Archive for the 'Attensa' Category

Smart, Managed RSS Systems

I put up a slideshow on SlideShare last night that shows (rather than tells) screenshots of how easy and powerful a smart RSS reader (like my client Attensa’s) can be to setup and use. (View it in ‘full screen’ mode so you can see the screen shots easily.)

I’ve blogged before about how much my productivity has been enhanced by using it to keep up with news and information about clients.

Thought it might be useful to people to see how easy Attensa’s RSS reader for Mac is to use.

Of 2013, Enterprise 2.0 and Fear

Over on ReadWrite Web Sarah Perez wrote a compelling post summarizing Forrester’s predictions of Web 2.0 adoption in the enterprise. She gives a great synopsis of the report, and speaks about the barriers to adoption:

“….One of the main challenges of getting Web 2.0 into the enterprise will be getting past the gatekeepers of traditional I.T. Businesses have been showing interest in these new technologies, but, ironically, the interest comes from departments outside of I.T. Instead, it’s the marketing department, R&D, and corporate communications pushing for the adoption of more Web 2.0-like tools.

Unfortunately, as often is the case, the business owners themselves don’t have the knowledge or expertise to make technology purchasing decisions for their company. They rely on I.T. to do so - a department that currently spends 70% of their budget maintaining past investments.

Despite the absolute mission-critical nature of I.T. in today’s business, the department is often provided with slim budgets, which tends to only allow for maintaining current infrastructure, not experimenting with new, unproven technologies.”

And she goes on to say,

“By 2013 Web 2.0 will be a feature, not a product.”

And while I agree with the overall premise of that statement, I agree with Forrester:

By 2013 Web 2.0 will be a fabric, not a phase.

And I think it’s that vision - coupled with fear, not budget constraints - that is precisely what’s holding so many businesses back from Web 2.0 adoption today. Scott Niesen over at Attensa has blogged a leading indicator (to me) of the fear when he said,

We are working with forward thinking IT professionals [JLJ’s emphasis] who are partnering with business teams to integrate Web 2.0 technologies to enhance existing systems and business processes….”

I agree with Scott that finally enterprise RSS adoption is coming into fruition - but why has it taken us so many years to finally get here?

Why do the folks considering (what James Dellow has called “the DNA” of enterprise communication and collaboration) enterprise RSS today have to be the “forward thinking” ones? Because of fear.

And it’s not the IT folks who are to blame. Many business leaders (in all sizes of organizations) are fearful of Web 2.0.

Why the Fear? Because Web 2.0 Fundamentally Changes Business Rules

Many have written compelling visions of the future of the enterprise under the influence of Web 2.0 technologies. (I still enjoy Sam Lawrence’s “Enterprise Octopus” vision as a succinct roll-up of what happens to a business in a Web 2.0 environment.)

And I believe Hugh Mcleod, in writing his extremely insightful “The Hughtrain” post from 2005 was right:

“: There’s only one thing harder than starting a new business: Re-inventing an old one.”

Hugh’s “Porous Membrane” description (which could look a little like an octopus on it’s side) sums up “why the fear?” to me:

hugh mcleod porus membrane

“….So I drew the diagram above.

1. In Cluetrain parlance, we say “markets are conversations”. So the diagram above represents your market, or “The Conversation”. That is demarkated by the outer circle “y”.

2. There is a smaller, inner circle “x”.

3. So the entire market, the “conversation” is seperated into two distinct parts, the inner area “A” and the outer area “B”.

4. Area “A” represents your company, the people supplying the market. We call that “The Internal Conversation”.

5. Area “B” represents the people in the market who are not making, but buying. Otherwise know as the customers. We call that “The External Conversation”.

6. So each market from a corporate point of view has an internal and external conversation. What seperates the two is a membrane, otherwise known as “x”.

7. Every company’s membrane is different, and controlled by a host of different technical and cultural factors.

8. Ideally, you want A and B to be identical as possible, or at least, in sync. The things that A is passionate about, B should also be passionate about. This we call “alignment”. A good example would be Apple. The people at Apple think the iPod is cool, and so do their customers. They are aligned.

