Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/dIRwf0fS RT @karenychastain #socbiz

Reply

Martin Farley November 23, 2011 at 1:49 pm

Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/dIRwf0fS RT @karenychastain #socbiz

Reply

ddurrance November 23, 2011 at 4:36 pm

Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/dIRwf0fS RT @karenychastain #socbiz

Reply

#SWCONF 2011 November 25, 2011 at 1:53 pm

RT @igotan: Seven Habits of a Highly Collaborative Social Organization #SWCONF http://t.co/BSAyxts9

Reply

Koleen Singerline December 2, 2011 at 3:00 pm

7 Habits of Highly Collaborative Social Organization http://t.co/WKFRpIJV Employee Management http://t.co/R3GYHU6Z #employeemanagement

Reply

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: