How to make sure that your Social Enterprise platform becomes a success in the company. Focus in Atlassians JIRA/Confluence products. Implementation checklist at the end.
2. What is Social Enterprise?
”Social Enterprise is used by
companies for innovation,
collaboration and communication
in systems based on social media”
3. Core features
Social Tools
Content sharing
Liking
Comments
Status updates
Profiles
Connections
Polls
Expert search
Instant
Messaging
Member directory
Who is online?
Fast response
Sharing links and
files
Meetings and
online
conferences
Scheduling
Document sharing
Real time features
Archiving and
sharing
Project
management
Create and
assign tasks
Comments
Planning and
follow up
Workflows
Reporting
4. Core features
File sharing
Synchronization
Access control
Internal and
external
sharing
Version control
E-
mail/messages
Group
messaging
Notice boards
Personal
messages
Routing
Media
Blogs
RSS feeds
integration
Video
Diagrams
Documents
Collaborative
production
Access to
common
repositories
Macros and
automation
5. Setting the business goals
for a JIRA/Confluence
project and following up
This is really old hat – S.M.A.R.T.
6. Why are companies using these systems
in the first place?
Strategic
goals
Support
innovation and
creativity
Support
change
Greater
eficiency
Uncover
expertise and
relations
Sharing
knowledge and
practice
Customer and
partner
relations
Strengthen
community
and common
goals
Company
differentiation
A rewarding
and positive
workplace
14. Practical roll out of a JIRA/Confluence combination
Collaboration and project
management in an organization
that is not familiar with the
Atlassian toolbox
15. System features overlap – and
some are missing
Task/project
management
Documentation
Team
collaboration
• Make clear choices - and stick to them
• Use macros and blueprints
• Get plugins for special needs
• Consider external systems
Invoicing
Email
marketing
Wireframing
External
help desk
Time tracking
Program/portf
olio
management
16. Important implementation
strategy questions
• Are the users in your JIRA and
Confluence systems the same?
• Are you matching Projects and Spaces
structurewise?
• Are you migrating from other systems?
• Are you using external system such as
Mailchimp, Zendesk or SharePoint?
• Will the plugins you are betting on stay
updated?
17. Think of your target groups and
their needs
• What data do you need to create?
• Weekly performance reports via
email?
• Web based assignment info?
• Word file or Excel sheet for
meetings?
18. Stale platform
•All tech and no comms
•Wrong platform
•Long wait for Big bang
•Culture trumps strategy
•No content maintenance
Culture
•The Man’s tool
•Distraction
•Too funky
•Just more hassle
Project issues
•Uneven rollout
•Losing pace
•Obstruction
•Frontloaded budget
Significant
implementation
risks
19. Checklist for successful
implementation
Ignore fashion when choosing
platform
It is a change project, not an IT
project
Define project goals clearly and
follow up
Avoid Big Bang rollouts
One message once is never
enough
Recruit opinion leaders
Make it easy to participate
Avoid fancy acronyms or names
Avoid empty spaces or
communities
Use macros, blueprints and
plugins to create great solutions
Research existing
process, channels, terminology
and org
Get real people and projects
into the platform early on
Make it social (pictures, links)
Integrate – don’t create a
walled garden – remember
legacy data
Avoid too many custom
workflows, issue types,
priorities and fields
Get enough licenses
Use the system in the process
Make sure to create local value
Be generous, not strict
Supply solutions, not demands
Management must participate
Involve your IT department