CREATING COLLABORATIVE PARTNERSHIPS
In this chapter, we learned about :
- Identify the different ways in which companies collaborate using technology
- Compare the different categories of collaboration technologies
- Define the fundamental concepts of a knowledge management system
- Provide an examples of a content management system along with its business purpose
- Evaluate the advantages of using a workflow management system
- Explain how groupware can benefit a business
Teams, Partnerships, and Alliances
- Organizations create an use teams, partnerships, and alliances to :
- Undertake new initiatives
- Address both minor and major problems
- Capitalize on significant opputunities
- Organizations create teams, partnerships, and alliances both internally with employees and externally with other organizations
- Collaboration system : Supports the work of teams by facilitating the sharing and flow of information
- Organizations form alliances and partnership with other organizations based on their core competency
- Core competency : An organization's key strength, a business function that it does better than any of its competitors
- Core competency strategy : Organization chooses to focus specifically on it core competency and forms partnership with other organizations to handle nonstrategic business processes
- Information technology can make a business partnership easier to establish and manage
- Information partnership : Occurs when two or more organizations cooperate by integrating their IT systems, thereby providing customers with the best of what each can offer
- The Internet has dramatically increased the aese and availability for IT-enabled organizational alliances and partnerships
Collaboration Systems
- Collaboration solves specific business task such as telecommuting, online meetings, deploying applications, and remote project and sales management
- Collaboration system - An IT-based set of tools that supports the work of teams by facilitating the sharing and flow of information
- Two categories of collaboration :
- Unstructured collaboration (information collaboration) : Includes document exchange, shared whiteboards, discussion forums, and e-mail
- Structured collaboration (process collaboration) : Involve shared participation in business processes such as workflow in which knowledge is hardcoded as rules
- Collaborative business functions
- Collaboration systems include :
- Knowledge management systems - Support the capturing and use of an organization's "know-how"
- Content management systems - Provides tools to manage the creation, storage, editing, and publication of information in collaborative environment
- Workflow management systems - Controls the movement of work through a business process
- Groupware systems - Software that supports team interaction and dynamic including calendaring, scheduling, and videoconferencing
Knowledge Management Systems
- Knowledge management (KM) : Involves capturing, evaluating, retrieving, and sharing information assets in a way that provides context for effective decisions and actions
- Knowledge management system : Supports the capturing and use of an organization's "know-how"
Explicit and Tacit Knowledge
- Intellectual and knowledge - based assets fall into twp categories :
- Explicit knowledge : Consists of anything that can be documented, archived, and codified, often with the help of IT
- Tacit knowledge : Knowledge contained in people's heads
- The following are two best practices for transferring or recreating tacit knowledge :
- Shadowing - Less experienced staff observed more experienced counterparts approach their work
- Joint problem solving - A novice and expert work together on a project
- Reasons why organizations launch knowledge management programs
KM Technologies
- Knowledge management systems include :
- Knowledge repositories (database)
- Expertise tools
- E-learning applications
- Discussion and chat technologies
- Search and data mining tools
KM and Social Networking
- Finding out how information flows through an organization
- Social networking analysis (SNA) : A process of mapping a group's contacts (whether personal or professional) to identify who knows whom and who works with whom
- SNA provides a clear picture of how employees and divisions work together and can help identify key experts
Content Management
- Content management system (CMS) : Provides tools to manage the creation, storage, editing, and publication of information in a collaborative environment
- CMS marketplace includes :
- Document management system (DMS) - Support the electronic capturing, storage, distribution, archival, and accessing of documents
- Digital asset management system (DAM) - Similar to DMS, generally works with binary rather than text files, such as multimedia files types
- Web content management system (WCM) - Adds an additional layer to document and digital asset management that enables publishing content both to intranets and public Web sites
- Content management system vendor overview
Working Wikis
- Wikis : Web-based tools that make it easy for users to add, remove, and change online content
- Business wikis : Collaborative Web pages that allow users to edit documents, share ideas, or monitor the status of a project
Workflow Management Systems
- Work activities can be performed in series or in parallel that involves people and automated computer systems
- Workflow : Defines all the steps or business rules, from beginning to end, required for a business process
- Workflow management system : Facilitates the automation and management of business processes and controls the movement of work through the business process
- Messaging-based workflow system : Send works assignments through an e-mail system
- Database-based workflow system : Stores documents in a central location and automatically asks the team member to access the document when it is their to edit their document
Groupware Systems
- Groupware technologies
- Groupware : Software that supports team interaction and dynamics including calendaring, scheduling, and videoconferencing
Videoconferencing
- Videoconferencing : A set of interactive telecommunication technologies that allow two or more locations to interact via two-way video and audio transmission simultaneously
Web Conferencing
- Web conferencing : Blends audio, video, and document-sharing technologies to create virtual meeting rooms where people "gather" at a password-protected Web site
Instant Messaging
- E-mail is the dominant form of collaboration application, but real-time collaboration tools like instant messaging are creating a new communication dynamic
- Instant messaging : Type of communications service that enables someone to create a kind of private chat room with another individual to communicate in real-time over the Internet
- Instant messaging application