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Consumer Driven IT

4 Posts tagged with the coit tag
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Apple did something ingenious when it came up with the idea of a Genius Bar in 2001 with the opening of its first Apple retail store. At a time when many other vendors left consumers to sit and stew while technical support staff in far-off places attempted to solve their problems over the phone, or via a painstakingly slow chat function, Apple got personal. Specifically, it let its buyers belly on up and have a real-live, face-to-face session with an Apple-trained tech right at their local Apple retail store.

 

This idea has apparently caught on with some CIOs who want to make their own IT staff more accessible and approachable to internal users, too. The Seattle headquarters of Starbucks, for example, features a Tech Café IT help desk modeled on the Apple store: InformationWeek reported that under direction of CIO Stephen Gillett, employees can come in, browse computing equipment they want to use, or connect with an IT staffer at the coffee king’s own version of a Genius Bar.

 

That’s a good first start, but I’m guessing that the Genius Bar concept can be taken even further. In fact, I think there’s an opportunity for each party — IT and business users — to have a chance at playing Genius. IT has valuable information to impart about technical support and a lot more. But the consumerization of IT has made business users not only more vocal about what they want, but also more savvy about the goals. In other words, the “bar” could be an exchange of ideas for both sides.

 

IT and Espresso

Having a physical Genius Bar already in place is not a prerequisite for fostering a deeper discussion between IT and the users it serves, however. It’s great if you have one, as far as ambience and meeting logistics go, but there’s nothing to stop IT leaders from booking a conference room and renting an espresso machine for regular bimonthly or even more frequent meetings with various invited segments of the business-user community.

The idea is to keep it informal, not to have business unit leaders or department members presenting ideas to the IT staff. Rather, it is about giving IT an opportunity to pick their brains about how they — and maybe their customers — would like to use new tools and technologies. Ideally, the goal is to make those dreams come true.

 

And the timing couldn’t better. Here are a few recent trends that might help you kick off a Genius session or two at your enterprise:

  • The new Apple iPad is here. Research company GigaOM recently posted  a blog by Stacey Higginbotham pointing to research showing that 64 percent of mobile workers now carry a tablet. The blog focused on network and security issues, but your Genius session with your tablet users — which should include as many frequent traveler execs and field workers as possible — might focus on getting as much value out of these devices as they can, every day. Chances are, they’re already familiar with applications out there that help them do their jobs better. IT can learn about those apps in the context of nuts-and-bolts concerns such as security and volume-licensing opportunities. But perhaps even more valuable is the chance for IT to see whether there are ways to boost user experiences and build some good will.

 

  • The new Apple iPad is here. Yes, I know I said that already, but there’s so much going on in the tablet world that surely you don’t expect to cover it all in one Genius session! So also plan to set up some Genius time with your marketing crew. Last October, The Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism, in collaboration with The Economist Group, provided impressive figures about tablet adoption: It reported that 11 percent of U.S. adults own a tablet and 77 percent use it every day. For its part, ChangeWave Research, a service of 451 Research, in a survey Your marketing folks should be exploring ways to exploit tablet use for enterprise customer and consumer advantage.

 

changewave2.bmp

Another recent survey from Equation Research, reports that 41 percent of the tablet users have experienced slow load times and crashes, poor page formatting, and other issues that may mean it’s time to think about optimizing websites for the new format.

 

Chatting up Social Media

  • Social media — that one’s here too. Companies are still struggling to make sense of it. If your company is like many others, marketing probably has led many of the efforts to figure out how to use social media to promote the brand and respond to customers, but it’s been a difficult proposition and one that’s getting ever more so. You want to bring the marketing folks to the Genius Bar (again) so you can better understand what they’re doing and what obstacles they’re struggling to surmount — and it’s guaranteed much of it will have to do with a very big, very unstructured, data analytics problem. They can’t go it alone, and they need your IT department to be aware of the importance of coming to grips with the challenge — even if your team is still struggling with that itself.

 

 

Enterprise 2.0 collaboration has been long promised, but is as yet largely unrealized. I urge you to read the whole of a blog I’ll excerpt here. It’s at Beyond the Cube and was written by Laurie Buczek, who formerly managed the internal social collaboration efforts for a large global enterprise, and who watched those efforts fail to achieve what she had hoped for. One of the points she makes is that: “We managed to do the normal IT deployment model — the very model I fiercely advocated for us not to do. We deployed just another tool amongst a minefield of other collaborative tools — without integration. To make it even harder, we underinvested in transition change management.”

