Start-up Technology
I had an interesting chat on Thursday with my friends Julie and Martin where amongst other things, we talked about using blogs and wikis within small and virtual companies.
At The Games Kitchen, we used a home-grown blogging tool to try and keep everyone up to date with what was going on. At Slam, we use Trac, which is a wiki geared towards task management purposes (I do wish it had a better administration interface though). In my work with Dynamo, I encouraged them to use a blog internally to capture knowledge, and it seems to work well for them.
Martin’s take was that these technologies come into their own in virtual or distributed companies, where people can’t be kept up to date with daily meetings or chats. I think he’s right, and it will be interesting to see how it all works out in practice for him (it’s always good to watch from the sidelines!). I can see a couple of gaps for products which could fit in amongst the mix, but I’ll keep them under my hat for now.
Later in the day, Scott Johnson (ex-Feedster) had made a podcast about “internal podcasts”, where he uses podcasts both as instructional and information communication tools with contractors and staff. Of course, this is just the 2006 version of voicemail communications, as used by retailers, airlines and many other companies to disseminate information on a daily and weekly basis. The advantage of podcasts is that they aren’t tied to one device, and Scott points out that your staff can now be listening to your message when they are jogging, walking the dog, or driving.
I’m curious to know if anyone else has used these technologies successfully or otherwise in their workplace?
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5 comments
dwlt wrote at 10:37 AM on 16 May 2006
@Anon: Good point – I think the other thing is that these types of software are getting easier to install and manage, and in some cases (such as with Jot and Socialtext, no need to install at all).