Archive for June, 2007
Any Librarians using Social Bookmarking?
8 Comments Published by Niall Cook June 20th, 2007 in Collective intelligence, Enterprise bookmarking, Knowledge managementSteve Dale laments the lack of librarians out there "evangelising the merits of personal tagging". He says:
Maybe I’m reading the wrong blogs, but my perception is that most Librarians remain wedded to structured, corporate categorisation and file management systems, and haven’t yet grasped that the world is changing around them.
Steve’s already been given a few […]
BUPA talk about Cogenz trial at Blogs and Social Media Conference 2.0
7 Comments Published by Julia Grinham June 6th, 2007 in Cogenz, Collective intelligence, Corporate Beta Program, Enterprise bookmarking, Knowledge managementKeely Flint from BUPA has kindly contributed this blog post:
As Lead Information Architect at BUPA, I thought it might be useful to give you a quick summary of the presentation I gave at the Blogs and Social Media Conference 2.0 yesterday, where I talked about our experiences trialling Cogenz.
BUPA have been trialling the Cogenz […]
Fifteen Uses of Corporate Bookmarking
1 Comment Published by Niall Cook June 3rd, 2007 in Collective intelligence, Enterprise bookmarking, Expertise management, Knowledge managementI’m not sure if R. Todd Stephens is planning another in his two-part "Fifteen Uses of…" social software series (the first being Wikis and Blogs), but I thought I’d pinch his format and chip in with my own Fifteen Uses of Corporate Bookmarking:
Monitoring news/blog coverage of your company
Consumer and competitor research
Identifying subject matter experts within […]
A Code for Enterprise 2.0 Practitioners
4 Comments Published by Niall Cook June 1st, 2007 in Collective intelligence, Knowledge managementRex Lee suggests a three-line code for the new Enterprise 2.0 practioner:
Value at all costs the personal impact of social computing
People are not resources to be exploited
Realize that the crowd is not always right
His argument for requiring such a code is that "the personal nature of social computing means we have a moral repsonsibility." He […]

