Everyone’s on Facebook, Why Aren’t They on the Intranet Too?

Thanks to all who came to my presentation at the ACMP 2011 conference – as promised you can find my entire presentation here!

In the fall I wrote a guest post entitled, “But I Don’t WANNA Change” about using change management techniques to encourage the adoption of social media within organizations. Over the past six months, I have seen how many people are interested in this topic, and I will be discussing it again at the Association for Change Management Professional’s conference May 1-4. One thing I have learned, however, is that even though social media is sweeping the world, that doesn’t mean your internal platform will engage your employees.

Social Media is Fast

Collage of social media icons

Photo Credit: Flickr, myretailmedia

Over the past five or six years we have seen a societal transformation take shape. Social Media has forever changed the way the world communicates. At the root of that change is behavior change; the idea that people had to learn to start doing something in a new way. There are always those early adopters (think Twitter users in 2007, Facebook users in 2004), but generally large-scale adoption of new communications tools takes years, often decades (think radio and television) – until now. Social media has raced across the globe in just a few years, with billions now taking part.

Social media has even had time to have what I call ‘nano-changes’ (nano as in rapid changes within a larger change). In the last several years we’ve seen a remarkable shift from blogs and discussion forums to instant update platforms like Twitter and Foursquare. There has also been a substantial move to mobile technology.

Behavior Change is Slow

A turtle slowly plods along

Photo Credit: Flickr, jhoward413

So how does understanding this information help you build a successful internal social media platform? Because to unleash the power of social media you have to understand human behavior. We are social creatures, but businesses that assume our social tendencies will ensure the success of a new collaboration platform are gravely mistaken. Why? Because they underestimate one crucial human behavior, we are social creatures AND creatures of habit. Change is hard, change is work, and getting people to change behavior requires significant effort.

These platforms often fail because:

1. They are poorly implemented and explained
2. Users don’t have a clear understanding of why using the site will help them
3. Leadership doesn’t lead by example and engage users via the platform
4. The tools don’t provide meaningful, updated information
5. They weren’t designed with the end-user in mind, so the user interface is complicated or confusing
6. They don’t continue to evolve

Here’s my take on each of these issues.

1. Solve a specific problem: A poorly implemented and explained IT implementation will always fail. (And make no mistake building an internal collaboration platform is an IT implementation.) My previous post has some detail around this particular issue, but one point reigns supreme: build the platform to meet a business need. Define the goal clearly and help employees understand how this new platform will achieve that goal. Is your goal to train employees, improve morale, or communicate more effectively to a global workforce? Define the goal, then design the platform to achieve it, and then communicate the hell out of it!

2. Clear vision: If users don’t understand what it is or why they should use it, it’s because the vision for the project was not clearly articulated. Take this example:

We are designing a web portal that through a user authentication process will enable simultaneous global interactions in a safe, behind-the-firewall employee collaboration platform.
OR
We’re creating a secure website where our employees can collaborate, share ideas, and inspire one another.

Articulating the vision is leadership’s responsibility, and the first step is to make certain people understand the critical elements. The second message clearly explains what it is, who it’s for, and what the benefits are, without using jargon.

3. Lead by example: If your CEO is still sending mass emails to everyone instead of launching the latest firm initiative via the new platform, then employees are receiving conflicting messages. Not only that, but if leadership is noticeably absent from the blogs, discussion forums, or communities created in the new platform then they are not reinforcing the use of the tool by modeling the behavior they expect to see – the employee thinks, ‘well the boss doesn’t use it, why should I bother to learn how?’

4. Content drives adoption: If people find the content engaging, informative, and useful they will return, if they don’t they are history. There are two parts to this: first, the content must be provided in an interesting manner. Don’t just post the company’s newsletter on the platform – make it interactive, use the discussion forum to determine the content for the next newsletter, etc. Second, the content needs to be consistently updated, which means you have to allocate enough resources to make sure the platform stays relevant and organized.

