Technically, a LOT of good tools are out there. So what's going on???
- Tools increase efficiency
- Tools improve productivity
- Tools make it easier for employees to find information and the experts they need
- Tools alone don't work
Maybe in a few cases. But overall it's not execution or the lack of a plan or business case that is the problem. The problem is the core need to justify internal networks with business cases. ROI is critical, and I have written about it many times (see, for instance, http://bit.ly/internalROI), but the anticipated ROI will not be realized if the social network does not reflect fundamental shifts in organizational and interpersonal behavior.
The objective of social media is lifestyle, not initiatives (http://bit.ly/kYsQ6u). And lifestyle within the corporate walls needs to change before internal or external social media strategies have lasting and measurable value.
When Starbuck's introduced MyStarbucksIdea.com, the driver was CEO Howard Shultz's belief that the company needed to reconnect with its customers. Look at the site (really, even for non-coffee drinkers, it is a great site). Yes, Starbuck's is engaging its customers. It is also engaging its baristas, those rarely listened-to front-line employees who see it all, who talk to and listen to customers, who execute the policies and operational procedures and know what works and what doesn't. Effective social media ignores hierarchy and organizational silos. The results probably do drive greater employee efficiency, but that is a by-product of the new social lifestyle.
One of my favorite corporate activities was the "feel good" campaign by Canadian credit union Servus. Servus gave 20,000 people $10 CDN and asked them to create a "Feel Good Ripple" by giving the money to someone else. Buy flowers for the grocery store cashier; buy coffee for the person behind you in line at the drive-thru; give $10 for a lunch to a homeless shelter. (http://www.springwise.com/financial_services/feelgoodripple/)
To have a positive impact, internal social network initiatives similarly have to change the interpersonal dynamic.
- Reward employees for sharing what went wrong so that others can learn.
- Reward people for helping others when it didn't affect their own jobs.
- Have people track how much time the intranet saved them, and allow them to donate that time to help someone else.
What has your organization done to make the intranet a lifestyle change agent?
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