When organisations engage us to deliver communication and collaboration programmes, one of the key benefits they’re looking for is to enable their organisations to better Work Out Loud. That is, to purposefully make your work visible so that it can be committed to corporate memory, built on, shared and learned from. For individuals, Working Out Loud (or WOL for short) can help to build relationships, improve skills and raise profiles. For companies, it can mean more work is committed to cor...| Intranetizen
This week Facebook released a detailed study into the value their enterprise product, Workplace, delivers for those organisations who have rolled it out. Conducted by heavyweight research firm Forrester, it uses a combination of surveys and qualitative interviews with customers to quantify the difference Workplace can make in enterprise collaboration and communication. The headlines are impressive. Among the quantified benefits seen by customers are: 10% increase in revenue per customer 20% r...| Intranetizen
In 1993 I had a custom-built computer. And it was great. I could choose the 386 processor and 16MB RAM to meet my expectations and budget. And it suited me perfectly. As I watched photos load a line of pixels at a time and it blew my tiny little mind. But would I do it now? Hell no. I go to the Mac store and choose between the space grey and the rose gold because it does everything I need it to and more. Continue reading Should you buy or build your intranet? at Intranetizen.| Intranetizen
The government has a new policy paper about its vision for digital services in the NHS and It’s well worth reading The future of healthcare: our vision for digital, data and technology in health and care, published in October, is a positive and ambitious starting point for improving digital services across the NHS. Taking inspiration and learnings from improvements in standards made by the government digital service (GDS), the paper outlines the issues currently faced across hospitals, care...| Intranetizen
The recent allegations about Cambridge Analytica using data obtained via Facebook to influence elections have made a serious dent in Facebook’s reputation. Its share price fell by 7%and MPs have summoned CEO Mark Zuckerberg to give evidence over the “catastrophic failure of process”. Inevitably, this [read more]| Intranetizen