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Archive for January, 2011

Lotusphere Opening Session – Demo Highlights

by on January 31st, 2011

So who doesn’t love a good demo………or two…….or three.  IBM highlighted a lot of new and upcoming features that supports the Social Business Theme.  Here are some highlights:

Notes

Lotus Notes is incorporating the whole idea of doing more work from within the client.  You can view video, approve tasks from a workflow engine or web content management system.  It includes:

  • A new shared calendar that lets any person change an invite, not just the chair
  • Incorporates the activity stream so all those events and information that was originally in Connections 3 can now be seen in Notes and you can then act on them.
  • Incorporates Coremetrics data.  Web Analytics is really hot right now. If it’s on a web site, someone want to know what’s happening on that site and act on it.

Mobile

OK, so IBM is pushing hard into Mobile. Here’s a short list of what’s happening with them

  • Android is now supported for Lotus Traveller, IBM’s email and calendar client
  • The sametime client allows you to send photos
  • The client pull various messages and let you centralize them and act on them. This includes the Activity stream
  • You can see shared files in the activity stream
  • XPages, the domino development tool, supports developers creating mobile apps including native apps.
  • The new Plantronics bluetooth headset has a sametime plugin so it changes your availability and routing of calls when you put it on your ear.
  • Nokia has a new E7  phone platform which IBM will fully support with all their products, email, messaging, connections, etc.
  • File under really cool, the phone actually has hdmi and dolby output so imaging using your phone for a web conference……or just watch a movie.

LotusLive

LotusLive is the cloud for the Lotus brand. You can get hosted email, web conferencing, instant messaging, and the whole host of social networking services.  In addition, they have a host of partners like Silanis for e-signatures.  They have grown this hosted platform 300% in 2010 and have a lot of new features and services:

  • Now supports a hybrid approach where some of your services may remain on premise
  • Now supports putting Domino apps on the cloud with a pay as you go, bring your own license, or developer license models
  • Supports LotusLive Symphone with some really cool shared editing and assigning model. (Google Apps but a little more complicated because you can assign sections of a doc to people)
  • Fully supported API to share services to other apps or to incorporate services into LotusLive
  • By 2011 2H, all the features of Lotus Connections 3 will be online

Lotus Connections

This is where IBM has the most released functionality. It also forms the core of the social business where things like Activity Stream and Sharebox start here.  These key items form the core of the social business framework.  I’ll blog on that later but it’s key because in this heterogeneous world, you can’t say, “I have my social tool and it’s good”. What about the blogging tool your marketing guys use? What about the analytics tool that kicks off a new report?  What about that workflow app that demands a response from someone.  If it’s all funneled to a person’s stream and they can stay on top of it all.  Cool idea, I reserve the the right to change my mind when I see a real implementation.

New in Connection

  • New Activity Streams that pull data and events from multiple locations. This is where IBM support for a variety of standards really starts to pay off.
  • preview docs in an activity stream
  • approve a piece of web content in an activity stream
  • look at a social app from it
  • Email client access that can be combined with the activity stream.  This supports Notes and Exchange
  • Pull in a calendar into the same page as email, activity stream.
  • New share button that lets you take whatever you are viewing and share it in a variety of ways
  • Much expanded community support with idea blogs, sub-communities, etc
  • Profiles meet social analytics and now you get recommendations on content, people you should know, etc.
  • New standalone forum
  • API’s to push these services into other applications

Connections Next

  • More integrated social mail
  • full support for OpenSocial, CMIS, ATOM, HTML5, and OpenAjax
  • Available in the second half of 2011

Sametime

  • Audio and video come to web based meetings, no client needed.
  • New bandwidth management tools will let you define what and how much to allocate on the network
  • Better security model for meetings
  • New mobile clients for sametime
  • a really big push into unified telephony.

Portal and Web Experience

As a fairly mature platform, what I’m seeing isn’t a new feature like the ability to create a virtual site.  Now it’s about making it really easy to get business users to manage the site.  3/4 of what IBM showed today was a vision for the future but the vision was really cool and went much further down the web experience and ease of use route than I’ve seen before.

