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Friends of Jivespace

4 Posts authored by: rrutan

An interesting aspect to the system is the concept of Friend Management.  In our organization, this is sleeper functionality.  When you befriend someone, you can use labels to organize your friendships into meaningful groupings. In the UI, go to Your Stuff > Friends and on the right hand side you'll see the Add/edit Labels.

You might be asking: What can this do for me?

By grouping your friends/connections into these buckets, you get an RSS Aggregation feed that notifies you when anyone in that grouping performs an action.

This is a very powerful way to follow people in the organization, whether you are in the SBS Dashboard, RSS Feed Reader, or external system with RSS Consumption Services.

 

Users can have multiple labels, so you can bleed a person across the different areas as you deem necessary by simply applying multiple labels to your friends.  Another important element is that this association is controlled by the user, not by the system.

 

It's pretty easy and very powerful, so give it a whirl and let me know what you think!  Any one have any other sleeper features they'd like to share?  Shout 'em out! =)

576 Views 1 Comments Permalink Tags: clearspacex, clearspace, feature, clearspace_community, friends, 2.5.x, sbs, manage, did-you-know

Ok guys, you got me.  Come up for air after a 1.9.0 to 2.0.2 upgrade, and you knock it out of the park with 2.5.x, yet again.  This along with all the other items on my plate, have led to a small hiatus in participation in the Jive community.  I can only hope that I am able to stay more active as time progresses....oh yeah..2.5.x...rock'n!

 

User Groups and Social Networking have been the missing elements in our community implementation, and here we are less than 1 year from our official community launch and we are getting ever so close to a fully self-sustainable community.  I can only wait until we go live with 2.5.x and all of our users will be able to take part in the new UI elements and features, as of right now...it looks like November 2008!

 

Some +1's for 2.5.x,

  • TinyMCE 3.x - so much more Web 2.0-ish than its predecessor.  Plus the ability to expose macros into the UI when creating content making it easier than ever for end-users to consume macro functionality.  It's Win freakin' Win!
    • The new Table of Contents Macro - I saw remnants of this in 2.0.2, but it wasn't activated.  Check it out....my thoughts are that you'll like it.  You'll like it so much you'll use the cleaner Style drop-down interface even more.
  • Social Groups +1 +1 +1, what more can I say...it was like Jive was reading our minds!  Scary, time to get out the foil-helmet again.
  • Friend associations.  I thought the Org. Chart view in 2.0.x was cool, but this is way better...interested to see how close our community users are once they self identify themselves as friends.
  • Concatenated Tag Searching - This one was one of my favorite sleeper features.  Click on any tag in Clearspace 2.5.x, and you'll be presented with a list of additional tags to further filter on.  Easily add and remove tags to see content...the interface is intuitive, and provide a nice shade of grey for Tag Groups.

 

So where do you go from here, only the team from Jive can say....but one things for sure...if they keep up this pace...I foresee another upgrade in my near future.  Have a feature you are super-psyched about, let me know...always interested to pass it along through the groundswell!

 

Take a gander through the Clearspace Feature Discusson community.  Find some features tagged feature-request or enhancement, and share your thoughts on what you'd like to see in the next version of Clearspace!

833 Views 1 Comments Permalink Tags: clearspace, features, 2.5.x, pat-on-back

Because it's what the users want...

Or perhaps,

If we change it, then the user's will stop using it!

I know I am not alone in my innate skepticism to general statements such as these.  But how do you know what the users want?  More importantly, how can someone make the argument that users will stop using it? These are great questions, where the answers in the Web 1.0 mentality are as ethereal as time travel.  A proverbial stalemate in most case, resulting in most people choosing not to ask! 

 

This is where I see a great opportunity for the Clearspace(X) platform.  With its bevvy of features, including Polling, Forums, Reporting, and OpenFire Presence Integrations, I see the gap between the answers to questions like these closing rapidly.  Let's take a look at how I would propose the use of ClearspaceX and an established community to address these situations.

 

Proposed Case

 

Company ABC has an interactive user application XYZ.  Non-company  users use the ABC daily, posting information that has grown to be critical for company ABC efficiencies.  However, the company is evaluating a need to update the interface/functionality for XYZ.  In a meeting where solutions are pitched, a suggestion is made that will make XYZ more robust in the long-haul; however, as a trade-off, some of XYZ's existing functionality will need to be accessed differently, behaviorally changed, and/or lost all together.  After the dust settles, the aforementioned suggestion holds the best long-term strategies at heart; however, it is constrained by the above tactical constraints.  How do we proceed?

 

(assumption, statistically relevent sample of the user's of XYZ  are reachable via an Online Community. Kind of a Catch-22, but provides reasoning on why a community platform investment is valueable)

 

Step #1 - Polling

 

In the community, we would post some high-level Polls to gauge initial feedback. Variations of the question could resemble something of this nature: 

 

Which of the following features listed , do you feel is the most important?The answer set should include all features impacted by the recommended change, unless the list is long, in which case I would break the Poll into multiple Polls spanned over an appropriate time range.  In each of these Polls, it is important to provide an option similar to, "None of the Features are important to me". Assuming we receive a large enough sample, we can immediately add some credence to the argument that the highly nominated features are in-fact relevant to a certain degree.  An optional last poll could be taken to run the top most selected features from each poll together, to see their rank against each other.

