It seems that the technology trap - believing new stuff can fix old problems - afflicts corporate, nonprofits and individuals alike. Last week's Blogwalk 4 discussed introducing blogs and similar collaborative tools to companies, and an old diagram I showed seemed to resonate, and I said I would put it online for those interested. The point of it is that you need to deal with cultural change as well as technology change at the same time. If you try and bring technology in without commitment from the top, regard to working practices and so on, you'll get resistance... or lots of systems that don't work. And if you try and innovate without using appropriate tools you could be frustrated in your purpose.
The diagram was originally developed with colleagues to help contain the enthusiasms a few years ago of nonprofits for the latest technologies, or (more often) to suggest they did have some value. You can find the full explanation here.
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Despite the summer inertia I have managed to do some thinking about development of this blog and other older sites, and I've come to the conclusion I really need a combination of blog and wiki. I'll use the blog to do short newsy pieces, and the wiki for longer articles with decent menus. The flexibility of this arrangement, and its simplicity of use, will of course then allow me to pull in the best of material from the Partnerships Online and Making the Net Work sites, and easily add to the heap in ways that are creative, productive and navigable. It's really so obvious someone will have done it already, and there'll be plenty of guides or even hosted packages. So I thought.
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I spent a great couple of hours yesterday with online community-builder Nancy White and friends, as she paused on her way from work in Armenia to home in Seattle. I don't know if community-builder quite covers Nancy's many skills, but that was at the core of our conversations.
It was one of those occasions where the surroundings were fairly mundane - noisy cafe in London's Festival Hall - but the result for me was old ideas clarified or dumped, and new ones generated. Here's a few - not to be attributed to Nancy, who may or may not agree. As the excellent facilitator she is, she encouraged us to bat things around, rather than holding forth herself. In the midst of it we did pick up that Armenia is big on barbecue, and that despite limited connectivity many people are really keen to use the Net for social benefit. I suspect part of that may be the Nancy effect, however.
Continue reading "Where best to meet online facilitators: in the cafe" »
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