  • Better impersonation will allow you to target and test different types of users
  • Preview of content becomes much easier and in context.
  • Entire site versioning lets you see what a site was like two months ago
  • WCM inline info for content authors and publishers.  (e.g. I recognize you and here’s when it was published, who approved it, and other key information as a hover over tag)
  • Incorporate portal events into the activity stream.  Please preview and approve this content, view site analytics, etc.
  • Chalk this up to really cool, Brian demoed conversion of a presentation slide to a banner image through simple drag and drop
  • He then did the same thing with a set of friends pictures from facebook
  • The object pallet will provide more than just portlets and will provide full type ahead search
  • Incorporate twitter and other feeds into the portal
  • Push results from a campaign to a CRM system like SugarCRM in real time.
  • The beta for Portal Next will become available later in the second half of 2011

Overall, the vision is great.  I really liked what I saw with the simplification of portal or at least the simplification from and end user perspective. I also agree with the continuing theme of everyone having to live together.  That’s what a portal is for after all so it should work well.

Lotusphere Opening Session – Initial Highlights

by on January 31st, 2011

I’m at Lotusphere and IBM threw a great opening session with a great band, Kevin Spacey to speak, and a look at what they are releasing and where they are going.  The theme is, “Get Social, Do Business”.   The key terms of this include:

  • Social Business
  • Web Experience
  • Work Experience

It’s actually a pretty unified theme and it makes a lot of sense given the value these tools can bring. (and yes, I really buy into the fact that a social network can bring a pretty large ROI)  Anyway, here’s the notes on what Lotus is doing:

Kevin Spacey Words of Wisdom

Kevin Spacey of Actor, stage actor, and producer fame was on hand to kick it off.  I believe IBM finally found a relevant speaker.  He’s relevant because Kevin actually launched a site called www.triggerstreet.com that is a community for screenwriters and directors to publish their ideas.  It was started as a channel to get better quality talent out there and allow them to get past the, “you don’t know anyone” problem.  Kevin was also the executive producer for the recent facebook movie, “Social Network”.  Best quote (ok, paraphrased quote)

Send the elevator back down.  If you have received benefit then help someone else who hasn’t had the opportunities you have had.

Key Themes

  • A social business is an engaged, transparent and nimble business. That’s really the purpose of the whole thing.
  • A social business helps people interact. It’s NOT focused on people interacting with documents
  • McKinsey Studies prove that those who employ social technologies outperform their competitors
  • BASF, the worlds largest chemical company,  is a great example of value provided by a social network.  A fungus threatened crops in China and a researcher in Germany found colleagues in Germany, Brazil, and India to find a chemical to control it. They then found a logistics specialist in Singapore to transport the chemical from India to China.  It call happened quickly because they were able to find the right people who had the knowledge to solve the problem and get the solution where it was needed.
  • IBM uses social tools throughout their business ranging from HR to Marketing, to Product Development.
  • There is a social business jam next week for those interested.  This is the chance to post your ideas and see where they go.

Summary

If Lotus is all about Social Business, then the end result is that their product suite has to inter-operate. It has to work with internal and external tools. It has to pull information and events from multiple sources and let you act on them with other people.  That’s the entire theme of what they term “Next”.  That includes Notes Next, Portal Next, Connections Next, etcv.

Market Insights in the Portal and Social World

by on January 30th, 2011

I tend to like these kinds of presentations because it gives me insight into cause and effect. It also gives me insight into the trends that are driving the portal, social business, collaboration, and other technologies.  This is going to be all over the board, hence a bulleted approach.

