Enterprise 2.0 Blueprint
Friday: June 13, 2008 11:23 AM
I have to admit that I am more of a visual person. I like to see all of the
pieces put together in order to get an idea of what I am looking at and how I
might be able to utilize it. After a couple of weeks, I put this model together
to pull together the various pieces of the Enterprise 2.0 puzzle.
- Business drivers for investing in Web 2.0 technology
- The actors or people involved with the effort
- The technologies within the Web 2.0 domain as well as related ones
- The methods of deployment; the how the technologies are being used
- The impact to the employee, the department and the business
Download Web 2.0 (Enterprise 2.0) Blueprint Here
Friday: June 13, 2008 11:23 AM
I have to admit that I am more of a visual person. I like to see all of the pieces put together in order to get an idea of what I am looking at and how I might be able to utilize it. After a couple of weeks, I put this model together to pull together the various pieces of the Enterprise 2.0 puzzle.
- Business drivers for investing in Web 2.0 technology
- The actors or people involved with the effort
- The technologies within the Web 2.0 domain as well as related ones
- The methods of deployment; the how the technologies are being used
- The impact to the employee, the department and the business
Download Web 2.0 (Enterprise 2.0) Blueprint Here
Comments (7)
This is a very useful and well laid out blueprint. Thanks very much for sharing this. I've pinned it to my wall.
Posted by: Cheryl McKinnon on June 16, 2008 10:04
Todd
very nice summary and outline of all things e2.0.. well thought out and comprehensive
track back to Michael Sampson.
Posted by: Kevin Shea on June 17, 2008 09:47
Thanks for sharing the blueprint. This excellent tool for communication in almost any organization - and I had to immediately share it with few of my colleagues.
Posted by: Heimo Laukkanen on June 19, 2008 04:31
Fascinating diagram there and a lot of good thinking in your blog. One thing that leaps out at me immediately is that the customer is not present under Value Add. They are only "Actors" engaged in the "design, support, and deployment of Enterprise 2.0."
In that sense, it is entirely business-centric. But part of Enterprise 2.0 is closing the loop so that customers receive the value as well as the business. In fact, many (including myself) will argue that maximizing business value only comes when customer value is also maximized.
That doesn't just make good Cluetrain sense, it makes good business sense.
Cheers,
BW
Posted by: Bob Warfield on July 15, 2008 10:37
Wondering if the use of "Blue Print" as separate words on the diagram as intentional (particularly since blueprints aren't blue any more!).
Posted by: Paula Thornton on July 22, 2008 21:27
I love it Todd - great work!
Don't know if you've seen my Web 2.0 Framework
http://www.rossdawsonblog.com/weblog/archives/2007/05/launching_the_w.html
And Enterprise 2.0 Governance Framework
http://www.rossdawsonblog.com/weblog/archives/2008/02/an_enterprise_2.html
I'm sure there are yet more quite different frames to take on this space yet. The visual approach absolutely helps people to understand.
Thanks for your contribution.
Posted by: Ross Dawson on July 23, 2008 17:36
Looks like an interesting piece of information - I guess seeing a message after almost 2 months should be surprising.
But can we get some text also attached to it so that it makes an easy reading? Too many items on the picture to ready clearly.
With warm regards
Ram
Posted by: Ramanathan S on August 28, 2008 03:49