wikiwed

February 03, 2008

Wiki Wednesday: Challenges in Creating Customer Facing Wikis

We have a special guest and topic for Wiki Wednesday this week.

Companies are engaging wikis to create customer communities and managing customer relationships, usually to capture customer ideas for new products and services or to provide support for existing ones. Creating customer facing wikis can be challenging and easily results in failure or only marginal success. Reviewing several cases of customer facing wikis, the presentation draws conclusions about success and failure factors in the implementation of customer facing wikis.

Christian Wagner is Professor of Information Systems at City University's Information Systems Department. He received his Ph.D. in Business Administration from the University of British Columbia in 1989. Thereafter he spent seven years as a faculty member at the University of Southern California, before joining City University in January 1996. Wagner specializes in the development and study of decision support systems, creativity support, and knowledge management with wikis and weblogs.

The event is a brown bag lunch at Socialtext in Palo Alto.  Sign up on the wiki, Facebook or Upcoming.org.

December 02, 2007

Wiki Wednesday December

If you are in London this Wednesday, go see Jimmy Wales speak, perhaps in mention about the Creative Commons licensing of Wikipedia.

If you are in San Francisco, go hear about Davis Wiki, my favorite example of a local community wiki.

If you are in Portland, wiki inventor Ward Cunningham is bringing in the holidays.

July 01, 2007

July Wiki Wednesday

Wiki Wednesday in Palo Alto is postponed until July 11th because of Independence Day.  We'll host a talk by social media researcher Eszter Hargittai.

London is certainly not celebrating our independence.  On the 4th, they will be discussing the rise of BTiddlyWiki with Jeremy Ruston, but in a lightening talk format other speakers include self-organizer David Terrar, Lars Plougmann, Alan Wood, Andy Roberts, Scott Gavin and Ben Gardner.  Thanks to BearingPoint for hosting.

March 06, 2007

Wiki Wednesday March

Tomorrow night in Palo Alto is Wiki Wednesday, with a talk by Bryan Pendleton of PARC on an in-depth study of Conflict and Coordination in Wikipedia

Wikipedia, a wiki-based encyclopedia, has become one of the most successful experiments in collaborative knowledge building on the Internet. As Wikipedia continues to grow, the potential for conflict and the need for consensus building and coordination increase as well. This talk examines the growth of such non-direct work and describes the development of tools to characterize and identify conflict and coordination costs in Wikipedia. The results may inform the design of new collaborative knowledge systems.

All day before we are having a Wikithon.  Unlike last month, most of our developers will be remotely participating so you can easily too.  This has turned into our version of 20% time, a day a month where people can work on their own projects.  Even non-developers are engaging in creating or participating in wiki communities.

December 05, 2006

W(hack)y Wednesday

Socialtext is hosting a Wiki Hackathon that is open to the public tomorrow.  If you want to hack wiki, any wiki, and maybe with our developers, the thing starts at 5pm PST both in Palo Alto and IRC channel #socialtext on irc.freenode.net.

Chris Allen will also be giving an update on SynchroEdit.

 

More info: Upcoming.org

October 30, 2006

November Wiki Wednesday

Come on by Wiki Wednesday this week for a conversation about Socialtext 2.0 design and SocialPoint with Kirsten Jones and whole team.  The discussion will be both technical, and not, and pizza.

October 04, 2006

Computer History Museum at Wiki Wednesday

Tonight at Wiki Wednesday: Bernard Peuto and Paul McJones of the Software Collection Committee will give a brief presentation on the SCC and solicit input from the wiki community on how wikis can be used to support this work and the overall mission of the Computer History Museum.

Sign up here and see you at Socialtext.

September 06, 2006

Wiki Wired

UPDATE: Veni. Vidi. Wiki. The published story, and commentary by Ryan Singel, The Wiki That Edited MeCharts of editors and saves by Peter T.

I believe the Wired Wiki experiment can be called a success, and yesterday I would have said it was doomed. Just came back from Wiki Wednesday, where Wired reporter Ryan Singel held a conversation about it.  How we conducted the experiment, what part of the editorial process it was directed at it and the participation of the community gives us a lot to learn from.

