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  • Mainly about engagement and collaboration using social media and events, with some asides on living in London. More about David Wilcox and also how the blog started.
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Comments

This comment is a diversion from this post, but not from the blog's topic.

I made the suggestion...that it would be a good idea to have a better-than-email system to enable people to share ideas and work together since there were no plans for a further get-together for some time.

I've been at meetings where this was suggested, and in each case, everyone agreed to do it. It's easy for the energy to fizzle the second you walk out the door, so people want to maintain momentum. But also in each case, this post-meeting electronic dialogue never materialized. It seems that once you get back to your own cube, you see the stack of other issues in front of you, and you reprioritize. That commitment you just made goes out the window.

David, it is possible that the people in your meetings were afraid of losing control, and judging by their reactions, that's probably the case. I've seen countless coworkers grimace at the suggestion of open discussion. But even if they were all for your idea, do you think it would have happened? In my experiences, I was not the only social software enthusiast in the room. Still, we couldn't get it to work.

We wanted to continue the discussions online because the meetings were successful, and the meetings were successful because we were able to devote all of our attention to a single issue. Our shared presence created a buzz, ideas flew across the room, and we were actually disappointed when the meeting had to end. So we loved the thought of continuing these discussions the second we got back to our own offices.

But when follow-up emails came, we were surrounded by dozens of other jobs that needed our focus, and they were easily buried in a stack of other more important emails. The energy created in the boardroom couldn't be replicated online.

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