  • Collaboration itself is growing at 11% which is more than the overall IT market. In other words, business are really looking at collaboration and that’s probably the social aspects of collaboration.
  • The market will ship 425 million mobile devices (smart phone, tablets, etc). This is the point where mobile ships more devices than PC
  • One out of three tvs are now internet equipped
  • What is happening is that we see a data explosion.  IDC states that we will have 1.8 Zettabytes of data.  By 2030 it will increase to 25 Zettabytes
  • By 2013, 75% of users will use mobile technology
  • I wish I had this chart.  The growth in network traffic is increasing.  Video eclipsed all other types of traffic in 2010. (Social, business, etc.)
  • IBM see collaboration software delivered as a service being the biggest growth leader in the entire messaging, portal, and collaboration market

Economy

For the first time in history, the GDP of emerging markets will eclipse the more established economies.

  • Demographically, what the urbanization of China matches in 30 years what took the US 100 years.
  • There continues to be a trend in the maturing workforce which means our workforce is getting older.  This will be a key driver in the use of social business technologies to share knowledge across these generations
  • in 2011, the US will grow by 3%
  • South America will grow by 4.3%
  • Africa will grow by 5.1%
  • Asia will grow by large amounts (didn’t capture before she moved on)
  • Brazil, Russia, India, and China will see almost 10% growth in this portal and collab market.  Compare that to 3-4% in the more developed countries
  • Industries that are growing: It’s the stimulus industries, public, utilities, defense, etc.
  • For collaboration software however, Telcom, banking, insurance and healthcare are experiencing large growth.  > 6%
  • Mid market now rank collaboration as the second most important technology investment. Business Analytics and Business Intelligence is third, just behind collaboration.

Transformation

They make on key point, the old collaboration software was all about people collaborating with documents. Social software is about people collaborating with people.

  • Collaboration ROI can represent ~$10,000 per knowledge worker per year if you can make it easier to acquire knowledge and ask questions.
  • IT is no longer driving these transformations.  Many have a play but the marketing department has taken the lead in many organizations
  • Marketing investment continues to drive or shift towards online investment.  I’ll put my two bit in and completely agree with this.  That’s what’s driving at least 2/3 of my work and web analytics are growing as the marketing folks demand to know what the results of their investment are.
  • Print now sits at the bottom in terms of new investment
  • 41% in a  Forrester survey are investment in portal and web content management to drive their website improvement efforts. See the Forrester article entitled,  “Portal Servers Refuse to go Quietly

Perficient is Distinguished Partner of the Year for Lotus

by on January 30th, 2011

File this under shameless self-promotion but it’s my blog so you’ll get a little bit of that now and again.

I’m at Lotusphere which is IBM big event in Orlando.  If it has to do with portals, collaboration, and messaging for IBM, this is the place to be.  The theme is all about social business and web experience.  IBM just announced that we won the North America Distinguished Partner of the Year.  It’s the big award and I’m excited that we won the award for the third time.

Anyway, Jonathan and I are at the conference and we’ll be blogging as we attend sessions, hear about cool news and identify trends.

Webinar on Social Intranets

by on January 25th, 2011

It’s no longer about intranets but social intranets. Social Text, along with Forrester and AHA have a webinar about their view on it.

Given the number of companies who have asked me, “Can I make social software become my intranet?”   My typical answer is, “Depends”  It depends on what you want to do and share.  If it includes transactions and processes, then probably not. If it’s driven by content and people, then yeah, you can get some value there.

The webinar will feature Tim Walters, Ph.D., Senior Analyst at independent research firm Forrester Research, Inc., Jack MacKay, Vice President and CIO at American Hospital Association (AHA), and Karthik Chakkarapani, the AHA’s IT Mananager of Strategy, Operations and Service. They will:

  • Discuss how a social intranet differs from a first-generation intranet
  • Provide examples of usage and benefits within organizations today
  • Give pointers for improving adoption and productivity
  • Discuss the pros and pitfalls of integrating enterprise application data

The webinar will include a live demonstration of AHA’s social intranet. Don’t miss your chance to learn how “social” is changing today’s corporate intranet!

Oracle Releases Latest Version of WebCenter

by on January 25th, 2011

While the CMS Wire article is a little lite on the details, we do know that the latest version of WebCenter is out and that Enterprise 2.0 is now Customer Experience Management.

