Geeked & Poked 2.0
Posted in Enterprise 2.0, Web 2.0 on September 28th, 2007
Lovingly linked to at GeekAndPoke.typepad.com
Thanks to the Fast Forward Blog for bringing this to our attention.

Lovingly linked to at GeekAndPoke.typepad.com
Thanks to the Fast Forward Blog for bringing this to our attention.
Yesterday I was speaking with a client about collaboration opportunities for a certain community. They described a common scenario - employees had been given broad access to Sharepoint. Folks rushed out and set up their own spaces, and now nobody collaborates across them. As a result information and knowledge is more hidden than it was before ‘collaboration’ became broadly available.
As true with collaboration than many other areas, lack of governance is a sure way to failure. There’s a common perception in the general public that a site like Wikipedia is a wild west, with anyone and everyone invited to say whatever the heck they want about anything under the sun. While a bit of that may be so, there is in fact a shadow army working within a rules set that generally rights egregious wrongs, often in near real time. Rules are indeed in place and they’re both explicit and tacit.
A rules set, structure and governance is necessary to ensure the context and health of of a collaboration platform. Volumes have been written about supporting a community, and the subject can run quite deep. For a pragmatic approach to the common problem described above I recommend reading what James Robertson of Step Two Designs posted today, a tidy summary of four stages that move the adoption of collaborative tools from fragmentation to coherence.
Best practice #3: Collaboration requires a balance of freedom and governance to thrive.