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New 'NBOR' Collaboration Software to Debut Next Month







New 'NBOR' Collaboration Software to
Debut Next Month

New 'NBOR' Collaboration Software to
Debut Next Month
01/10/2004 09:32 AM

Denny Jaeger's forthcoming software, called "No Boundaries Or Rules," or NBOR, includes an intuitive user interface for writing, drawing, compiling multimedia presentations and other PC tasks.




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New 'NBOR' Collaboration Software to Debut Next Month

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Innovation as Collaboration


Innovation as Collaboration 02/01/2005 09:04 PM
smartcarA few years ago a furniture company flew me down to their headquarters to talk to them about innovation, and to get my comments on a new product that they'd developed for the professional services industry. This was a company that had been honoured for years as one of America's most innovative companies, so I wasn't sure how much I could help them. They ushered me first into the R&D department where I met with some very creative individuals who obviously knew a lot about their business, and about product innovation. The department featured a giant furniture 'playroom', stocked with a variety of furniture components, where creative minds could serendipitously experiment and build makeshift prototypes on the fly. I was impressed.

Being a consultant, the first question I asked them was about their innovation process. Specifically, I asked, how were customer needs, complaints and ideas routed from the front-line customer contacts (the sales and marketing people) to R&D. I got blank stares. New product ideas were developed in the laboratory, it seems, and the only customer input was from surveys and focus groups once the R&D people already had something to show them.

An interesting discussion ensued. The gist of it was the company's argument that customers, not being experts in furniture, don't know what they want until they're shown something. If you were to ask them what they want, they'd just respond "what can you offer me?" My response was two-fold:

First, I said, you shouldn't be asking people what furniture they want, because  it's not a piece of furniture that they're looking for, necessarily, it's the attributes and benefits that the furniture offers that people want: Comfort, orthopedic support, mobility, prestige, 'workability'. I described a company I had recently read about that had abolished chairs. All the work surfaces had been raised to a comfortable work-level while standing, and each employee had been given a lightweight, personal 'memory cushion' to stand on that clipped to their belt, and a pair of personal orthopedically-designed shoes designed to make standing for long periods comfortable. In this company, people were constantly on the move and an enormous amount of time was spent booking meeting rooms. Now, the entire office could be configured as ad hoc meeting areas, chairs (with their high attendant cost and floor-space needs) could be eliminated, and mobility was optimized. People even found that they were more productive standing up and constantly moving around. This was a company that understood furniture was a means to an end, and the end for them was mobility and flexibility, so they 'invented' tools (furniture, cushions and shoes) that had those attributes.

Secondly, I added, you need to use an iterative process to elicit what people need, want and would use, a process Imperato and Harari (in their book Jumping the Curve) call "Thinking the Customer Ahead". This process entails a combination of visioning, asking a lot of 'what if' questions, and generally helping customers imagine the future state of their own organizations and needs, and how they would react if something new were suddenly available. This is an inherently collaborati ve process, as much as it is an innovative one. Just as asking people 'what would you like to see on the company intranet?' is likely to produce unimaginative (or no) answers, so would asking customers what furniture they need. But if you helped them to envision what the future of their business would look like, and then worked from that vision to ask an iterative set of 'what if' questions to elicit the kinds of furniture they could imagine using effectively in that future environment, and then collaboratively work with them to 'design' it, then you'd be getting somewhere.

As it turned out, the new product they had asked me to evaluate was designed to solve a problem in the professional services industry that had been widely talked about for a generation. Now they had an answer, but it was an answer to yesterday's problem, for which effective work-arounds had been found and were still evolving. And they had designed a product that had several critical inconvenience factors that were show-stoppers, and which they could have known about by spending more time talking to customers much earlier in the process.

One of my creative suggestions to them, as a customer, was that if they really want to sell their top-of-the-line ergonomic chairs to CEOs, they should give them away free to hotels and conference centres for their meeting rooms, where CEOs hang out and where the chairs are notoriously uncomfortable. The proviso would be that the name of the chair be conspicuously emblazoned on each chair. I don't think they ever took me up on the idea. I still think it would work, and pay for itself in no time.

