This book is about collaboration, networking and knowledge generation in the time of the 'second wave' of Internet technology, loosely called 'Web 2.0'. Whilst enterprise technology departments have been steadily building their information and knowledge management portfolios, the Internet has generated new sets of tools and capabilities which provide opportunities and challenges for improving and enriching knowledge work. This book fills the gap between strategy and technology by focussing upon the functional capabilities of Web 2.0 in corporate environments and matching these to specific types of information requirement and behaviour. It takes a resource based view of the firm: why and how can the knowledge capabilities and information assets of organisations be better leveraged using Web 2.0 tools?Identifying the underlying benefits requires the use of frameworks beyond profitability and cost control. Some of these perspectives are not in the usual business vocabulary, but when applied, demonstrate the role that can be played by Web 2.0, how to manage towards these and how to assess success.
Transactive memory systems, social uncertainty, identity theory, network dynamics, complexity theory, organisational memory and the demographics of inter- generational change are not part of normal business parlance but can be used to clarify Web 2.0 application and potentiality.This book is written by a well-respected practitioner and academic. It draws on the author's practical experience as a technology developer, designer, senior manager and researcher. It also provides approaches to understanding and tackling real-world problems.
- ISBN10 1780631871
- ISBN13 9781780631875
- Publish Date 17 May 2010 (first published 1 March 2010)
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country GB
- Publisher Elsevier Science & Technology
- Imprint Chandos Publishing (Oxford) Ltd
- Format eBook
- Pages 280
- Language English