Enterprise 2.0
Immediacy entered the Web 1.0 world in the 1990s with a very
‘Web 2.0’ message.
Our vision of ‘Content Management for all’ sought to break down
the over-engineered and over-priced solutions of that time with a
solution that was simple, powerful and affordable and extended out
the capability of publishing to the web from the chosen few to the
many.
The Immediacy browser-based content Editor was an early example
of the Rich Internet Applications that have become all the rage
under the Web 2.0 banner and our advanced ‘Word-like’ interface,
stretched the boundaries of what was possible in a web browser to
create a solution that users readily adopted.
Our message has stayed consistent over the last 7 years and now,
with the rise of the Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0 movements, the rest
of the world seems to be catching up.
Although we have stuck to our principles, our developments have
moved on to become significantly more robust, scalable and
extensible. As a company we have become more mature and developed
the quality of support services and account management that we know
our customers appreciate. We have also created vibrant and active
user communities, both offline and online, where knowledge and
ideas are shared.
Having been through these learning curves and pain barriers, we
know what faces younger, less mature companies, as they seek to
serve the breadth of customer base and diversity of needs that we
support on a daily basis.
So, to organisations who seek the power of Web 2.0 ideas for
Enterprise level application but don’t like the risks associated
with less mature, venture capital funded start-ups, we say
Immediacy is your ideal partner.
What does Web 2.0 mean to you?
Research amongst senior executives conducted
by the Economist Intelligence Unit in January 2007 listed the
concepts or technologies that it is believed characterise Web 2.0.
The top 5 answers were as follows:
| 1. Enabling users to easily create
content |
58% |
| 2. Social networks |
57% |
| 3. Collaborative content creation |
54% |
| 4. Leveraging collective intelligence through
tagging |
39% |
| 5. Online search |
37% |
What we think...
- The difference between Web 2.0 styled easy content creation
tools and 2nd generation Content Management Systems is
minimal. Blogs and Wikis are becoming more CMS
like and CMS developers are adding blog and wiki
capabilities.
- Social Networks are primarily
about easily created homepages and profiles that help
provide the content, context and connections to enable social
interaction to flourish, be that in a personal or business context.
If you recognise what they are and how they work you can
utilise this power within an Enterprise and a Content
Management System can provide the platform and tools you need to do
it.
- Blogging is a valuable way to
create useful and authentic content both within and
outside and organisation. Blogging capabilities built within a
mature Content Management System provide both the power of topical,
chronological content creation and commenting as well as the means
to protect an organisation from anti-social abuse that can damage
brand image.
- Collaboration is becoming an established ‘basic service’ within
the IT infrastructure, from large enterprises to small businesses.
It makes most sense for Content Management Systems to
harness the power of infrastructure based
collaboration capabilities through connectors and
integration rather than seeking to re-invent them.
- User generated tagging and folksonomies
demonstrate the power of democratic processes in managing large
volumes of information but potentially undermine the strict
compliance environments that many organisations have to operate in.
Auto-categorisation capabilities offer the opportunity to
bridge the gap between metadata categorisation and
classification requirements and the ability for the user to add
knowledge in the web content and document creation process.
- The dominance of online search as the primary
means to find information puts a major emphasis on the ability of a
Content Management System to manage Search
Engine Marketing. This includes in-built capabilities
that help websites rank well in organic search returns and
the capabilities to build measurable landing pages and microsites
to help drive web traffic and improve Pay Per Click
conversions.
- The rise of the perpetual beta emphasises the
importance of user engagement and listening to
customers. Established software vendors, such as Immediacy, have
been actively growing their offline and online user communities and
using these as a source of feature requests and prioritisation of
user needs.
- Successful website initiatives put an emphasis on ‘try,
tune, repeat’ to maximise the effectiveness of a site to
build web traffic and convert it to meaningful and useful actions,
be that measurable sales leads or requests for information. Content
Management Systems that enable effective and easy
integration of web analytic services, such as Google
Analytics, make the ‘try, tune, repeat’ process simpler to
implement.
- Increasing emphasis on APIs and open standards
is opening up possibilities for ‘mashing-up’ data sources and
applications and making application integration, rather than
proprietary ‘lock-in’ an attractive proposition for enterprises.
Web Content Management Systems like
Immediacy have placed considerable emphasis on use of standard
protocols such as xml, SOAP and WebDAV to enable simpler and
effective integration.
- The willingness of organisations to access software solutions
over the web and subscribe to them on a monthly, predictable cost,
basis is growing rapidly. Content Management Systems vendors like
Immediacy are increasingly offering hosted solution and predictable
payment options and evaluating where ‘Software as a
Service’ provision makes more sense for some or all of
their products.