Category Archives: Reviews

RSS and the ROI of KM

The benefits of spending money on research and communication infrastructure and training can be understood more easily by examining intangible values and the roll of early adopters.

Paul Strassmann offers an interesting metric alluding to the ROI of KM (Return on Investment for Knowledge Management) in an article on Baselinemag.com. He argues that the difference between a company’s Financial Value, as determined by its own accountants, and it’s Market Value, as determined by the price its investors are willing to pay for its stock, is of key importance. Investors are willing to pay more for a good company than it’s tangible assets are worth because unlike accountants they recognize the value of intangibles. Strassmann argues that Knowledge Management makes up the bulk of those intangibles.

Why? Accountants don’t know how to explain the worth of employees’ knowledge, trademarks, accumulated software, customer loyalty and other intangibles—underscoring a major difference between the way CFOs and CIOs evaluate technology operations. CFOs look at I.T. strictly in terms of financial accounts; CIOs also look at intangible factors such as the worth of the knowledge held by the company’s workforce.

After eliminating companies with highly volatile stocks, Strassmann comes up with the following formula:

Market Value minus Financial Value equals Knowledge Value.

He goes further and recommends that the Knowledge Value then be divided by Number of Employees. It’s an interesting formula, isn’t it? The article also contains a table illustrating the Knowledge Value of several large corporations, primarily in the pharmaceutical industry. I think this analysis is worth pondering in almost any circumstance, though, even if only as a thinking process.

The ROI of KM is a very important issue, as it could, if quantified, be a key source of leverage in securing funding for things like training, research and communications infrastructure.

I think this could be of particular interest to the Web 2.0 community, as new tools begin to transition from early-adopter ephemera into marketed commodities. Where does a tool like RSS stand in the above equation today? Where will it stand in 6 months or 5 years? RSS may be a good example of an asset that stands in the shadows of even the intangible Market Values. Outside stakeholders are unlikely to place value on your organization’s utilizing a well-constructed suite of RSS feeds. But they are quite likely to place great value on the things that RSS enables. For example:

  • Rapid response to any off-site links to your organization’s web site
  • Your group-members being consistently informed about breaking news and hot topics in the field without inefficient manual “web surfing”
  • Your organization and its members developing longer-term relationships with other key players in the field, many of whom will be early adopters of RSS themselves and will thus be reading your feeds. Non-early adopters may not recognize the importance of Persons A, B and C being subscribed to your outgoing feeds, but they are more likely to recognize the importance of a well developed relationship with any of those people regardless of the technology that enables it.
  • A cohesive message from members across the team, as information is more effectively shared internally via RSS than by emails.

Perhaps then this points to the complication of such equations posed by emerging social technologies in general. When your organization makes the transition from having a few early adopters seruptitiously using RSS to magically be on top of the knowledge in their field into a scenario where instead your organization is paying for RSS services to acquire those intangible assets – that’s a shift in Strassmann’s equation that will be helpful to understand. The “investment” part of the ROI equation will really be an upgrade from partial adoption of emerging technolgies in the intangible column (or from being altogether invisible) and into the tangible costs column.

But the impact in the Knowledge Value column will shift from being of unknown causality (“group members are using RSS? what’s that?”) into an amplified impact caused by actual Financial investment. In simpler terms, purchasing emerging research services and tools won’t hopefully be something alltogether new with surprising consequences, but rather a formalization of a previously marginal investment leading to greater intanible assets. Recognizing Strassmann’s three values (Financial, Market and Knowledge Values) could be a helpful way to understand and thus explain the ROI of Web 2.0 enabled KM.

Strassman article found via Gary Price’s Resource Shelf

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Spate of Key Items Found re RSS, Tagging, Blogs and Wikis

My web-friend Beth Kanter is on fire this week. She’s posted links to The World Information Society’s focus on blogs and wikis in the developing world, Alexandra Samuel’s very succinct Make Your Non-Profit More Effective with RSS and (perhaps most exciting) coverage of a recent talk by Joshua Schachter, the creator of Del.icio.us. All 3 are great resources worth checking out.

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Bookmarklet Overload? Check out Blummy

Ok, I don’t know about anyone else but I’m dealing with a serious bookmarklet explosion. Web 2.0 is full of bookmarklets! These links you drag up to your toolbar can do amazing things, but there’s only so much room on the toolbar.

