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Three myths of enterprise wiki deployment

Three myths of enterprise wiki deployment

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 21 Jan 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

As organizations get caught up in the excitement of enterprise 2.0, platforms like wikis may appear simple enough, but your employees may not think so. Why you don’t want a culture clash with the wiki

Highly-successful wikis are often driven by IT-savvy employees, noted Jespersen, given the familiarity with technology and previous experience with wikis. But in general, those tasked with driving the project will be determined by the scope of the wiki, which could be either enterprise-wide or group level. The former, she said, will require a person like an intranet manager, whereas the latter can be managed by a member of each group.

Myth Two: Employees know how to contribute.

The concept of a wiki may be simple, but contributing content is not necessarily logical for casual users. Jespersen said some organizations prefer to refer to existing written policies around content creation that say, for instance, employees are responsible for the content they produce. But policies can be tricky considering the goal is to strike a balance between governance and structure and flexibility, said Jespersen, “but it’s difficult not to fall into either extreme.”

Some wiki-specific policies can include guidelines around creating pages that are easy to read by having a table of contents if the page is long, or having a naming system for links to ensure consistency.

Myth Three: Wikis will always provide the information employees need.

Although searchability is often a selling point of wikis, Jespersen said the reality is wikis are difficult to search through, unlike a content management system. Given there is little structure built into wikis, “it is difficult to structure this information to make it findable the next day even.”

Content on a wiki can grow faster than the organization can keep up, she said, therefore the wiki managers must perform regular searches and quality checks of the content.

Overall, Jespersen suggested starting with a pilot so that the true purpose and scope of the wiki can be first ascertained before an enterprise-wide launch.










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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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