Do recall that the use of wikis in journalism has been significantly tainted by the LA Times Wikitorial debacle.  It was a failure in wiki implementation, goal setting, content structure and moderation.  While the media has embraced public blogs, they still have a while to go before public wikis are accepted. 

When I was an intern I got into an argument with the editor of the Washington Post that ended with him telling me I have a perception problem.  Since then I have been trying to prove him wrong, but that's a larger story, right now I might tell him the same thing.

There are different parts of the editorial process where wikis are perfect fits.  Public wikis of course run the greatest risks, but I believe these risks can be managed with the right practices.  Up front, this experiment was different from Wikitorial:

  • Monitoring tools like Recent Changes and History were made available to let the community moderate
  • Requiring registration to edit made contributors more accountable
  • It could be argued that a WYSIWYG editor enabled domain experts to contribute, but in this case the domain was wikis, so it probably wasn't a factor.  Nevertheless usability always matters.
  • Besides the article, we use a weblog for submission of headline ideas and an included page for the deck
  • Choosing an article, instead of an editorial, provided an implicit guideline for what was acceptable.
  • Most importantly -- a clear goal for the collaboration was set

There was one lesson from the Wikitorial, something I saw coming back then, that we had to employ in the middle of the project.  With the Wikitorial, an edit war ensued with differing viewpoints.  Jimmy Wales stepped in and forked the page, creating pro and con editorials.  With a wiki, there is space for everyone, even when the topic is war.  In this, the topic was wikis where lots of people have a stake.  Wired endorsed an Enumeration to also be published, for remaindered links and references.  This served as a pressure release valve, to let the quality of the main article improve.

We made some mistakes, perhaps on purpose:

  • The collaboration was for an open group of participants to play the role of editor to Ryan's original submission.  This is a very unusual role for most participants, and most chose to edit directly in ways that an editor accountable to both the institution and journalist would not.
  • While there was a goal, there were no guidelines.  Closest thing was pointing to the Wired Style Guide.  There were no rules, norms or conventions.  Unlike the Esquire experiment, there was no benefit from Wikipedia's established guidelines.
  • Leadership was passive.  Wired explictly did not edit the article and did not pass judgement.

The article initially evolved reasonably.  A pattern I have seen before, say with sharing Wikified Books, where most of the contributions were lightweight and adding in references and associations that came to the minds of readers.  Personally, I stayed out of the initial editing fray (Wired did too, more on that later) to leave room for others.  But a wave of edits came in.  Angela called it "here's my favorite wiki" links.  This did reflect the topic of the article, a domain of vendors, open source and public wiki project managers.  Almost every wiki vendor added a link to themselves and editing in their positioning.  Part of this is a sad commentary about the space, I can tell you that if this experiment was done 2 years ago, the contributions would be more, uh, wiki-like.

Wired Wiki Stats 1

Wired Wiki Stats 2

There were some real gems, particularly in the education section.  One person took it upon themselves to interview an expert at Harvard after coordinating with Ryan and contributed a quote that persisted.  Someone suggested an expert to Ryan on the Comments page, but he didn't have time to interview her.  She got word of the experiment and contributed persistent edits herself.  There was a minor dispute within the section, and some backchanneling between the parties, but the result stands.

At one point, someone stepped in made the first significant edit.  They were kind enough to leave the remainder on what was the beginning of the Enumeration page, with an explanation:

Whereas the Wired Wiki story became too long, and became a soapbox for too many wiki, editors moved some of it to this page.

Hark, and know that you are upon an epic enumeration of wiki. Here, mentions of many wiki sites shall you find, and links shall you encounter.

At first I thought it was crazy, but then saw the wisdom.  Unfortunately, this created a vacuum that was quickly filled with the same.  Yesterday, with the deadline approaching, I thought the experiment would be a failure.

This morning there was a significant amount of edits, including some multiple detailed edits by one editor.  Suddenly, the article was a story again.  And the edits persisted.

At present, there is no plans for a community and I wouldn't say that one took root.  But some common understanding was reached in a short period of time.  I gained greater confirmation about some mediative techniques and moderation practices.  There are better parts of the editorial process to apply this too, some proven already, and many happening behind the firewall, but much work to be done.

The result is a good story, dear reader (at the moment), I leave to you to judge.

