Archives pour octobre, 2009


Comment les blogs, wikis, réseaux sociaux et autres outils web 2.0 peuvent aider à trouver les experts au sein d’une entreprise?

Un article intéressant du Wall Street Journal (co-écrit par Izak Benbasat, que reconnaîtront les étudiants de la M.Sc. de HEC Montréal), sur l’utilisation des outils de collaboration afin d’augmenter la diffusion des connaissances au sein d’une entreprise, aborde la question.

Every big company has in-house experts. So why don’t they use them more?

In-house experts, with their specialized knowledge and skills, could be invaluable to both colleagues and managers. But often workers who could use their help in other departments and locations don’t even know they exist.

Talk about a waste! Because of an inability to tap expertise, problems go unsolved, new ideas never get imagined, employees feel underutilized and underappreciated. These are things that no business can afford anytime—let alone in this tough economic climate. Which is why so-called expertise-locator systems have become a hot topic in corporate IT.

To date, most such systems are centrally managed efforts, and that’s a problem. The typical setup identifies and catalogs experts in a searchable directory or database that includes descriptions of the experts’ knowledge and experience, and sometimes links to samples of their work, such as research reports.

But there are gaping holes in this approach. For starters, big companies tend to be dynamic organizations, in a constant state of flux, and few commit the resources necessary to constantly review and update the credentials of often rapidly changing rolls of experts.

Second, users of these systems need more than a list of who knows what among employees. They also need to gauge the experts’ « softer » qualities, such as trustworthiness, communication skills and willingness to help. It isn’t easy for a centrally managed database to offer opinions in these areas without crossing delicate political and cultural boundaries.

The answer, we think, is to use social-computing tools.

Petit résumé intéressant d’une conférence de Forrester sur la création de valeur par l’adoption d’une approche agile pour la définition des spécifications.

Quelques points-clés:

Friction points between traditional and Agile approaches:

  • Delivers requirements vs collaboration on the product
  • Where in the process you engage vs. iterative
  • Requirements that are out of date, long/hard to read, solution focused, take way too long vs. collaborative and timely requirements

Often the customer has no time because they are doing their day-job (the one you are trying to help in some way with software!). There are often many customers to involve in the requirements efforts, not just one or two to quickly jot down stories with. The customers are often distributed so you have to bake in time to work with all of them alone and together. Agile is reliant on good communication but stereotypically, developers don’t communicate well.

We cannot ignore analysis – processes require analysis and solutions require thought - so take time to do these.

L’article complet est ici: http://requirements.seilevel.com/blog/2009/10/delivering-business-value-with-agile_28.html

Le modèle d’affaires des blogueurs professionnels

Une étude intéressante réalisée par Technorati sur les blogues en 2009 (State of the Blogosphere 2009) montre que le salaire moyen des blogueurs est d’environ 40,000$. Ces revenus ne sont pas liés au blogue en lui-même, mais bien à la réputation que le blogueur assidu réussit à construire autour de lui en tant que personne:

Bloggers who are active, consistent and have built some semblance of an audience and community are using that platform to convert it into book deals, speaking gigs, more traditional media appointments, and even setting up and running conferences. Essentially, individuals who have used a Blog platform to establish themselves as some sort of recognized authority are not just nurturing their online community, but parlaying it into real business (with dollars attached to it). Let’s also not forget those who have used their Blog to gain a significance presence that helped them secure a better position either within their company or with another one. (tiré de TwistImage.com)

Pour ceux qui hésitaient encore à s’y mettre, ce sont de bons arguments :-)

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