Enterprise 2.0 and B2C Web 2.0 Show Serious Traction—But Social Sticky Wickets Remain—How to Trust? |
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The Social Networking Conference (SNC) was an excellent place to check the pulse of Web 2.0 adoption from customer and provider perspectives. Producer Marc Lesnick explained in his opening remarks that, in the months preceding this conference, corporations had knocked on his door asking to get involved. His Ticonderoga Ventures had held several SNCs over the past few years, and it had been largely the purview of social networking start-ups and their facilitators. This is a very apt indication of the enterprise adoption predicted by my State of Social Networking Forrester coverage and 2007 Review.
SNC SF 2008 took place July 10-11, 2008 at the UC San Francisco's Mission Bay Conference Center. It was a focused conference that balanced start-ups' and enterprises' innovation—with a dash of perspective from Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak and Social Networking Watch's Mark Brooks. On the enterprise side, GE's Grewal and GM's Denison covered the enterprise 2.0 and B2C Web 2.0 perspectives respectively, while the U.S. Air Force's Adkins presented nascent cross-boundary collaboration in the armed services. Start-ups Twitter, Mowave, Faceforce and many others gave fascinating examples of innovation along several vectors. I beta-released the Social Network Roadmap in my presentation and moderated a panel with Visible Path, Jigsaw and LinkedIn in which we discussed various aspects of how enterprises were using social networks. IBM's Rawn Shah offered a useful network for "social context" for planning and solutions for social networks.
Notable, too, was Daniel Brusilovsky's very lucid presentation, "Social Networks: a Teen Perspective. Daniel is the 15 year old founder of Teens in Tech.
I have coverage of all these tracks, which I'll summarize before Analysis and Conclusions. The reportage follows this convention: the summaries are from my notes of speakers' remarks, and when a sentence is parenthesized, it is a comment. Click on logos for abstracts of the tracks.