EA New Year's Resolutions, Seventh Edition
Creating the Crowd Value: Taking the Next Step Beyond the Social Enterprise
As a business leader you are probably just starting to contend with social networks in your business and often find them to be of questionable value. The "social enterprise" is being touted as the next big thing: the new way to do business and a "social" way to do business. But the next big thing in collaboration is crowds, not the social enterprise.
Creating the Crowd Value: Taking the Next Step Beyond the Social Enterprise
As a business leader you are probably just starting to contend with social networks in your business and often find them to be of questionable value. The "social enterprise" is being touted as the next big thing: the new way to do business and a "social" way to do business. But the next big thing in collaboration is crowds, not the social enterprise.
Creating the Crowd Value: Taking the Next Step Beyond the Social Enterprise
As a business leader you are probably just starting to contend with social networks in your business and often find them to be of questionable value. The "social enterprise" is being touted as the next big thing: the new way to do business and a "social" way to do business. But the next big thing in collaboration is crowds, not the social enterprise.
Creating the Crowd Value: Taking the Next Step Beyond the Social Enterprise
As a business leader you are probably just starting to contend with social networks in your business and often find them to be of questionable value. The "social enterprise" is being touted as the next big thing: the new way to do business and a "social" way to do business. But the next big thing in collaboration is crowds, not the social enterprise.
A Contrarian View of Scalability
In just about every due diligence engagement I carry out, the VC and I spend a lot of time on scalabity of the software architecture. The company whose software architecture we are evaluating usually has a good track record of successfully scaling up on quite a few technology and business dimensions. If we extrapolate the historical growth rate a few years into the future, the company really looks attractive. The concern, however, is that the company might run into a hard barrier for growth.
Marketing IT Operations: Part II -- Executing the Marketing Plan
In Part I of this two-part Executive Update series, we reviewed the critical urgency of IT "marketing" its value to the business end users with a vision that is crisp, clear, and compelling.1 Businesses now have competitive
Marketing IT Operations: Part II -- Executing the Marketing Plan
In Part I of this two-part Executive Update series, we reviewed the critical urgency of IT "marketing" its value to the business end users with a vision that is crisp, clear, and compelling.1 Businesses now have competitive
Marketing IT Operations: Part II -- Executing the Marketing Plan
In Part I of this two-part Executive Update series, we reviewed the critical urgency of IT "marketing" its value to the business end users with a vision that is crisp, clear, and compelling.1 Businesses now have competitive
A Contrarian View of Scalability
In just about every due diligence engagement I carry out, the VC and I spend a lot of time on scalabity of the software architecture. The company whose software architecture we are evaluating usually has a good track record of successfully scaling up on quite a few technology and business dimensions.
Devops: Exploring the Value of Microblogging
Unified Portfolio Management: The Basics
Inciting Infrastructure Insights
Good infrastructure is like having a good dinner party planner -- when everything goes well, few guests notice or appreciate the careful plans and up-front investments that went into the event. Yet if and when something does go wrong, things seem to come to an abrupt halt, often with embarrassing results.