Enter Blummy. The concept is simple and brilliant. You create an account (free, I think just a user name and password if I remember correctly) and then with relative ease you can create a Super Bookmarklet. You can drag and drop from a menu of the most interesting bookmarklets other people have contributed, into a box that you size yourself. Then, you drag your Blummy bookmarklet link to your toolbar.

Ok, get ready for this: when you are bopping around the web and find a site that you want to know more about or do something with – you just click your Blummy bookmarklet and all of the sudden your personal bookmarklet box drops down with all of the bookmarklets you put into it inside. This is way cool; given the explosion of awesome services usable by one-click javascript bookmarklet the browser is going to have to change. To be honest I wouldn’t be surprised if Firefox started doing something just like this soon, and then 3 years later Microsoft’s Internet Explorer will begin doing it too. But for now, I think you’ll love Blummy.

Just to give you an idea of the possibilities, here’s what I’ve got in my Blummy Box:

  • Bookmark to Del.icio.us
  • Add to Newsgator (subscribe to the RSS feed of the page you are on)
  • Furl+Del.icio.us (save in both Furl and Delicious – something I would love to do but have never been able to make work for me on any computer anywhere. Now being no exception. It doesn’t work!)
  • Furl This!
  • Check Uptime – evaluates how often a website is unavailable. I great idea, but there isn’t enough data out there yet. Or something, I have not found a single web site it finds data for yet (including msn.com) so I’m going to remove this one. I’ll just drag and drop it out of my box)
  • WayBack – awesome service of the Internet Archive that shows you what the website you are on used to look like last time their spiders indexed it. Invaluable. Great for “fixing” other peoples’ broken links, or finding things taken offline for a variety of reasons.
  • Google Who’s Linking – very nice. Search in Google to see who has linked to the site you are on. Great for discovering related content and organizations.
  • Whois – this is how you find out who owns the site you are looking at, and a variety of other information about it. I use this a couple times a week.
  • Wikipedia look-up. Great idea, looks up anything you have highlighted in your browser in Wikipedia. The version I drug and dropped doesn’t work, at least in Safari browser.
  • Gmail send, nice. Click this puppy and a pop-up window appears from your gmail account with the URL of the site you are on in the body of the email ready to send to some one. The title of the page is the subject line, and my email signature is there! This beats Furl’s email function.
  • Del.icio.us look-up. One of my favorites. I use it daily. Pops up a window with all the tags, descriptions and the users who have applied them to the site you are on in the social bookmarking site Del.icio.us. Reminds you that the description field is important to fill out!! I can’t just talk about that bookmarklet without giving it to you right here: Del.lookup – try it out, you’ll love it.
  • Google What’s Similar, another search function I use often when doing promotion or outreach online. Nice that it’s available in one (or two) clicks.
  • View Scripts – nice idea, should show me any “scripts” being run on the site I’m looking at. Doesn’t work for me.

So that’s what I’ve got in my Blummy box so far! It’s also not too hard to create your own bookmarklets. I just grabbed the above from user contributed ones, many of which I had seen before.

The downside: It’s ugly. I don’t know why we aren’t allowed to tell blummy how many cells we’d like to populate and drag+drop bookmarklets into those cells, rather than the sloppy free-form space it now offers. It looks less professional than it could. But really, the functionality is so rad that I’m not losing sleep.

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Google Foil Sold on eBay

One of my favorite search engines, Jux2.com, was just sold on eBay for the modest but comfortable sum of $110,100. Check out the auction here, it’s pretty interesting!

Jux2 performs an invaluable service by demonstrating what search results Google misses and Yahoo! or Ask.com find. You can also use it to find the “best results” those found by all three big search engines. This is great for several reasons. First, many people use Google exclusively for their web searches. Jux2 can help fill in the gaps so you don’t miss important information. Really, go try out some sample searches – Google misses some important stuff!

Second, Jux2 is good because people need to know that Google isn’t omniscient (whether it’s benevolent is another question.) Before we become so awestruck by the power of the most succesful search engine in the world and hand over every data finding function of our lives to it – it’s good to know it’s limitations. If only in a spiritual sense!

Thanks to Sid Yadiv at Rev2.org whose write up on this alerted me to the sale last night. His site is another one readers here may enjoy giving a look. He and I have been reading each others’ blogs for some time now.

Related: People interested in advancing their search capabilities may also find Soople and Xtra-Google of interest.