Specialization has created intellectual and imaginative silos in organizations, and a recent Wharton study written up in S+B Magazine has found, as I did on that trip, that these silos are a huge obstacle to innovation: "The most effective product development and commercialization processes encourage dynamic communication and idea sharing among engineers, marketers, and customers...Failure to incorporate the customer’s perspective often seriously limits the potential financial and competitive value of corporate innovation...Often, engineers are tucked away so far within a company that they don’t see firsthand what customers really need."

Other key findings of the study:
  • over-concentration on technology and under-emphasis of the emotional appeal of products leads to market failure
  • better products result when employees are themselves customers of the product
  • 'anthropological research' -- visiting customers to see how they actually use (and mis-use) products can provide huge insights on need and innovation opportunities
  • when entering new markets, having local partners 'on the ground' can help tweak products to meet needs that are unique to that new market
  • using cross-functional teams and having the R&D people 'get out more' can help reduce 'customer blindness'
  • spreading R&D efforts around the world can help global companies enhance their 'environmental scan' and tap into ideas and adaptations that may not be apparent at head office
  • surveys that gather data on customer behaviour are insufficient -- it's more important to know why customers do what they do, to determine their true wants and needs, and this usually requires face-to-face contact and collaborative effort to determine
  • it's important to understand customers' aversion to change, and annoyance with having too many choices, when developing products
  • key qualities needed of the facilitators of dialogue between R&D, sales and customers: humility and curiosity
This study focused mainly on new product innovation, but the same need for collaboration with all the departments of the company, and with customers as well, applies equally to other types of business innovation. I like the Doblin Group's Ten Types of Innovation, an excellent way of parsing all the innovation opportunities open to a company:
  • Business model: How you make money (e.g. Dell's pay-in-advance for a custom-made PC model).
  • Networks and alliances: How you join forces with other companies for mutual benefit  (e.g. Sara Lee sticking strictly to branding and outsourcing all manufacturing)
  • Enabling process: How you support the company's core processes and workers (e.g. Starbucks' premium wage and benefits packages to attract superior staff)
  • Core processes: How you create and add value to your offerings (e.g. Wal-Mart's reinvention of retailing as shelf-space leasing)
  • Product performance: How you design your core offerings  (e.g. the Mercedes Smart Car's unique and imaginative attributes -- pictured above -- pick up the new Feb/05 Fast Company for a fascinating discussion of why you won't see it in the US)
  • Product system: How you link and/or provide a platform for multiple products (e.g. the Microsoft integrated productivity suite)
  • Service: How you provide value to customers and consumers beyond and around your products (e.g. Singapore Airlines' thoughtful and pampering extras)
  • Delivery Channel: How you get your offerings to market (e.g. Martha Stewart's multi-media ways of getting her 'home' stuff to your home)
  • Brand: How you communicate your offerings (e.g. Absolut vodka's "theme and variations' advertising concept)
  • Customer experience<>: How your customers feel when they interact with your company and its offerings (e.g. the Harley Davidson owners' community)
Collaboration within company departments and with customers is absolutely essential to the success of any of these ten types of innovation. My sense, however, is that in most large organizations collaboration (as opposed to mere coordination) is antithetical to corporate culture, modus operandi, and hierarchical structure. That's why many innovation advisers think innovation is best done in a business unit separate from the main operating unit, where emphasis is inevitably on protecting the status quo.

And that's also why I was surprised to see the results of a new study, by KPMG and Ipsos-Reid, of Canada's most innovative companies. Only three of the top 10 are small-to-medium sized businesses (Research in Motion, Westjet Airlines and Ballard Power Systems). The others include four of Canada's five largest telecom and broadcasting firms, its largest grocery chain, its largest engineering firm and its largest software distributor. And while this 'bias to big' is less noticeable in the Innovation category than in the overall Most Admired rankings (which are top-heavy with banks), it struck me as peculiar -- until I read how the winners had been selected: Only the CEOs of Canada's leading (read: biggest) corporations got to vote. It's not surprising, then, that they picked almost exclusively other large corporations.

I wonder what the answers would have been if they had asked customers?

Approvals and Collaboration


Approvals and Collaboration 07/19/2004 01:31 AM
Control precisely who edits and publishes web pages.

