October sale - up to 30% off training courses – use code: OCT25UAE
25 May 2015 | Updated on 3 February 2017
Don’t know your yams from your tweets? Clueless about Ning and Ping? Fear not, for we aim to demystify social media and social enterprise so you can find tools that suit projects and pockets. 1. Av...
Don’t know your yams from your tweets? Clueless about Ning and Ping? Fear not, for we aim to demystify social media and social enterprise so you can find tools that suit projects and pockets.
1. Avoid project disconnect. Got a question? Want to engage stakeholders? Need to raise an issue? Enter micro-blogging and the world of quick-fire messaging!
2. Blog to rally and reflect. If you’re a PM, you know what a Swiss Army knife feels like! So why not cut your load by blogging? A blog is a type of web site that’s a great way to inspire your team, discuss ideas, share documentation, reflect on lessons learnt and heaps more. Of all the many platforms around like Moveable Type and Expression Engine, here’s a handful.
3. Network, network, network! It’s who you know as much as what you know today. Social networking sites deliver visibility, credibility and transparency. They fall into roughly three sometimes interchangeable groups: public, professional community and social enterprise that usually link with other social media.
If you want to go international then International Community for Project Managers has resources, news and opportunities for peer-to-peer contact.
For targeted networking a must-see is the Office of Government Commerce’s Best Practice User Group for its P3RM methods. Members share knowledge and exchange ideas about PRINCE2, MSP and more to improve their use and understanding of the methodologies.
5. Capture and create with Wikis galore. Say your team’s producing documentation. How do people get at it on Sundays? Where’s the latest version? Where are the notes? As with Wikipedia, on wikis you collaborate, search and store living documents. Since they’re not exactly ideal for stuff like scheduling or issue tracking, tie them to applications that do those jobs. Wikis galore to choose from at WikiMatrix and Wikipedia so just two listed here.
6. Open an office in the clouds. You’re in Paris but the files are on the desktop in New York? What do you do? Next time, go to the cloud. Online files don’t sit on a desktop but on a suite in the clouds giving you access from any computer, any time and any place.