5. User first! It is always surprising to me how often the simplest (and arguably most important) issue is lost in the myriad of technical details – if the user experience is poor, they won’t use the site. Very few people will take the time and money to do a full, extensive usability review, but there are other options. First, there is ‘do-it-yourself’ usability that can be quite helpful. Steve Krug has a great book on this topic that has practical tips that really can improve any website. Another solution is to launch your new platform in beta, tell everyone it’s in beta, ask for their honest, candid feedback, and then (here’s the trick) listen to them! People are MUCH more forgiving of a new platform if they can see the site improving and evolving, which brings me to my last point…

6. Evolve, evolve, evolve: A platform that doesn’t grow with the needs of its users, no matter how well promoted it is, will ultimately stagnate and die. You don’t have to have a complete overhaul every six months, but you do have to continue to provide your users with more value. The other key here – don’t just add stuff, go back to your business drivers and add the stuff that reinforces those business objectives. Ask users what features or functionality they would like, and if it’s technically feasible give it to them.

Each of the issues above are core change management principles: creating a sense of urgency, articulating a clear vision, leading by example, and gathering feedback to continually evolve are all crucial steps to ensuring a successful internal collaboration implementation. It’s not build it and they will come, it’s more like build it, do all of this hard work, get them involved, and then they will come! But hey, better that than yet another wiki that no one uses, right?

Michael Murray is an Associate at Booz Allen Hamilton, where he has helped clients use social media to engage people around the world and in the office across the hall.

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About michael.murray

An Associate at Booz Allen Hamilton, I am passionate about helping our clients succeed. I am also keenly aware of what social media can (and cannot) do for my clients, which have included the Departments of Commerce, Defense, Energy, and Labor. My background in change management, social media, and strategic communications allows me to look at the behavioral side of the social media spectrum in order to encourage the adoption of these tools. My experience includes engaging stakeholders through social networks, wikis, blogs, micro-blogs, websites, intranets, and discussion forums. To encourage adoption of these technologies I implement change management best practices such as developing a shared understanding of the problem and creating a guiding coalition to champion the change.

View all posts by michael.murray

24 Responses to “Everyone’s on Facebook, Why Aren’t They on the Intranet Too?”

  1. Zhenyan18ucky Says:

    So funny negozio hogan
    negozio hogan

    • Anonymous Says:

      Thank you for your email. I’ll be working on a client site during the day with limited access to this email account until May 10, 2011. I’ll do my best to respond to your email after business hours. While I’m out of the office, please consider reading my blog (www.steveradick.com) or following me on Twitter (www.twitter.com/sradick).

      If you’d like a quicker response and your inquiry is related to Booz Allen’s Digital Strategy & Social Media Practice, please contact Tracy Johnson (johnson_tracy@bah.com).

      I will respond to your email as soon as I can.

      Steve Radick
      Lead Associate
      Booz Allen Hamilton
      Read my blog at http://www.steveradick.com
      Follow me on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/sradick.

  2. Niall Harbison Says:

    Yammer sorts a lot of stuff down. We use it and although it is always hard to get people using new technology it has vastly improved our communication and cut down on emails. It is hard to change people’s habits though

    • Anonymous Says:

      Thank you for your email. I’ll be working on a client site during the day with limited access to this email account until May 10, 2011. I’ll do my best to respond to your email after business hours. While I’m out of the office, please consider reading my blog (www.steveradick.com) or following me on Twitter (www.twitter.com/sradick).

      If you’d like a quicker response and your inquiry is related to Booz Allen’s Digital Strategy & Social Media Practice, please contact Tracy Johnson (johnson_tracy@bah.com).

      I will respond to your email as soon as I can.

      Steve Radick
      Lead Associate
      Booz Allen Hamilton
      Read my blog at http://www.steveradick.com
      Follow me on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/sradick.