 

That’s a fate Laurie thinks can be avoided. I do, too, especially if you set up a Genius Bar gathering for social business strategy managers as well as those who have carved a name for themselves in social media. As Laurie notes, these folks can explain how internal social media communities need to feel natural and part of the workflow.

 

I’m sure there are plenty of other topics you’d like to engage in more deeply with the business over a cup of cappuccino or tea, so I’ll leave you to take it from here. Let us know where you think your own Genius Bar might go — and enjoy!

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$1B is the astonishing amount Facebook is paying for Instagram, making Kevin Systrom a multi-millionaire (full disclosure: my daughter was classmates with Kevin and graduated with him from The Middlesex School – she commented that all her classmates can now relax because the race for the “most successful” in her class is officially over!). What I found most fascinating is the instant backlash from loyal users about Instagram becoming part of the “evil empire”, i.e. Facebook. In fact, many Instagram users of my daughter’s age have long since abandoned Facebook as a photo-sharing site or even as their social network of choice, leaving it to us aging Baby Boomers.

 

This must be pretty sobering to IT.  While many IT departments are still wrestling with putting together policies for employees’ use of Facebook at work, employees have already moved on to the next cool thing. How can IT possibly keep up? In many ways it can’t. Consumerization not only marches on, it has hopped a speeding bullet train. IT would be wise to focus more on ways to evolve their organization and infrastructure to adapt with speed and agility and worry less about what the technology-du-jour happens to be.  For instance, using a knowledge-based security approach with strong yet flexible authentication will enable IT to move from the era of “no” to “know” regardless of the particular device or app.

Here’s what else was in the IT consumerization news in the last two weeks:

 

April 19:  82% of data breeches are due to staff errors by Kevin Fogarty via IT World

Information from latest survey from PwC; another Sophos survey show very low trust by IT in their users.

 

April 17: Paying with smartphones to outpace credit cards by 2020 by Cameron Scott via ITWorld

The race is on, so says Pew Research’s survey of technology experts.

 

April 16:  Consumerization and the nagging IT expectations gap by Matthew Brown of Forrester

Great post looking back at earlier predictions and what it all means for IT.

 

April 15:  The post-PC Enterprise by Aaron Levie via TechCrunch

CEO of Box positions Apple’s strategy as the ultimate implementation of Larry Ellison’s original network computer (NC)

 

April 14: Is Facebook making us lonely? by Stephen Marche via Atlantic Monthly

Research shows that heavy users of Facebook actually tend to be more lonely.

 

April 13:  The fallacy of business social networking by Galen Gruman via Infoworld

It is not surprising employees resist using tools they don’t need.

 

BYOD and mobile cloud apps lead to licensing compliance issues by Bridget Botelho via SearchEnterpriseDesktop

IT is using old methodologies to track new ways of app delivery, and it can cause compliance issues.

 

The value of social business: exploring the ROI question by Dion Hinchcliffe via Dachis

A practical approach to evaluating ROI in a very early maturity advancement.

 

April 10:  Does your cloud storage provider hold the keys to your data? by Patrick Lambert via TechRepublic

Time-proven best practices for protecting your data should not be forgotten in the cloud.

 

Social customer service: don't compete against machines by David Gutelius via Forbes

Social customer service is using social business technology to transform customer care, and pairs the best aspects of humans and technology, while transcending the limitations of both.

 

April 9: The CIO enters the era of disruption by Thornton May via CIO

New C-level positions are being created to perform tasks perceived as not being adequately addressed by incumbent CIOs and CMOs

 

NEW from CA Technologies This Week:

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The latest happenings with our own Chief & Chuck and how to manage smart phones in special places.   Chief & Chuck - Whoosh.jpg

 

Read the comic on a:

 

Keeping you laughing from ALL devices.

Read more about the new era of consumer driven IT at: www.ca.com/cdit.

 

- Cartoon is under Creative Commons license (Attribution, Noncommercial, No Derivative Works)

 

Read the complete post here>>

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The consumerization of IT is driving CIOs to think differently about how they enable devices in the enterprise.  CA Technologies takes a comic view on how IT responds. 

 

Chief_Chuck multi-platforms.jpg

 

 

Read more about the new era of consumer driven IT at: www.ca.com/cdit.

- Cartoon is under Creative Commons license (Attribution, Noncommercial, No Derivative Works)



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