Titelangaben
Räth, Philip ; Urbach, Nils ; Smolnik, Stefan ; Butler, Brian S.:
Corporate Adoption of Social Computing : A Process-Based Analysis.
In: Journal of Information Technology Case and Application Research.
Bd. 14
(2012)
Heft 2
.
- S. 3-27.
ISSN 2333-6897
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/15228053.2012.10845699
Angaben zu Projekten
Projekttitel: |
Offizieller Projekttitel Projekt-ID Projektgruppe WI Digital Life Ohne Angabe Projektgruppe WI Kommunikation & IT-gestützte Zusammenarbeit Ohne Angabe |
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Abstract
Digital natives – the generation for whom the Internet has always existed – have embraced the medium as one of choice. They use social computing applications as a medium for many activities, including receiving and giving product advice (ratings, comments), meeting with and talking to friends (social networking, chat), organizing events (social networking), learning (Wikipedia, weblogs), and communication with the general public (Youtube, weblogs). Facebook, a social networking service, has reached an audience of approximately 800 million users; young Iranians organize protests against their government via social networks, while amateur journalists and artists are viewed by millions on Youtube and weblogs. Inspired by these developments, corporations now seek to adopt social computing applications and derive similar benefits for their organizations. However, despite their growing interest, many firms report significant problems with the implementation and acceptance of social computing applications. We describe how three companies solved significant communication and collaboration issues by incorporating social computing applications into their intranets. Particular attention is paid to the deployment and adoption processes.