85 Articles match "Communities of Practice","Membership"

The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Blog Your path to success Measuring Community Strength by Gil Yehuda on February 4, 2010 in Enterprise 2.0 I’ve been reading a lot about “2.0 communities” from the perspective of employee communities (related to virtual teams and communities of practice) as well as customer communities (related to interactive marketing practices).  At Home About Services For Vendors Policies Enterprise 2.0 Personal Branding Subscribe Gil Yehuda's Enterprise 2.0
 
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Communities of Practice for Local Government Skip to main content Site navigation W elcome C ommunities
 
Thursday, November 26, 2009
A contribution by Adam Arvidsson : “The following is an attempt to use an empirical study of an actual instane of value co-creation. Such affective investments can be attracted through the promotion of a particular kind of ethos. The people who supply affective investments are generally not interested in monetary compensation but they are anxious that the ethos of their productive community be respected: In essence: value depends on the ability attract affective investments from a co-producing audience. On a second level, this ‘ethical
 

The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

In the latter half of 2008, we worked with a number of companies to establish communities of practice. In training the people with key roles in the communities (such as the coordinator, core team members and those with support roles outside the communities) a common question arose..."what Of what do we do first?" Of course the answer to this depends on the specific context.
This is the fifth in a series of blog posts I wrote for  Darren Sidnick . am finally getting the rest of the series up. In our first post on Communities of Practice (CoPs) we disabused ourselves of the confusion between a community and the platform that allows a community to interact together online. Is a “class” I You can find part1   here,  p art 2   here,    part 3 here  and part 4 here . 
A great series of articles well-worth the time to read if you are interested in Communities of Practice: Communities of Practice (CoPs) CoP Series #3: Community - without people? CoP Series CoP Series #2: What the heck is a Domain and why should I care? CoP Series #5: Is my community a community of practice?
Home Products & services Support & downloads My account Select a country
This afternoon I’m spending a half hour on a Skype video conversation to share a bit of how I use social media. figured it would be good to exercise my memory a bit and unearth some of the key stories that led me to to my social media use today, and perhaps surface some of my patterns. The history approach also shows that while the term “social media” was not in play when I jumped in, the social use of online media has been growing I These roots are significant because our patterns of use, our ways of embracing or rejecting technology are grounded
This is a reblog of a guest blog post I did on Darren Sidnick’s Learning & Technology Blog: What the heck is a Domain and why should I care? (CoP In the first in our series on communities of practice, (CoPs) I briefly mentioned Community, Domain and Practice. Because Etienne Wenger does such a great job of defining domain (and he really helped me understand it) I’ll start with CoP with Nancy White) . I’m republishing them here with Darren’s blessing!
Community of practice From EduTech Wiki Jump to: navigation , search This article or section is incomplete and its contents need further attention. Use your judgment! Contents 1 Definitions 2 Supporting a COP through virtual environments 3 Communities of practice, formal learning and education 4 Components of a social learning system 4.1 Communities of practice 4.2 Boundaries 4.3 Identities 5 Building a social learning system 5.1 Community building 5.2 Exploring
A while back I blogged about the possibility of networks and blogospheres cutting into the need for communities. believe this is happening a great deal, as now people may have a more purposeful or ideal way of achieving their needs that they were once achieving by being in a community. NOTE: I want to stress in this post I’m referring to *pure* CoPs, ie. cross-functional group spaces to learn about a topic (*usually* comprised of people across I I’m not refering to teams using CoP-like social software, like Basecamp as a group space to coordinate
person implementing across the whole organisation, within a department, across a couple of departments, within a group, etc… Of late we have seen posts by folks at ThoughtFarmer and Socialtext on pilot/implementation methods. My focus is not on the social computing practitioner, but rather on a regular person wanting to run an online Community of Practice (CoP). This is not a post about social computing deploying/piloting/adoption in general. All these are applicable on many levels eg.
Tomoye Try Tomoye Ecco online | Attend an online demo | Pricing and deployment options Overview Community taxonomy Powerful questions and answers Find experts and network Videos, blogs, bookmarks, documents and more Leader and technical features SharePoint powerpack Employees learning from each other. Customers sharing new ideas and best practices. Partners collaborating more effectively.