At the same time though, Oracle knew they were going to bring them all together at some point (converge). And that’s what they have done with WebCenter 11g Release 1 PS3. But as MacMillan told us, it wasn’t simply a matter of bringing the old into a single platform. They have brought the best of each and then built onto it additional features and capabilities needed by organizations today.

Engagement: The next step in social business software

by on January 24th, 2011

In my daily browse of Mashable, this popped up: HOW TO: Engage and mobilize Facebook fans beyond the “Like” and made me think that this is a good example of how public communities and social networks can be used to teach a HOW TO for social software.  Here is my take:

1. Profiles: Facebook, Twitter, About.me, LinkedIn and so on have made HUGE shifts in building out the profiles within their sites.  This is something I have been a big proponent of for a long time with Social Business Software (SBS) and products like Lotus Connections and Jive have always done a nice job helping users start with this easy win within enterprises.  When one of the “sells” of SBS is the ability to find that “right person” – profiles is where this rubber hits the road and the latest versions of Connections and the soon-to-be released Jive 5 blows this out of the water.  For some companies this is THE use that sells SBS.

2. A plan: Yes, you need one.  And this was part of the Ah-Ha moment from Mashable’s article.  I can’t tell you how many times I have been on a call or on-site with a client/prospect who said, “We tried this in 2006 with ___insert product here _____ and it never took.”   And when I took a look at their company/community engagement plan or roadmap, it wasn’t there.  As much as you think, because you are the champion of this and as much as you get “wow, this is cool” when you engage business in demos of SBS, that just getting it up and taking a “build it and they will come” philosophy it usually doesn’t work.  Whether its a roadmap, engagement plan or whatever you want to call it – you need to have a plan to take this business tool from an IT deployment to a working and living business tool that has best-practice examples of communities, profiles, blogs, wiki’s and so on.  You need a plan that will get you from a simple profile build and a few communities/wiki/blogs to a flourishing internal social network and avoid having it die on the vine.  This is similar to and part of our Enable Methodology here at Perficient.

3. Governance: Hugely important though often a step-child to the collaboration enablement process.  I try to bring these folks, whether formalized within an organization or maybe the HR generalist who coordinates policies with a company, because they are one of two parties that usually can put a stop to just about any project.  Leadership is very aware (scared, too) of what people can do internally and externally.  Likely and hopefully, your company has some email, blogging and external internet policy and really it can be as simple as taking those and extending to SBS or maybe your company has a history of small groups informally forming under the radar.  SBS is a tool  that allows the informal groups to become less formal – which is good.  This may be a golf league or it may be a group of engineers that have some R&D “idea jams” on their own or on company time.  Its good to deal with these scenarios ahead of time and also have a candid conversation about these policies being fluid.  In the last year SBS has changed a lot and will continue to do so and by allowing governance stakeholders to know that these policies will likely change more frequently it allows for expectation and processes to be set up to handle these quick-changes.

4. Security: Party number-two that can stop a SBS project – in my book.  Groups, directories, integration, mobile access, SSL, encryption and more.  These folks control these functional areas likely. These functional areas can bring a SBS project to a halt unless security is part of securing the application and data from the get-go.  Again, security usually knows of a project happening but they usually come in as the project has surpassed the requirements phase and usually come in prior to a pre-build discussions – when network ID’s, SSL and application ID’s might be needed (yesterday!).  I find that when security is brought in early the tend to be more agreeable and actually find that they tend to be champions along with you.  Good thing about that, senior leadership tends to hold security in high regards.

This is collaboration. I point out two enterprise functional domains to make sure you include from the start, but remember this is collaboration.  These people, and all stakeholders, are part of the decision – a collaborative one at that – not the sole decision makers.   Decisions will come from thoughtful requirement gathering and business engagement which will dove-tail into an amazing vision and enablement process.  That process is a fluid one that – like a scrum – gathers, develops, tests, deploys, gathers…and so on.  To steal a cliche:  Collaboration is truly the journey and not the destination.  You will see more than ROI. You will see a generational knowledge gaps close, you will see leaders and HERO’s pop up, you will see projects go smoother, you will see your organization transform into a more sustainable one.

