Consumer technologies will be widely adopted by businesses over the next five
years to improve communication and personal productivity, says analyst
Gartner.
Research from the firm predicts consumer web technologies such as social
networking, virtual worlds such as Second Life, and portable personalities will
soon become mainstream business tools.
Advertisement
Report author Jackie Fenn says firms need to regard adoption of consumer web
technologies as an ongoing activity.
‘MySpace and FaceBook are the most successful community environments on the
planet because they have pulled people away from email, which is the one thing
that nothing else has managed to do so far,’ said Fenn.
‘That is not yet true in most corporations where email prevails, although
some repository and sharing is done in other collaboration environments, such as
wikis, on an emerging basis,’ she said.
Dan Marovitz, chief operating officer of global technology at Deutsche Bank,
says unscheduled and unstructured communication has a value in the workplace.
‘Banks have a hard time installing Web 2.0 tools because we have to log and
record everything for security compliance,’ he said.
Marovitz says businesses are still figuring out how to use collaborative
environments and technologies, although instant messaging is already widely
used.
‘Wikis can be useful especially in investment banking, where it is so
jargon-based and understanding all the different products that come out is not
always easy,’ he said.
Ollie Ross, head of research at blue chip user group The Corporate IT Forum,
believes further adoption of collaborative technologies by businesses is likely.
‘Corporates looking to make use of diversely located skills and experience
have used proprietary collaborative technologies as internal communication and
knowledge transfer tools for the past three years,’ said Ross.
‘What is interesting now, is the upsurge of interest in using informal
solutions such as wikis and blogs to support enterprise community development
and enhance team productivity.’
Comments
Have your say on this article