The Language of Collaboration


The Language of Collaboration 06/05/2005 11:27 PM
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Geography and collaboration


Geography and collaboration 03/19/2003 10:26 PM
Russ Pavlicek
In his InfoWorld column this week, Russ Pavlicek addresses a sensitive issue: the relationship between open source and outsourcing:
It is true that many software tasks are being farmed out to less expensive foreign programmers, but it is false to say that open source is responsible for this migration.
...
The presence of millions of older PCs in the world with near-zero market value means that some of these machines will eventually work their way into the hands of foreign computer students with limited budgets. The availability of open-source software makes many of those machines useful to these students -- or at least "legal."
...
The rising number of these students overseas creates the supply that will meet the demand of some American businesses to lower software development costs. Open-source technology did not cause this situation, although it does allow cash-poor students to use legal software instead of resorting to illegal copies of commercial software. [T he Open Source: Boon or Bust?]
A year ago, Dave Winer accidentally included the wrong image of me in a posting on Scripting News. The picture was, in fact, of an Indian programmer named Nish, who had written an article on C# that I found useful. A year ago, Nish's bio read: ...

Best and Worst of Messaging &
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2003 is unlikely to go down as a banner year for either messaging or collaboration, writes eWEEK's Steve Gillmor.

IBM, Microsoft Collide on Collaboration


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Collaboration, Up Close and From Afar


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With great regret, I bid my goodbyes yesterday to the folks at the Strong Angel II demonstration, but I'm staying well-connected to the project in several ways. One is by using software that has become a crucial component to the project, Groove, the collaboration software that just hit its 3.0 milestone. Groove does so many things, but at its heart is a peer-to-peer networking system, replete with widgets and tools and fully encrypted at every level. In situations like the ones the Strong Angel teams are modeling, security is vital for some data even if not for all. One of the most intriguing demonstrations on Kona has been named "Pony Express," after the relay mail system of yesteryear, except this is being done with WiFi, laptops and Groove. The idea is that humanitarian assistance people in the field -- where there's no connectivity -- could fill out forms on their laptops, gathering data about populations and needs; then someone would drive by with a WiFi-equipped vehicle, synchronize the Groove "workspace" containing the data; and bring it back to the home base. This would be done again and again, and ultimately each person in the field, not just the people at the base, would have the most current possible data even without a direct Internet connection. My ongoing regret about Groove is its Windows-centricity. Ray Ozzie and his team at Groove really should find a way to port the application to Unix (Mac and Linux). But they've heard that from me before...

IP telephony meets collaboration


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PicSearch Announces Collaboration With
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PicSearch Announces Collaboration With
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"Picsearch announced today that it has entered into an agreement to supply the new MSN Search service with image search services. This means that MSN consumers may search for electronic images on the Internet using technology made available by Picsearch."

IBM lays out collaboration plans


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The Future of Microsoft Collaboration


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Collaboration Across Space (and a Wee
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07/09/2004 06:32 PM

Here's an interesting blurb from the Stanford Report:

stanford jam

Music Professor Chris Chafe played his celleto with Berkeley musician Roberto Morales, left, in Wallenberg Hall during an intercontinental jam session June 18 that took advantage of sophisticated teleconference technology. Projected on the screen are Hogne Moe, left, and Oyvind Berg, who "virtually" joined the concert from the Royal Academy of Technolgy in Stockholm. The quartet played three improvisational concerts as part of the "Point 25" project (the title refers to the one-quarter-second delay of the Internet broadcast) sponsored, in part, by the Wallenberg Global Learning Network. Audience members in Stanford and Stockholm also were able to watch each other.

Does anyone know if the event was recorded?


Red Hat Summit Day 2: Good
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Red Hat Summit Day 2: Good
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Day 2 of the Red Hat Summit in New Orleans began with speeches from Red Hat's Michael Tiemann and IBM's Irving Wladawsky-Berger. I also caught up with free music guru John Buckman for his thoughts on making money from music online.

Microsoft still a collaboration
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Microsoft still a collaboration
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06/21/2004 05:59 AM
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Super 3G Collaboration Announced


Super 3G Collaboration Announced 01/03/2005 08:00 AM
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SugarCRM Adds Collaboration


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Open-source customer relationship management software developer SugarCRM Inc. is adding several new components to extend the capabilities of its sales, marketing and customer service applications.

Will That Be Coordination, Cooperation,
or Collaboration?


Will That Be Coordination, Cooperation,
or Collaboration?
03/25/2005 06:39 PM
The Idea: Three Words: Coordination, Cooperation, and Collaboration, are often used interchangeably. They shouldn't be.

