You are here: silicon.com > Networks > WebWatch

WebWatch

Staff web 2.0 skills can boost work productivity

Listen up boss

Tags: business, users, internet, web 2.0

By Tim Ferguson

Published: 24 September 2008 11:50 BST

Businesses should exploit their employees' knowledge of web 2.0 in order to fully take advantage of the tech, according to analysts.

With more consumers than ever involved with social networking, user-generated content and cloud-based apps, businesses should be using their employees' web 2.0 skills to make the workforce more productive, a report from the Butler Group has found.

Check out silicon.com's latest Cheat Sheets…

♦ Google Android

♦ Video: ID cards

♦ BBC iPlayer

♦ Galileo

♦ CRM

♦ Biometrics

Richard Edwards, information management practice director at Butler Group, told silicon.com: "[We] have this other life outside of work in which we're interacting with [other people] and we're sort of bringing those ideas into the workplace."

He added: "[Businesses] need to recognise what's actually happening - what are those changes - and examine the possibility of utilising some of this to bring about positive change within the business."

But in order to get the best out of web 2.0-savvy staff, bosses will need to listen to their workers. "No one can argue that getting employees to contribute more of their wisdom and know-how for the good of the organisation is a positive thing," he said.

The Butler Group report adds that businesses risk losing out if they fail to formalise the use of web 2.0 within the organisation.

Edwards said: "The workforce itself is starting to make use of the consumer web - i.e. web 2.0 - to do some of their daily tasks. And these are being undertaken without any real form of governance or control from the organisation."

"Unless you understand the big picture, there's no way we can move forwards," he added.

In a recent silicon.com CIO Jury, however, several CIOs revealed they have banned the use of social networking from their office.

Mike Roberts, IT director at the London Clinic, said: "The computer is a tool for work. I suggest these sites are blocked. Uploading/downloading can be a security risk. If staff feel that being able to access these sites is important to them, I don't want to employ them."

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure
Read and write about internet access at the airports of the world at atlarge.com. Rate airports, and see what others have to say...

Rob Bamforth Seeking memorable mobile apps Quocirca's Straight Talking: Why are there so few?

Stewart Baines How much SEO is too much? Net Effect: Plus 10 tips on boosting your site's profile


  • Jobs
.NET Silverlight WPF Developers C# E-Commerce City

Preference will be given to candidates with experience of building complex GUI apps displaying complex calculations from large data sets utilising ...

SOA Developer - C#

Expanding software house in Dublin has a requirement for a talented Web Developer with 4 years commercial experience.You will join a technically ...

PHP Developer (PHP, MYSQL, SMARTY, LAMP, JQuery) - Imm. Start

Developing mostly social networking solutions and large scale database web apps. PHP/LAMP Developer, (Core skills:PHP, MySQL,AJAX, JQuery, Zend, CSS, ...

Agenda Setters 2008
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.





Quick Sitemap Links: