bahjat abuhadba dilion rath jessica smith chapter 9 : the wiki workplace
TRANSCRIPT
Unleashing the Power of Us
Robert Stephens Created Geek Squad 2002 Best Buy acquired
60 employees $3 million
Now 12,000 employees 700 locations across North America $280 million
Unleashing the Power of Us
Stephen’s is now leading the company in a bold effort to move Best Buy away from products and into services
CEO Brad Anderson “Robert Stephens has been at the heart of our service
culture that we’re building across our company.”
Unleashing the Power of Us
Geek Squad employees use wikis, video games, and all kinds of unorthodox collaboration technologies to brainstorms new ideas, manage projects, swap service tips, and socializes with their peers.
They contribute to product innovation and marketing
Result: Deep, long-term
transformations in the culture, structure, process, and economics of work
Shift from closed hierarchical workplaces with rigid employment relationships to increasingly self-organized, distributed, and collaborative human capital networks that draw knowledge and resources from inside and outside the firm
Unleashing the Power of Us
Geek Squad Good example of how technology and demographics
are coming together in a radical workplace and meritocracy that is rewriting the rules of engagement at Best Buy and showing the world how the new wiki workplace can produce superior bottom-line results
Geeks, Wikis, and Global Domination
Greek Squad secret sauce is the people and how the collaborate Retain talent
Branding, “hiring the best people’, and the fun workplace ethos
Stephens learned to engage his agents in a continuous process of innovation and improvement that keeps the agents motivated to perform at their highest level
Geeks, Wikis, and Global Domination
Example: Geek Squad agents instinctively started using
online multiplayer games to stay in touch as the organization grew from 60 to 12,000 employees in just three years
Initially, Stephens created a wiki, but it was slow to take off
Stephens realized the employees had all self-organized online by playing Battlefield 2.
It proved to be the most effective and efficient collaborative tool.
384 colleagues simultaneously played at once
Geeks, Wikis, and Global Domination
Product Development Agents applied their intimate knowledge of
customers and technology to design award-winning products for Best Buy Pragmatic Flash Drive
No cap, folds into itself Thinly, reinforced loop for key chain Won a prestigious German design award
PR Stunts Predicted when the Star Wars movie came out the business
would pick up because IT workers would be getting movie tickets
Posted downloadable excuse notes on the web 800,00 downloads
Rise of the Wiki Workplace
Geek Squad’s successes signal the value of bring high-technology adoption, creativity, social connectivity, fun and diversity into the workplace.
Rise of the Wiki Workplace
There has long been recognition that organizational bureaucracy impedes innovation, agility, and success Typical office – long
rows of desks, regimented in army fashion, with typists clicking away from 9 to 5
– Teamwork– Corporations have
become networked in the sense that they build business webs with partners on a platform of information technology
– Traditional hierarchies were bosses still expect to bosses.
Rise of the Wiki Workplace
Net Generation Most large corporations are geographically dispersed Fuels the need for people to communicate and work
together while being separated by great distances Net work technologies allow companies to run
cohesive yet decentralized operations by linking employees in virtual teams and communities of practice
Rise of the Wiki Workplace
Competitive pressures are making organizations more agile, more focused on the customer, and more attuned to dynamic competitive strategies
Firms Less hierarchical and decision-making authority then they
used to be Less likely to provide lifelong careers and job security, and
more in need of continuous reorganization to maintain or gain competitive advantage
Decentralizing their decision-making function, communicating in a peer-to-peer fashion, and embracing new technologies that empower employees to communicate easily and openly with people inside and outside the firm
Rise of the Wiki Workplace
Net Generation is embracing new web-based tools such as blogs, wikis, chat rooms, peer-to-peer networks, and personal broadcasting
These tools enable employees to engage and co-create with more people in more regions of the world, with a richer, more versatile capability set, and with less hassle and more enjoyment than any earlier generation of workplace technology.
Rise of the Wiki Workplace
Whereas, previous generations value loyalty, seniority, security, and authority, the N-Gen’s norms reflect a desire for creativity, social connectivity, fun, freedom, speed, and diversity in their workplaces
Companies are going to have to understand the Net Generation and the individuals who will emerge as its leaders
Bottom-up innovation
-Geek Squad: was one of best buys many tale innovations.
- Dennis Gil: a leading best buy manager had many ideas on improving best buys day to day operations.
- Because of Dennis’s efforts, true effective communications was established between executive mangers and operational managers.
Social Computing in the Enterprise
-Ross Mayfield, CEO and founder of SocialText, one of the growing number of start-ups that supply social computing especially wikis to enterprises.
- He is a strong advocate of drilling through the rigid organizational hierarchy. He takes Best Buy’s experience as an example.
Social Computing in the Enterprise
- Mayfield believes that today's firms should adapt to the trends in social networking and positively take advantage of these new habits rather than the other way around.
- Example on WIKIS: IT wikis have been used to strengthen a collaborative environment in a European based investment bank.
Social Computing in the Enterprise
- Many supporters of the use of social computing technologies find it as a way to document the decentralization a lot of companies have come to in their project creating processes.
- A problem nowadays is solved in many cases outside the formal setting of the firm thus giving it an informality nature.
Notable Trends
- Inevitable changes should be employed by originations as adaptive enhancing tools.
- Firms should always spread the culture of dynamic continuous improvement.
- One should not that prominent trends such as Wikipedia is better than yesterday and tomorrow will better because most of today's project are scopes of continuous improvements.
Peer Production in the Workplace
Weaves internal and external resources together
IBM and their InnovationJam Happened in September 2006 Covered by 2, 72 hr sessions Consisted of over 100,000 participants CEO, Sam Palmisano committed up to $100 million to
develop the ideas with the most social and economic potential
Teams
Not a new conceptEffective tool for problem solvingWikipedia: 16,000 people actively peer-
produce the siteSlashdot: 250,000 people actively peer-
produce the site
Time Allocation
Is the time allotted for specific activities Google: employees are required to “Goof off”
with 20% of their timeWhat this does: allows employees to conjure
up new ideas and product road maps
Decision Making
Considered today as the invisible hand of the marketplace
Markets are being put to work in corporate strategy, planning, and having company stakeholders inform company decision making
Consists of: forecast product sales, spot emerging trends and technologies
Resource Allocation
Basically placing the most tradable resources in the correct marketplace
Thus, removing internal politics and sets up a dynamic where teams buy and sell access to resources based on their independent judgments about how badly the resources are needed