September 05, 2006

Participatory Media at Wiki Wednesday

Tomorrow night's Wiki Wednesday Palo Alto will feature an open conversation with Wired News reporter Ryan Singel about lessons learned from the Wired Wiki experiment.  I expect we will cover the broader topic of participatory media.

We'll have a parallel conversation for developers about the REST API and STRUT (a conversion toolbox.

See you Wednesday night, 6-8pm, at Socialtext.

August 03, 2006

Wikimania II

Great to be in Boston at the second Wikimania, the Wikipedia community conference.  Keynoting at the first one in Frankfurt was an honor and joy.  This time, I get to sit back and enjoy one of the most diverse hallways you will find. 

Wiki Wednesday in Palo Alto was a real hit.  Jeremy Ruston provided a demo of TiddlyWiki and talked through the unexpected use cases, from GTD and beyond.  Jeremy has something appealingly useful that is being extended through plugins by a burgeoning community.  Some of his core insights were about how real people don't use the web.  The AJAX-enabled accordion-style presentation-in-page UI is akin to tabbed browsing (which regular people don't do).  TiddyWiki is an app as an HTML file, which means he gets to joke with people that by visiting the site they have already downloaded it.  But by containing the app as just a file in a folder, installation is accessible. 

Pete, Adina, Jonas and I also talked about Socialtext Open and how improving the installer is our top priority.  A funny conversation ensued about if making install too easy meant you wouldn't value the outcome as much.  But it was great to meet some folks who did install and get their feedback.

July 29, 2006

August Wiki Wednesday

Jeremy Ruston, creator of TiddyWiki, a reusable non-linear personal noteboook, will be our guest speaker at Wiki Wednesday Palo Alto.  I'll also be on hand with other Socialtexters for a conversation about Socialtext Open.

Heading to the mountains for a couple of disconnected (hopefully) days.  Next weekend I'll be at Wikimania in Boston.

January 03, 2006

Changing the Geometry of the Game

Tom Peters:

In their brilliant Blue Ocean Strategy, INSEAD authors Chan Kim & Renée Mauborgne present their basic thesis in simple terms: "Value innovation is about making the competition irrelevant by creating uncontested market space. We argue that beating the competition within the confines of the existing industry is not the way to create profitable growth."

That's precisely what Mike Leach has done—and what you need to do is read every damn word in the article .... which may be the best article on business strategy I've ever read. Especially biz strategy for the 00s.

He is referring to an article by Michael Lewis (Moneyball) on Texas Tech's football coach that kept me up thinking half the night.  Jim McGee says: Go read the article. For extra credit, go read what Peters has to say. Then put both of them down and think about it.  Essentially, Mike Leach has changed the geometry, tempo and approach to talent of the game.   

We'll be talking football and more tomorrow night at Wiki Wednesday in Palo Alto.

December 30, 2005

The Rose Bowl Wiki Wednesday

January's Wiki Wednesday coincides with the Rose Bowl (USC vs. Texas).  For Palo Alto we are projecting the game and have a keg from Gordon Beirsche.  Come on by for a weird mix of tech and sports.

December 07, 2005

Freedom of Anonymous Speech

Here's a scenario for you to consider on Wiki Wednesday.

Assume that John Seigenthaler gets what he wants from his criticism of Wikipedia.  He very well may gain congressional hearings on anonymity.  Purportedly in comments to a post by Larry Sanger that begs the question, his intent is to have the private sector regulate anonymity on the net.

The way he described it, you could shift the burden by changing the law so that Internet Service Providers would evaluate the plaintiff's evidence, and decide themselves whether revealing the customer's identity might be appropriate. If the decision is yes, at that point the ISP notifies the customer, who is given the opportunity to initiate legal proceedings to enjoin the ISP from revealing his identity.

Given the consolidation of telecom, this would empower a handful of ISPs, as in 5, to be judge and jury for revealing identity.  Anonymity is a critical facet of society, and it's value is more than whistle-blowing.  I wouldn't call it a right, but would call it a feature of the virtual and real worlds (we don't walk around with name-tags).  Regardless of how you value anonymity, you should agree that this would:

  1. create undue costs for ISPs,
  2. privatize governance and enforcement,
  3. create undue legal costs for consumers, which
  4. could lead to infringements on civil liberties, because
  5. customers would be guilty until proven innocent.

