Lady Liberty thanks you
Posted: January 10th, 2008 | Author: Andy | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »And she keeps your spoon clean.
A nice morning in January
Posted: January 10th, 2008 | Author: Andy | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »Getting breakfast at the Deli in Morristown, looking at the park across the road.
I haz leet spamz
Posted: January 4th, 2008 | Author: Andy | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »Stratton afternoon
Posted: December 15th, 2007 | Author: Andy | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »The Zen Tricksters
Posted: December 14th, 2007 | Author: Andy | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »Playing for free at the lodge at Stratton, how cool is that?
Ordering a Wii in the car
Posted: December 14th, 2007 | Author: Andy | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »Yeah, and I didn’t get it anyway – foo.
Studies prove Vanilla is the most popular ERP flavor
Posted: December 13th, 2007 | Author: Andy | Filed under: Archive, Design & UX, Systematic Viewpoints | No Comments »I’ve been watching the kerfuffle over Scoble’s post and chewing on the subject some more. As Thomas points out, we’ve been over this before but it still merits thought.
My perspective? I have little insight into how usability and interface refinements will make their way into ERP products as delivered because I don’t build the stuff. I’ve been responsible for implementing it, I certainly have had to use it, and now I make a fine living making it usable in big-ass companies.
I used to take the stance that there was no reason that enterprise software shouldn’t be any harder to use than transactions at Amazon, eBay or [your favorite e-tailer here]. Those sites buffer a lot of complexity and multiple integrations from us tender humans.
I can name 2 differences that matter. First, the effect of the money trail – if users of commercial interfaces can’t complete their transaction, revenue stops. The enterprise doesn’t always have that level of motivation, depending on the function in question. Second, I’ve yet to see an organization that has deep global processes. Of course certain processes are mandated into localized versions, but more often its a reflection of the M&A activity that grew the organization on top of the regional variations.
Most often, companies fund a ‘vanilla’ ERP deployment and hope that their users can get through some training. It’s a big challenge in global organizations to quantify the variability, organize all the assets, apply security and personalization and make the stuff easier to use. Given the lack of budget for usability features and the heavy lifting it takes, it’s little wonder that most organizations aren’t taking the steps necessary, but why aren’t they demanding better user experience from their enterprise software?
In most cases I think it’s because they too have been conditioned to think that it must be complex. Perhaps this comes down from the days when the computers were behind glass and their keepers wore lab coats. All too often the IT community projects a certain machismo around ERP usability:
- It’s non-essential, ‘nice to have’
- It’s a ‘training issue’.
- Not an issue, everything passed UAT.
- We delivered the user requirements
Enterprises should share some of the blame and adding ease of use is to the features they’re requiring vendors to deliver. I’m seeing this begin to happen as ERP maturity evolves within companies. Users are speaking up, and in some cases where metrics are not being met it’s being linked to usability issues.
Social Media in the enterprise – best practice #5 (final episode)
Posted: December 10th, 2007 | Author: Andy | Filed under: Archive, Business, Social Media, Systematic Viewpoints | No Comments »At the company I was with 2 years ago the CEO had been holding town halls around the world. Corporate Communications had put together an intranet site to support the message, including a section that was positioned as being the CEO’s commentary.
One day I was chatting with the head of communications, and he asked me if I’d read the latest installment. Of course I had, personally I always found this section to be too scripted. I said that I thought it would help employees establish a sense of connection with the CEO if he were to keep a simple blog, and take a few minutes to type (or dictate) his own, honest impressions after the events, like “What a great reception I got when I arrived” or “A young man in a yellow shirt asked a really great question”, or anything that honestly sounded like his own thoughts.
My colleague’s eyes went wide. He said (I paraphrase) “Blogs? Blogs are diarrhea. I despise blogs. That’s not an appropriate vehicle for our CEO to communicate.” I understood his position – his career was built by carefully crafting and polishing words and paying great attention to nuance. Yet I could see that he wasn’t seeing the potential so I held firm, suggesting that people were more likely to react positively to a more personal voice. Eventually we agreed to disagree.
A year later the CEO’s Gen-Y son had convinced him that he should be using a blog to effectively communicate with his employees, and he wanted to start right away. I’d hate to be a senior corporate communications professional whose executives were getting direction from their kids before they got it from me.
If, in your professional capacity you may be impacted in any way by social media, don’t be dismissive. Pay attention to the changing landscape before it passes you by.
Best practice #5 – Remain neutral! Social media in the enterprise elicits emotional responses in some. Don’t let personal biases impair your ability to perceive the opportunity related to social media, even if you can’t fathom why people would use IM, blogs, wikis, Twitter…or whatever comes next. Something will and it deserves your objective attention.