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Examining Power Dynamics and Web 2.0

Conversation is ramping up about the dominance of white males in the emerging Web 2.0 world. Once place I’ve found the issues being discussed is over at the Mashable blog. What can be done? Here’s my two cents re steps that could help:

  1. Let’s prioritize bringing together the for-profit and non-profit worlds. There are so many proactive groups in the non-profit world working to shift power away from those with the most privilege. At the same time there are lots of people of color and women making careers both online and using the web as one of many tools. The folks over at are prioritizing bringing these two groups together. So if you’re in either sphere (biz or NPO) you might want to check them out.
  2. Let’s look to experts outside the “a-list” of bloggers to read, look to for advice, invite to speak and to provide assistance to. Mary Hodder’s great Speakers Wiki was created for just this purpose. It’s a directory of web folks from outside the white-male demographic.
  3. Search engines are notorious for reinforcing pre-existing privilege. While Google may have a huge index and powerful technology, check out social-recommendation enabled search engines like Wink. If we can find participants in ecosystems like that who have perspectives other than those of white men, then our searches will expose us to information that the dominant models might continue to marginalize. (I intend to write an in depth review of Wink later.)

Just thought I’d put in my two cents. I know I’m not interested in all these new web tools for their own sake, but for their usefulness in making the world a better place. I know that’s the case for a huge number of people online, including many readers of this site.

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MSN Search Beats Google on Inbound Link Search, Destroys “Blog Search” Engines

The director of The Committee to Protect Bloggers (for whom I am a technical consultant) sent me an email tonight asking what the best way to find inbound links to their blog was. The results of my investigation were so interesting to me that I thought I’d post the email I sent in response.

How many inbound links total, like to tell people “we’re linked to by this many sites”? I am thrilled to say that the best way to find out is NOT to search in Google for link:http://committeetoprotectbloggers.civiblog.org (455 results). Strange as this might seem, I am happy to report that Microsoft’s search (MSN Search, http://search.msn.com) comes back with 15,525 results. And they look pretty damned valid. Update: As of the middle of the night MSN search is now up to 17,500+ results for this search.) Now I am certainly no fan of Microsoft, but it is a happy day for me when I can say that the best search engine for your particular need is NOT Google. Unfortunately, the “blog search” engines all suck…some so bad that I emailed them asking what’s up.

So if I’m understanding your question right, I’d say in this case to use MSN Search and tell people that the NEW CPB site has been linked to 15,525 times as of this most recent search.

If you look at the MSN results you’ll note that a large number of them are from blogs, so why do these supposed “blog search” engines not find these links? Is this related to the fact that my traffic monitor is a much better way to find who’s linking to me than are Technorati, PubSub and Feedster combined?

You know what the coolest thing is? There’s an RSS feed available for MSN Search results for web search. Who else offers RSS feeds of their search results – not of news, or of blogs, but of the whole web. Nobody I know. You have to use 3rd party, subscription based GoogleAlerts.com to get an RSS feed of Google web search results. If I can get this from MSN search, do I need Technorati?

I swear I really am cheering for Web 2.0, but I’ve been super frustrated with some performance issues lately. Just to balance out the complaining, I’ll tell you I’ve been having great experiences with Newsgator (for RSS reading), Blinkx.com (for podcast search) and Del.icio.us for rebound lovin’ post breakup with Furl.net, who hasn’t returned my email or blog post – despite some one from parent company LookSmart having a Firefox tab open on this article (Furl, I Can’t Take it Anymore!) for 5 hours today. But I’m not all about complaints!

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2 Great Del.icio.us Tools

Just came upon two great tools for the social bookmarking service Del.icio.us. The best is a del.icio.us link backs bookmarklet, which you can drag and drop into your toolbar and then click at any page online to see who has bookmarked it and their tags and descriptions. Great for evaluating the Web2.0 hipster interest in any given URL. And for finding people of like mind. And for getting an instant review of any page online. All the more reason to use your description field to share concerns about bad sites, too.

Tool number two is almost a toy for geeks. It’s LiveMarks, where you can see the most popular and the most recent items tagged in del.icio.us appearing live on the page as it happens. It’s like TV for web nerds. I found several things of interest to me there, and I discovered it after several people visited my site from Live Marks.

The community of creative people around it is one of the reasons Del.icio.us is so compelling (and so much more so than Furl.net) Check out this list of Del.icio.us plug-ins and mashups that have been created, many of which are not part of the basic program. How many other social bookmarking services have that kind of community, culture of innovation and corporate responsiveness?

Related: Here’s my del.icio.us archive.