9. When A and B are no longer aligned is when the company starts getting into trouble. When A starts saying their gizmo is great and B is telling everybody it sucks, then you have serious misalignment.

10. So how do you keep misalignment from happening?

11. The answer lies in “x”, the membrane that seperates A from B. The more porous the membrane, the easier it is for conversations between A and B, the internal and external, to happen. The easier for the conversations on both side of membrane “x” to adjust to the other, to become like the other.

12. And nothing, and I do mean nothing, pokes holes in the membrane better than blogs. You want porous? You got porous. Blogs punch holes in membranes like like it was Swiss cheese.

13. The more porous your membrane (”x”), the easier it is for the internal conversation to inform and align with the external conversation, and vice versa.

14. Not to mention it makes misalignment, if it happens, a lot easier to repair.

15. Of course this begs the question, why have a membrane “x” at all? Why bother with such a hierarchy? But that’s another story.

[AFTERTHOUGHT:] And yes, this works with internal blogs as well, poking holes in the membranes that seperate people within a corporate culture; aligning “the conversation” internally etc. The other advantage of internal blogging is that it organises conversation into a long-term manageable form. Two people sharing ideas via blogs is a lot more permanent, viral and useful for the company than two people sharing the same information over by the watercooler.

[AFTERTHOUGHT:] Poking holes in membranes subverts hierarchies. Avast, ye scurvies etc.”

Avast ye scurvies it is! Let’s subvert the hierarchies, get over the fear of changing the way we do business and let the porous membranes dissolve. Our customers, employees and (I’ll bet money) shareholders will appreciate us for it.

Again, in a succinct summary statement, Martin Koser over on Frogpond said:

“Don’t spend hours pondering the details and splitting hairs - actually use this stuff and find out.”

Enterprise RSS Day Of Action - Memes are Bubbling

The Enterprise RSS Day of Action is coming up this Thursday, and it’s fun to see the conversations bubbling about it around the web. I especially liked Charlie Davidson’s matter-of-fact post about it the other day over on the Attensa blog.

In his very succinct post - “RSS is what RSS does” - he summed it up nicely…

“Ironically it is also the tool I am using daily to participate in this community of thought.”

Scott Niesen described a meme he’s been following that positions the technical and business points of view on collaboration and communications flow, where he succinctly describes how Attensa’s started talking in a very different way about “enterprise RSS” to enterprises who are struggling to get their arms around all the information they’re being asked to manage:

“When it comes to talking about getting your arms around the information you and Enterprise RSS, it all comes back to Andrew McAfee’s SLATES:

Search | Links | Authorship | Tags | Extensions | Signals

“SLATES describes the combined use of effective enterprise search and discovery, using links to connect information together into a meaningful information ecosystem using the model of the Web, providing low-barrier social tools for public authorship of enterprise content, tags to let users created emergent organizational structure, extensions to spontaneously provide intelligent content suggestions similar to Amazon’s recommendation system, and signals to let users know when enterprise information they care about has been published or updated, such as when a corporate RSS feed of interest changes.”

Replacing the abbreviation RSS with words like signals, alerts, delivery is far more descriptive and useful to customers. One of our customers has named their RSS initiative project: Communication & Collaboration Delivery. That’s got a much better ring to it than Enterprise RSS.”

As long as we don’t replace RSS with SAD, I’m cool with it, Scott.

James Dellow, over on the Enterprise RSS Day of Action WIKI, has envisioned this day and the WIKI space to set aside some time to review the following:

Enabling Communication and Collaboration To Do List:

  1. Develop a resource pack, containing slides, posters etc, that people can use to run their own day of action
  2. Create a list of Enterprise RSS solutions (servers, feed readers and other related tools)
  3. Develop an Enterprise RSS FAQ and Glossary
  4. Collect case studies of early adopters
  5. Enterprise RSS Company bios

I plan to spend the morning on Thursday talking communication and collaboration online. Care to join in?