Recently I specified< /a> the requirements for collaboration:

Collaboration entails finding the right group of people (skills, personalities, knowledge, work-styles, and chemistry), ensuring they share commitment to the collaboration task at hand, and providing them with an environment, tools, knowledge, training, process and facilitation to ensure they work together effectively

but I didn't define the term. The term is being cheapened ("collaboration tools", "collaborative environments") to the point where in many people's minds it's indistinguishable from cooperation and coordination, which are less elaborate and less ambitious collective undertakings. How can we differentiate between these terms in a meaningful way? Here are a few ways that I think they differ:


Coordination
Cooperation
Collaboration
Preconditions for Success ("Must-Haves")
Shared objectives; Need for more than one person to be involved; Understanding of who needs to do what by when
Shared objectives; Need for more than one person to be involved; Mutual trust and respect; Acknowledgment of mutual benefit of working together
Shared objectives; Sense of urgency and commitment; Dynamic process; Sense of belonging; Open communication; Mutual trust and respect; Complementary, diverse skills and knowledge; Intellectual agility
Enablers (Additional "Nice to Haves")
Appropriate tools (see below); Problem resolution mechanism
Frequent consultation and knowledge-sharing between participants; Clear role definitions; Appropriate tools (see below)
Right mix of people; Collaboration skills and practice collaborating; Good facilitator(s); Collaborative 'Four Practices' mindset and other appropriate tools (see below)
Purpose of Using This Approach
Avoid gaps & overlap in individuals' assigned work
Obtain mutual benefit by sharing or partitioning work
Achieve collective results that the participants would be incapable of accomplishing working alone
Desired Outcome
Efficiently-achieved results meeting objectives
Same as for Coordination, plus savings in time and cost
Same as for Cooperation, plus innovative, extraordinary, breakthrough results, and collective 'we did that!' accomplishment
Optimal Application
Harmonizing tasks, roles and schedules in simple environments and systems
Solving problems in complicated environments and systems
Enabling the emergence of understanding and realization of shared visions in complex environments and systems
Examples
Project to implement off-the-shelf IT application; Traffic flow regulation
Marriage; Operating a local community-owned utility or grain elevator; Coping with an epidemic or catastrophe
Brainstorming to discover a dramatically better way to do something; Jazz or theatrical improvisation; Co-creation
Appropriate Tools
Project management tools with schedules, roles, critical path (CPM), PERT and GANTT  charts; "who will do what by when" action lists
Systems thinking; Analytical tools (root cause analysis etc.)
Appreciative inquiry; Open Space meeting protocols; Four Practices; Conversations; Stories
Degree of interdependence in designing the effort's work-products (and need for physical co-location of participants)
Minimal
Considerable
Substantial
Degree of individual latitude in carrying out the agreed-upon design
Minimal
Considerable
Substantial

Where do teams, partnerships, think-tanks, open-source and joint ventures fit in this schema? The general
definition of a team is an interdependent group, which suggests that collaborative groups are teams, coordinated groups are not, and cooperative groups may or may not be. Partnerships and joint ventures are both, I would argue, primarily cooperative undertakings, whose objectives evolve over time. Open-source developments can run the gamut among all three types of undertaking. So theoretically can think-tanks, though in reality most think-tank work is solitary and not really collaborative. Even the work of scientists on major international projects is, I am told, substantially individual, with a lot more coordination and cooperation than true collaboration.

The last two rows of the above chart may seem somewhat paradoxical. It is relatively easy to coordinate the activities of a 'virtual' group that must work remotely and asynchronously, and much harder (but not impossible) to achieve virtual collaboration, especially if the collaborators already know each other. But once the 'design' of the collective work-product is done, the implementation work of a coordinated group is usually very explicit, while the implementation work of collaborators is necessarily more improvisational.

So what? Well, in many cases, collective work may be dysfunctional because it is organized as one of these types of undertaking when what is needed is another type. Or, based on a misunderstanding of the nature of the collective effort, the wrong resources and tools are provided, or the preconditions for success are not met. And collaboration is not always a better approach than coordination or cooperation. In situations where the Wisdom of Crowds is valuable (prediction, optimization and coordination problems), independence of 'crowd' members is essential, and cooperative or collaborative processes can lead to 'groupthink' and actually detract from the crowd's 'wisdom'. There is nothing more frustrating than being invited into a supposedly empowered, collaborative team and then being charged with a task that needs nothing more than a good project coordinator.