6 Resolutions to Ensure SharePoint Success in 2011

by on January 22nd, 2011

I found this article by Joe Shepley at CMSWire interesting both in how applicable the resolutions are to many who aren’t using Sharepoint but instead use WebSphere Portal, Oracle WebCenter, Liferay, JBoss Enterprise Portal etc.  I also like some of Joe Shepley’s more in depth discussion on where Sharepoint works compared to ECM or Social Software.  It’s worth reading.

  1. Take the time to understand your true needs around core SharePoint capabilities, especially document management and collaboration
  2. Evaluate your current application landscape before thinking about making SharePoint 2010 your core ECM system
  3. Avoid thinking of coexistence between SharePoint and other applications as either/or
  4. Get everyone involved in charting your organization’s approach to SharePoint and its role in the larger content management ecosystem
  5. Use a pilot to refine your approach to SharePoint
  6. Create a Center of Excellence to act as an ongoing governance body as SharePoint and your other content management applications continue to evolve

Go to the entire article for more.

Social Networking vs Social Media

by on January 22nd, 2011

So I’ve seen a lot of people change up how they use these two terms.  In my minds, they are very different although the base technologies used as people going about networking and working the social media may have a huge overlap.

social media: the use of tools like twitter, facebook, blogs, etc to both monitor how your company is doing with your customers and to market your company.

social networking: the use of web 2.0 tools like twitter, facebooks, jive, sharepoint, lotus connections, wikis, blogs, etc to keep up with colleagues, share information, and find information.  This is a natural evolution to the social network you probably already have when you call people, engage people around the water cooler, send emails etc.  These new technologies make it easier to find people and find answers even if your legacy social network is small.

As people continue to make use of web 2.0 tools to to do both, I think we’ll see a maturation of thought around it and of additional tools like social analytics to measure both the quality of social media efforts as well as how a company is using a social network and who is important to that network.  Can you imagine a time when HR will use a social analytics tool to look up a person before they allow a counter-offer to be made in order to keep him or her?

Top 10 Portal Architecture Questions

by on January 22nd, 2011

OK, so I’ll admit first off that you really should ask more than 10 questions.  But you have to start somewhere.  Since a portal has the capacity to bring together so many moving parts, these questions can be quite broad.  So here are my top 10.

  1. How many people will be using the portal and how often?
  2. Does the portal need to be highly available. In other words, can it go down and how often?  Keep in mind that everyone will say it should never go down but almost no one want to pay the price for true high availability.  So this will inevitably be a multi-part question.
  3. Where are your users stored?  Is it any LDAP? Is multiple LDAPs?
  4. Do you want Single Sign On (SSO) ?  OK, this is another cheater question because everyone wants it. We just need to figure out how to achieve it given the constraints at hand.
  5. What are your platform standards.  Are you a Linux shop, Microsoft shop, Intel hardware, Unix based hardware, etc.
  6. Are you considering virtualization?  If so, where? Just in your non-production environments, in prod?   Does that include virtualization of your database? etc.
  7. Tell me about your content management needs?  This will become part of a larger discussion but it’s important to dive into it.
  8. What are your personalization needs?  Personalization comes in many flavors ranging from security/group personalization to I know what you did on my site last time and  you might like this….     From a technical standpoint, personalization really isn’t all that hard. What’s hard is defining what you want to do and when.
  9. What kind of reports do you want about site, page, and portlet usage?  Because portals act at the sub-page level, it’s important to both educate users and then capture information about how people are using what you’ve built.
  10. What is the branding, look/feel, or theme going to look like?  Who is in charge?  Who will actually create the html/css?

So there you have, a very short list but something I almost always ask.  If I were to do a top 20, search, internationalization, development standards, integration, and host of other things would have made the list.