|
|
273 Articles match "Corporate","Distributed"
The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
|
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
This strategy may be more challenging for firms whose distribution channels own or control customer information—as is the case for many packaged-goods companies. Copyright © 2009 Harvard Business School Publishing Corporation. Take This Test Keep Up With HBR Follow us on Twitter » Become a Fan on Facebook » HBR on YouTube » Get Email Alerts From Harvard Business Review Cart My Account Downloads Explore Today on HBR Blogs Magazine Books Authors Store Harvard Business School
|
|
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
These quotes are good but they are a plea, or ideal situation…they seem to highlight more of the distribution and management aspect, ie. Patrick concludes:
“ We assume , naïvely, that only the corporate plot and its aspiration towards triumph matters when it comes to knowledge asymmetries, and that everybody will share knowledge willingly once they understand what the corporate plot is. 8221;
“…we My last post was a review of a paper by Patrick Lambe , and in this post I review yet another paper on the same topic.
The point of this
|
|
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Paul Fernhout unearthed this older piece from Langdon Winner :
“One especially foggy area in cyberlibertarian rhetoric is its depiction of matters of power and distribution. Today developments of this kind are visible in the corporate mergers that have produced a tremendous concentration of control over not only the conduits of cyberspace but the content it carries. Who stands to gain and who will lose in the transformations now underway? Will existing sources of injustice be reduced or amplified?
|
|
The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
|
•
Saturday, July 12, 2008
About Contact Web Strategy Vault Web Strategy by Jeremiah Owyang | Social Media, Web Marketing Jeremiah Owyang discusses how web tools and social media enable companies to connect with customers List of Social Computing Strategists and Community Managers for Enterprise Corporations 2008 –Social Media Jobs and Professionals June 20th, 2008 | Category: Career , Social Media Job , Web Team , On the move , Community Manager , Industry Index If you’re interested in jobs for this space, please read the
|
|
•
Monday, April 6, 2009
Distribute to the organisation and say “we, the company, decided this was our concerns and approach to appropriate and inappropriate behaviour”. Go back to the directors, tell them the training has occurred and the guidelines drawn up with the whole company buyin, ask for signoff and permission to distribute to company, ask them to disable firewall blocks , and make sure you give them follow up - ongoing workshops, monitoring of lawbreakers, and so on. For Public Relations who are concerned about Crisis Communication in Social Networks and are responsible for Social Media Training across the organisation.
|
|
|
|
•
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
The above comes from a great 38-page overview essay by Kevin Carson where he reviews current trends to more distributed manufacturing, often based on open source design, as well as a new type of machinery.
* Siefkes is wrong only in referring to producers under the existing corporate system as “market producers,” since absent “intellectual property” as a legal bulwark to proprietary design, the market incentive would be toward designing products that were interoperable with other platforms, and toward competition in the design of accessories and replacement parts tailored to other companies’
|
|
•
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Médaille to explain how he sees the connection between the p2p approach and distributism.
This, in a nutshell, is the idea behind the economic philosophy known as “Distributism.” It is simply the idea that economic and social systems work better when productive resources, such as land, tools, and education, are widely distributed throughout the population. I asked the distributist author John C. This is an excellent and easy to read introduction:
|
|
•
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
NOTE: Similar terms are: working from home, telecommuting, distributed work, mobility, digital nomads, remote teams, virtual teams…
Working from Anywhere :
"Not intended to supplant traditional workplaces, third places, just as the phrase suggests, are an alternative to the first place, the formal corporate office, and the second place, your home. Our research, in fact, shows that workers of the future will on average This is a topic I have come across a lot in my reading lately as it seems to be ever more relevant in times of an economic downturn…organisational issues such as capital costs and talent retention, and personal issues such as cost and happiness all become much more highlighted.
|
|
|
|
•
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Just the definition:
“Cloud-publishing will provide the tools to allow groups of people to easily coalesce around the production, distribution and sale of a particular book or books. Book Oven is constructing tools and processes for the collective and independent production of books.
In a thoughtful, but really hard to summarize blog entry, the concept of self-publishing is rejected, in favour of ‘cloud publishing’.
|
|
•
Thursday, April 16, 2009
It was okay, but I only used it inside a corporate context. Tags: distributed work productivit Until recently, I had only used Outlook for a short period in 1998-99. The feature I most enjoyed was the calendaring and appointments function. I've tried several email clients since then and settled on Gnus as the most useful I've found. Over the years, I've participated in a number of mailing lists,
|
|
•
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
One would have to think that a distributed system of power on the boat would have resulted in a few key changes. A microclimate is a small area that has differing weather than the surrounding area. Architects often design buildings specifically to avoid or create a microclimate. Anyone who ever saw a baseball game in San Francisco’s Candlestick Park quickly learned how poor design
|
|
|
|
•
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
This might be the classic part of Knowledge Management; the collection, storage, and distribution of information, documents, books, and intellectual property. knowledge libraries in large corporations that allow global access to documents across departments and subsidiaries
corporate wiki tools that allow the capturing of experts’ knowledge and allow collaboratively develop this knowledge
We welcome Tim Wieringa as a guest blogger to Green Chameleon.
Since Since 1999, my work has been related to Knowledge Management (KM).
|
|
•
Monday, August 24, 2009
In it he paints a picture of valiant workers surreptitiously cyber-skulking on dank distributed web sites, efficiently working and making money for their companies – all the while keeping an eye out for dagger-wielding IT staff looking to keep their security models and networks digitally pure. environments that people will use and providing a corporate culture in which they can be used. Integration is Enterprise 2.0. This week my friend and colleague Dion Hinchcliffe posted an article on ZD Net describing 14 Reasons Why Enterprise 2.0
|
|