 

At this point, we may or may not have additional steps.  Assuming that a large percentage of people did not select the "None of the Features are important to me"...we can now go to the next step.

 

Step #2 - Targetted Forums

 

Now that you have some direction where there MAY be some friction, using the Forums element, post some questions to the community, suggesting the necessary changes to the features.  Be up front about the impact, this is important.  If the feature will not be there, dont sugar coat.  A simple table presentation or easily digestable format is recommended.  You can choose to possibly only include your top-ranked poll selections if desired.  It will reduce the noise of the discussion thread most certainly; however, you risk losing an opportunity to get candid viral feedback about these features.  If any doubt, error on the side of inclusion!

 

Assuming we get a similar turnout for feedback, we can evaluate specific elements of a feature that are desired and focus on possibly achieving that vs. the entire feature altogether.  At this point, we should feel fairly confident in our understanding of these features, and their impact on application XYZ!

 

Note:  In most communities you have "star performers" that represent above-average participation in the community.  Be sure to take their feedback into consideration as a tie-breaker when in doubt.

 

Step #3 - Real-Time Interaction

 

If further clarity is stil needed, you can advertise an online chat, using the OpenFire Chat Integration in ClearspaceX.  Invite the target audience of participatns from the polls and forums, along with the rest of the community.  In this chat, I would be even more candid about why you are on the fence.  Ask direct questions to community, and open the floor for discussion.  Discussions in real-time tend to draw out more debate as they tend to favor hot instinctive discussion, as opposed to cold predicated thought.

 

Each one of these steps can be repeated in any order at this point to achieve the desired level of comfort, but at the end of the day.   You have tangible/quantifiable facts that represent the user-base, and can depend less on abstractions / interpretations of off-topic indirect feedback possibly related to the feature(s).

 

Summation

 

For companies that are highly dependent on satisfying a large distributed set of end-users, a community presence makes perfect business sense.  Not only can you argue the traditional "self-service" argument as users help each other, but an established community platform provides a sounding board for the business to create quick and statistically relevant analysis for litmus testing ideas in the incubation stage.  This will help to insure that ideas with solid business models with complementing solid understandings of the user receptiveness to said ideas are put at the forefront of development.   In the new era of Web 2.0, where agility is king, the concept of a community presence is an invaluable ally in building brand loyality with an ever-growing and demanding marketplace.

 

If you have similar experiences and/or feedback regarding the above process, I would love to hear it.  Especiially regarding how receptive communities are to cooperative changes to a community, in the face of losing features, as long as they are part of the process and the change is for the greater good.

1,061 Views 1 Comments Permalink Tags: clearspacex, forums, reporting, openfire, case-study

Random ClearspaceX Ideas...

Posted by rrutan Feb 26, 2008

Since this Blog really has taken shape yet, I guess I get the benefit of setting a possible tone moving forward.  In that regard, I hope this tone is appropriate, but from a platform perspective, I see nothing but possibilities for the Clearspace(X) platform in growing collaboration across disparate teams.

 

In my company, we are currently working to try and create less obscure lines between community initiatives and revenue.  Obviously the immediate first phase for attempts such as this are to try and merge into existing systems, while over time, if the technology is pervasive enough, it can ultimately change the systems to a new paradigm.  Given that we've only recently gone live with CleraspaceX 1.9.0 on OAS10g 10.1.3.3.0, we are unfortunately in the former stages of this process.

 

As such, some ideas that we had to leverage some of ClearspaceX's unique features include the following:

 

 

 

 

  • Leveraging the Listener Framework and Filters to process content at create/edit time against a custom dictionary of terms and matching URL structures...and storing meta-data on the document/thread/blog post for rendering actions to take into consideration when rendering the item for display.  The hopes would be to do one of the following: provide a list of relevant links off to the side of the document that would help drive traffic towards measureable calls to action.  If we were bold enough, we could apply these meta-data instructions as a filter, and alter the appearance of the actual words in the content as hyperlinks.  This might be too intrusive to our customers, and we'll need to evaluate the nice balance between content ownership and ROI. =)

  • Abstracting the Ratings Engine in ClearspaceX as a Ratings Service for all content on the website.  We've been looking at the possibility, of creating a private community visible only to Admins and WebService logins, and then creating Document Stubs into that community and capturing Ratings regarding non-ClearspaceX pages on those assets, and then surfacing the ratings to the remote sites as well through the same Web Service APIs.  Since ClearspaceX is integrated into our SSO solution, we already know that we are talking apples to apples between the 2 systems.  We just need to work out logistics of whether or not a user (who is logged in), has a "username" or as we call it "alias" when they rate...and how to handle the corner-cases that stem from that core issue.

 

Some others ideas that I do not have time to rant on include dynamic forum threads injected via Web Service integration, integration with internal document creation workflows into ClearspaceX, as well as leveraging Web Services to creating micro-communities for bolstering real-time sales opportunities between sales and customer seeking assistance. 

 

Currently, a pet project of mine is to get OpenFire setup and see what ideas come from that....

 

 

I hope this content has spurred some thoughts about how I envisioned ClearspaceX being used (at least from my perspective), but please comment and let us know what interests you.

 

 

1,148 Views 2 Comments Permalink Tags: clearspacex, clearspace, developers, social_productivity