It all comes down to what you are trying to accomplish. The 'Purpose of Using This Approach" row of this chart is therefore perhaps the most important. A hammer, a wrench and a screwdriver are not interchangeable tools, and none is best for all situations.

All take, no give: why collaboration
fails


All take, no give: why collaboration
fails
04/25/2004 08:41 PM
ZDNet Apr 26 2004 0:36AM GMT

DreamworX Collaboration Tools


DreamworX Collaboration Tools 04/06/2005 06:43 AM
Development started, DCT is getting shape

Oracle Blends IM, Collaboration


Oracle Blends IM, Collaboration 06/14/2004 02:25 AM
Oracle Collaboration Suite 3.0, aimed at the enterprise, adds an instant messaging capability to complement the suite's e-mail, voice mail, calendar, Web conferencing and file management features.

Will IBM/BEA Collaboration Rile Rivals?


Will IBM/BEA Collaboration Rile Rivals? 12/02/2003 01:25 AM
UPDATE: Despite analyst concerns, JCP founder Sun isn't overly concerned that new specs will damage the standards body's, or its own, clout.

cwick - collaboration server


cwick - collaboration server 04/28/2004 12:07 AM
cwick release dublin3

Supply Chain Collaboration


Supply Chain Collaboration 11/19/2003 01:03 PM
marcus evans Nov 19 2003 12:15PM ET

Motorola-NTU collaboration results in
win-win situation


Motorola-NTU collaboration results in
win-win situation
08/31/2004 09:58 AM
Channel NewsAsia Aug 31 2004 2:30PM GMT

Call for Participation: W3C
Teleconference on Collaboration


Call for Participation: W3C
Teleconference on Collaboration
03/11/2003 01:22 AM
4 March 2003: W3C is pleased to announce the first in a series of teleconferences on Web accessibility research. Researchers and practitioners in document collaboration, human-computer interaction, assistive technologies, disability studies, Web accessibility, and related fields are invited. The event is sponsored by the Web Accessibility Initiative's Research and Development Interest Group. The first telecon is tentatively 14 April. Position papers are due 21 March. Please refer to the call for papers. (News archive)

Collaboration targets global 3G chipset


Collaboration targets global 3G chipset 07/15/2004 03:22 AM
Electronics Talk Jul 15 2004 5:59AM GMT

Point/Counterpoint: Web services for
collaboration


Point/Counterpoint: Web services for
collaboration
12/08/2003 10:25 AM
P.J.: Despite what some may think, I'm about as platform-neutral as they come. But here's the problem: There's still no agreement on how presence shall be presented as a Web service. On one side are the proponents of XMPP (Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol), an XML-based outgrowth of the Jabber project, which doesn't seem to be supported by anyone bigger than Novell. On the other, I see IBM and Microsoft agreeing on something for the first time since OS/2 1.0 was released: that SIP (Session Initiation Protocol)/SIMPLE (SIP Implementation for Messaging and Presence Leverage Enhancements) is the way to go. So, I'm curious, Jon: What side are you on?
Jon: Both, for different reasons, but it doesn't matter for the purposes of this discussion. I know several developers who are using Jabber as a SOAP transport, and I'm told that the new breed of SIP-oriented IP PBXs offers SOAP interfaces. It's not a question of whether Web services will turbocharge the next generation of collaboration, but how. And there are two big answers. First, Web services will provide a general means of access to the messaging substrates. Second, Web services will help us unify metadata (message headers, aka context) and content (message bodies, aka documents) under a common data-management discipline: XML. [Full story at InfoWorld.com]
...

Microsoft steers apps toward
collaboration


Microsoft steers apps toward
collaboration
03/14/2003 06:18 PM
At a conference for users of its business applications, Microsoft plans to announce integration capabilities designed to simplify the development of automated links between companies and their business partners.

Hosted collaboration steps to the plate


Hosted collaboration steps to the plate 06/28/2004 08:07 AM
Hosted collaboration services from vendors Documentum, Intuit, and SiteScape are expanding to give enterprise workgroups improved project control and finer-grained user management.
Grok Description matches for New 'NBOR' Collaboration Software to Debut Next Month
GrokA matches for New 'NBOR' Collaboration Software to Debut Next Month

New 'NBOR' Collaboration Software to Debut Next Month

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