    • Michael Says:

      Niall – you’re absolutely right, Yammer can be a great tool for minimizing e-mail and increasing internal collaboration. You’re also right that it’s hard to change people’s behavior. Getting the leadership to understand that they need to be on the tool consistently (walk the walk), train their folks on how to use the tool, and gather feedback to customize to your company’s needs all takes a real effort. Too many people launch it and leave it – the launch is just the beginning!

      Thanks for the read and the comment!

      Michael

      • Anonymous Says:

        Thank you for your email. I’ll be out of the office speaking at the International Crisis and Risk Communications Conference from May 9 through May 11th. While I’m out of the office, please consider reading my blog (www.steveradick.com) or following me on Twitter (www.twitter.com/sradick).

        If you’d like a quicker response and your inquiry is related to Booz Allen’s Digital Strategy & Social Media Practice, please contact Tracy Johnson (johnson_tracy@bah.com).

        I will respond to your email as soon as I can.

        Steve Radick
        Lead Associate
        Booz Allen Hamilton
        Read my blog at http://www.steveradick.com
        Follow me on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/sradick.

  3. LCS Says:

    Too True Michael, I think you can apply this process irregardless of intranet platform.

    If I think back to my days as Intranet Manager, London Underground (almost 10 years ago) it took a monthly CEO news flash published on the site too drive usage and for the various departments to buy in to the benefits of a corporate intranet.

    The technology changes but the approach remains the same.

  4. LCS Says:

    Too True Michael, I think you can apply this process irregardless of intranet platform.

    If I think back to my days as Intranet Manager, London Underground (almost 10 years ago) it took a monthly CEO news flash published on the site too drive usage and for the various departments to buy in to the benefits of a corporate intranet.

    The technology changes but the approach remains the same.

  5. LCS Says:

    Too True Michael, I think you can apply this process irregardless of intranet platform.

    If I think back to my days as Intranet Manager, London Underground (almost 10 years ago) it took a monthly CEO news flash published on the site too drive usage and for the various departments to buy in to the benefits of a corporate intranet.

    The technology changes but the approach remains the same.

    • Anonymous Says:

      Thank you for your email. I’ll be out of the office speaking at the International Crisis and Risk Communications Conference from May 9 through May 11th. While I’m out of the office, please consider reading my blog (www.steveradick.com) or following me on Twitter (www.twitter.com/sradick).

      If you’d like a quicker response and your inquiry is related to Booz Allen’s Digital Strategy & Social Media Practice, please contact Tracy Johnson (johnson_tracy@bah.com).

      I will respond to your email as soon as I can.

      Steve Radick
      Lead Associate
      Booz Allen Hamilton
      Read my blog at http://www.steveradick.com
      Follow me on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/sradick.

    • Anonymous Says:

      Thank you for your email. I’ll be out of the office speaking at the International Crisis and Risk Communications Conference from May 9 through May 11th. While I’m out of the office, please consider reading my blog (www.steveradick.com) or following me on Twitter (www.twitter.com/sradick).

      If you’d like a quicker response and your inquiry is related to Booz Allen’s Digital Strategy & Social Media Practice, please contact Tracy Johnson (johnson_tracy@bah.com).

      I will respond to your email as soon as I can.

      Steve Radick
      Lead Associate
      Booz Allen Hamilton
      Read my blog at http://www.steveradick.com
      Follow me on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/sradick.

    • Anonymous Says:

      Thank you for your email. I’ll be out of the office speaking at the International Crisis and Risk Communications Conference from May 9 through May 11th. While I’m out of the office, please consider reading my blog (www.steveradick.com) or following me on Twitter (www.twitter.com/sradick).

      If you’d like a quicker response and your inquiry is related to Booz Allen’s Digital Strategy & Social Media Practice, please contact Tracy Johnson (johnson_tracy@bah.com).

      I will respond to your email as soon as I can.

      Steve Radick
      Lead Associate
      Booz Allen Hamilton
      Read my blog at http://www.steveradick.com
      Follow me on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/sradick.

  6. Hermineeworld Says:

    Interesting and informative post.. It made me think 🙂

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