Now, if the ISP or legal action revealed the libelous party it would resolve Seigenthaler's complaint against Wikipedia. 

Beyond this attempt to weaken anonymity on the Net, Wikipedia's open nature is also under attack.  Adam Curry edited podcasting history in his favor.  Big deal.  It's a wiki, just edit it if you disagree and let the community's practice work over time.

Consider regulating against graffiti.  You have two options:

  • Guard every wall in town to prevent the infraction from occurring
  • Paint over infractions and enforce the law by chasing down perpetrators

The former is not just prohibitively expensive, it kills creativity and culture.  The later is the status quo and generally works, especially where communities flourish.

So what would have Wikipedia do?  Lock down contributions through a fact checking process with rigid policy?  Or let people contribute, leverage revision history and let the group revert infractions.

Social media is disruptive.  The role of regulation significantly impacts how society will manage transition.  Today much of media is regulated through complaints (e.g. indecency).  It only takes one horror story for us to loose freedom of anonymous speech.  The easiest and most dangerous way to curb social media is to have it conform to mainstream models.

UPDATE: Cnet has a pretty good article on the liability reform sought by Seigenthaler, the first argument I made.  Mitch Ratcliffe takes issue with my second argument, about how a wiki works and how best to regulate it.  Mitch, you keep trying to fit Wikipedia into your model of how an encyclopedia should be instead of recognizing how it is different.  A print version of Wikipedia should have an editorial process bolted on to emergent practice, as it is a comparable product, frozen in time.  But instead, the evolving nature of Wikipedia needs to be recognized and celebrated for what it is.  Help people understand what it is, not what it is not.

FURTHER: Doc Searls on the first argument, "Identity without anonymity is like math without zero."

December 05, 2005

Wiki Wednesday

It's that time of the month.  Socialtext is hosting Wiki Wednesday in a city near you.  Join me in Palo Alto from 6 to 9 pm, or others in other cities (Pete Kaminski happens to be in London on his way back from Les Blogs, and Taiwan is happening!).

October 31, 2005

Jonas Luster Joins Socialtext

Many of you already know Jonas Luster, known quantity in open source and social software, who just joined Socialtext as our Open Source Community Facilitator.

Jonas has played an active role in OSS projects including Apache, mod_ruby and Drupal.  He is has worked with Lycos, CollabNet, Technorati and Blizzard Entertainment.  He got his doctorate in Social Psychology and Criminology from the University of Amsterdam, and is an occasional guest lecturer at UofA.

We could think of no one better to work the community and make it fun at the same time.

Come by and see Jonas at Wiki Wednesday.

October 28, 2005

Wiki Wednesday November 2nd

The whole Socialtext team is in town for an on-site retreat next week, so we are having this month's Wiki Wednesday in Palo Alto.  Some great suprise guests are coming by.  Mark the date and sign up on the wiki.

Also, a few of us are coming to TagCamp this weekend. Unfortunately it overlaps with the UCLA-Stanford and Earthquakes-Galaxy football games, but I'll stop by for some geek time.

September 02, 2005

Wiki Wednesday

First there was Mobile Monday, then Tag Tuesday, and now, behold -- Wiki Wednesday!

Next Wednesday, September 7th, it starts in 13 cities around the world, from Lubbock to London. People get together to chat, learn about wikis, find jobs, talk deals and generally cavort.  Ice cream on Socialtext.

Here's the cities we have so far, precise locations are still being firmed up: London, Lubbock (looking for a second geek), Indianapolis, Palo Alto, Minneapolis, Montreal, New York City, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, Portland, Seattle, St. Louis and Toronto

It's a wiki, you know what to do.

I'll be in London, on my way to Our Social World, and we need a venue.

UPDATE: Wiki Wednesday Paris has been added, bringing us to 14 cities and four countries.  Socialtext customer DrKW is providing their top floor, wifi, drinks and snacks for Wiki Wednesday London.

We will also have collections cups for the Red Cross, you know what you should do.

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  • Ross Mayfield is the Chairman, President & Co-founder of Socialtext, the first wiki company and leading provider of Enterprise 2.0 solutions,
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