RSS Lovers: This Post is For You

No, not here, over on the ReadWriteWeb site, where Marshall Kirkpatrick wrote a wonderful compendium of Seven Tips for Making the Most of RSS. Not for the newly RSS-initiated, Marshall digs deep into a bunch of very cool RSS tools, and showed some excellent screen shots of Attensa’s RSS reader in action.

Makes me want to write a Beginners Guide to RSS. Wait… I did that three years ago at Marqui! I wonder if they still have the RSS Rx whitepaper we wrote while there…. It’d be fun to update it today.

RSS From Fasticon

As a bonus, Marshall included this fantastic little shot from Fasticon, a site with vey cool icon sets for sale.

I hope the team over at the Enterprise RSS Day of Action (coming up in two weeks, April 24) will leverage the heck out of Marshall’s post.

Timing is everything…

Sales + Marketing: “Make” or “Buy” Linkages?

A great marketer cannot succeed without a great understanding of the sales process. Period. Anyone spending money to generate leads needs to understand exactly what happens to them from the sales perspective.

I’ve been cold-calling for a couple of hours twice a week for one of my clients for several months. It’s been one of the best things I could do as a marketing “consultant.” In fact, every marketer earning a paycheck should spend a few hours every month (at least) cold calling… which means finding prospects on your own and calling into them.

Why Cold Calling is Good for Marketers:

  • It refines your positioning in real-time. It’s amazing how short your “script” becomes - get in, get to the point, get to the next-step.
  • It defines your prospect - no longer is the “VP of HR” a “Persona” - she becomes a person. She’s an (im)patient voice on the phone with whom you have a real conversation (if you’re lucky) in real time.
  • Your internal customer (the sales person) suddenly becomes very real as well. You’re living in his world, doing what we ask him to do every day. Nothing says loving like hearing someone say, “Is this a sales call?<CLICK>”

No wonder he wants decent leads. Cold calling is hard.

Intelligent Leads - Handcrafted with Care

For other clients I’ve pulled together lists of highly targeted leads, complete with market intelligence. Here’s the methodology I used:

  • Create a vertical/geographic prospect list based business objectives (BTW, leading a business strategy session to uncover them is always a plus, making the linkage even stronger, you can do this as well)
  • Profile prospect companies, products and managers in HighBeam, LinkedIN, Technorati and various other web sites
    • With the luxury of time I set up persistent searches on company keywords for a couple of days and “listen” to the market - via RSS
  • Develop an up-to-date, accurate picture of the state of the company’s:
    • Ecosystem - including public filings, blog posts, “memes”
    • Leadership profiles - including potential LinkedIN connections
    • Partner contacts, etc.
  • Create pain points, provide possible scripts
  • Deliver in an Excel spreadsheet with fields and notes carefully mapped to my client’s CRM system

It takes hours. Gathering market intelligence isn’t easy.

Buying Better Intelligence

Two weeks ago I received an email from Raksha Varma from InsideView who thought I might be interested in looking at their new product, SalesView…

From their web site:

“…it’s no longer just who you know that will make business deals happen but “what you know about who you know” tightly synched with “when and where you should know it”. You need to be able to combine the best enterprise-ready information sources with the best insights from social relationships and buyer behavior to identify the right opportunities at the right time and determine the right people to contact.”

When Raksha offered me the opportunity to chat with InsideView CMO Rand Schulman, I jumped at it.

Basically, InsideView’s SalesView automates what I’ve been doing for clients. Their model is built to leverage social media, score and rank results based on algorithms they’ve developed and common sense - for example, a ZoomInfo profile is not ranked as highly as a LinkedIN profile - and (I think) rightfully so.

InsideView Platform

I like their pricing - SalesView PRO is $79 a seat, and they offer a free version to whet the appetite. The cool thing about the content that SalesView scrapes? With the two paid versions, you can map fields of SalesView into SalesForce or other CRM solution, and content can be updated immediately so content is always contextually relevant (SFA “enrichment”).

SalesView Packages

I need to use it for awhile, but I’m predicting that SalesView is likely to make my Top 10 Marketing Tools list within months. I’m sold on the concept, having built it by hand for months…

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