Microsoft Case Study: Portals as Communities for Knowledge Sharing Mary Lee Kennedy Director, Knowledge Network Group Microsoft Corporation KnowledgeNets 2001 May 17th, 2001, New York.

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Transcript Microsoft Case Study: Portals as Communities for Knowledge Sharing Mary Lee Kennedy Director, Knowledge Network Group Microsoft Corporation KnowledgeNets 2001 May 17th, 2001, New York.

Microsoft Case Study:
Portals as Communities for
Knowledge Sharing
Mary Lee Kennedy
Director, Knowledge Network Group
Microsoft Corporation
KnowledgeNets 2001
May 17th, 2001, New York
The Topic
“The case study will focus on the
intranet knowledge capture,
organization, access, and delivery
and reuse strategy to put what we
know at our fingertips.”
Community as Social
Capital
Individual/Group Engagement
High
Collaboration
Connectivity
 Peer to peer
 Peer to expert
 Expert to
“Officialdom”
expert
Understanding
Low
High
Individual/Group Effort
Why Bother?

Brain power

Top companies in 20 industries ranked
according to their levels of knowledge
capital with ave. company’s KC having 3
times their book value or $21 billion.
(1999 Knowledge Capital Scorecard*)
http://www.intellectualcapital.nl/
*“Seeing is Believing,” CFO, 2/1999 – NYU Stern School of Business,
Prof. Baruch Lev
Microsoft Employees…

On average spend 2.31 hours a day engaging with
information




50% of that time is looking for it and 50% of the time is
using it.
Are avid users of both tacit expertise and explicit
information in electronic environment
Want one-stop shopping, faster access/real-time
access, easier/more accessibility to web sites, a
good/powerful search engine and relevant
information.
Expect “everything” to be specific, measurable,
relevant and tangible i.e. there is an expectation of
value, value creation and contextual understanding.
Portal Topography
Super-Level Integrator
MSW as an integrator
provides access to the major
domains of the intranet.
FinWeb
Watson
MSW
as integrator
PGPortal
InfoWeb
Miicrosoft.com
ITGWeb
Audit
HRWeb
Benefits
Domains
Corp.
Finance
MSW
as domain
Domains are the major portal players, and are
defined by their ownership of unique material
that maps to concepts or subjects like "HR."
MSW is a domain as well as an integrator
because it has unique content.
“Community” Levers



Content (Information and knowledge)
Tools
Services
Explicit Content
FY01 Top 15 Requests:















77% - MS product/tech info
70% - Training materials
68% - Technical or white papers
68% - Internal project websites
62% - Internal news and features
61% - Presentations
60% - Standards & specifications
54% - Books
53% - External News
48% - Trade journals (electronic)
47% - Competitor Product info
44% - Competitor websites
42% - Conference proceedings
37% - Org charts
37% - Trade journals (print)
Implicit Content
Intranet Tools



“Officialdom” engagement
Electronic connectivity
Workgroup collaboration
Corporate Portal
People/Roles
Connectivity
Contribution/Consumption
Develop or
Procure
Contribution
vs.
Consumption
Reuse
(delivery or
publish)
New Hire
Mentor &
Collaborate
Employee in
Experienced
training, professional
Kn. Worker
development
Senior
Employee
Workgroup Collaboration
Group Collaboration
Intranet Web Services

Taxonomy
Schemas
 Search and tag taxonomy
 Navigation taxonomy

Search
Navigation
Today’s Pro’s and Con’s

Pro’s





Peer recognition motivating
factor in workgroup
collaboration
Grass-roots, “middle” and
technology drivers are
cultural fit – and productive
Intense levels of informal
sharing and information
publishing based on
meritocracy
Subject matter is
organizational catalyst in
enterprise/divisional
communities
Joint commitment to
platform, content, and
services

Con’s




Multiple efforts
Deep knowledge of user
experience within each
portal but not across the
intranet (other than MSWeb)
Potential for confusion and
ignorance on key content
and internal messaging
“Deer in the headlights
syndrome”
Evolution
Web-site
Access
FY1996
Microsoft
Community
Industry
Information “Anywhere
Information Architecture On any
Device”
Events
LOB
FY1999
FY2000 FY2001/2002
The Challenge of Islands
?
?
?
?
Next Wave: XML Web Services
Standard
Connectivity
Presentation Programmability
Browse
the Web
Program
the Web
Employee Engagement
Henry
Heath
Patty
Dianne
Brendan
Brian
Common Goals Strategy

Establish an internal network of major
portal owners to adopt standards and best
practices, including:




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Portal planning
User experience
Content quality
Business and employee information and
knowledge,
Information architecture
Editorial programming, and
Applications platform.
Vision for the Intranet

Empower Microsoft employees
through seamless access to tools,
services, information and knowledge
any time, anywhere, on any device.
i.e. information and knowledge at your fingertips!
Value Proposition

The Company


Employees


will have an efficient and effective information and
knowledge management solution for employees, and
one to share with our customers.
can easily find, share and reuse information and
knowledge, understand its significance/relevance, and
apply it as intended by the employee.
Network members

Will meet their audience needs faster than they would
when operating independently.
Planning
Framework
Customers
Partners
User Experience
Editorial Programming
Information Architecture
Information and Knowledge
Employees
Applications Platform
Collect/Manage/Share/Metrics
Infrastructure (Assumed)
FY02 Success





Increase reuse of the most valuable
content, tools and knowledge
Increase employee ability to identify and
understand key business topics
Decrease multiple portal efforts and
increase efficiencies
Increase user satisfaction across the
intranet experience
Have a great story to tell our customers.
Key “Mantras”


Culture defines what works when
establishing community
The dynamic duo



Technology can enable it
People drive it
Common understanding and
desired end-state keep it productive
Questions


Mary Lee Kennedy
[email protected]
Planning

Objective


Establish a cross-portal business-owner
driven strategy for the intranet that ensures a
measurable benefit to employees and to
Microsoft.
First steps

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“Vote with your wallet”
Research sub-team to establish intranet
baseline
Collaborative workspace
Executive sponsorship
Internet/Intranet review
User Experience

Objective


Design a simple, intuitive and flexible user
experience which provides seamless
navigation across the major portals
First steps

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Baseline exploratory research on intranet user
expectations including community tools and
preferred method of engaging with peers,
experts and the “company”
Audience (employee) understanding thru a
Persona Village
Tie-ins between intranet/internet/extranet
Editorial Programming

Objective


Coordinate editorial content that increases
employee understanding
First steps


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Requirements for a consistent employee
understanding
Editorial roles and responsibilities
Common programming schedule
Editorial standards
Content quality standards
Information Architecture

Objective

Design and implement an information
architecture that provides


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The employee-base with the ability to find (through
search and browse) the authoritative, consistent,
exhaustive information needed
The publishers and aggregators the ability to add
metadata based on a shared taxonomy with a
minimum expense of time and effort.
First steps

Core taxonomies (search, tag, navigation)


What makes a “Best Bet”
Use of common content management tool
Information and Knowledge

Objective


Guarantee that critical content sets
meet business and employee
productivity needs
First steps
Baseline information needs assessment
 Identification and valuation of key
information and knowledge sets
 Articulation of roles and responsibilities
 Agreement on content quality standards

Applications Platform

Objective


Provide reusable platform solutions
with architectural guidance and a
synchronization path that ensures
fastest deployment.
First steps



Construct an architectural guidance process
Review current platforms…identify
audience/planned use opportunities
Engage product groups