Open Text Corporation, a global leader in enterprise content management (ECM), today unveiled its Enterprise 2.0 strategy designed to help customers transform their organisations with powerful social computing tools.
Open Text is taking its collaboration and Web solutions offerings to a new level, providing 2.0 capabilities - wikis, forums, blogs, tagging, moderation, communities and real-time collaboration - that are persuasive, productive and integrated into business processes, while still respecting compliance initiatives.
Web 2.0 technologies have redefined the Web as a platform to harness collective intelligence. Applied in the enterprise, organisations can achieve a future desired state of Enterprise 2.0, where its internal and external Web sites and applications get better the more people use them.
Application of these new technologies creates more engaging Web experiences, improves knowledge sharing and collaboration, increases employee productivity and helps improve brand loyalty and interaction.
Leveraging its existing Web 2.0 solutions based on its market leading Web content management offering, Open Text will provide a comprehensive set of new solutions to better address the broad range of 2.0 requirements.
These solutions are aimed at collaboration and social computing requirements behind the firewall as a natural extension of customers' current ECM initiatives (ensuring a tight link to existing content and processes), as well as Web 2.0 enablement of public Web sites, intranets and extranets.
"In order to be successful, customers must view Enterprise 2.0 within the context of their ECM strategies," commented Bill Forquer, Executive Vice-President of Marketing at Open Text. "Our ECM leadership is based on advocating a holistic approach, where content originating from multiple sources and repositories can be effectively managed, reused and delivered across the enterprise. An effective Enterprise 2.0 strategy requires a similar holistic approach that factors in all the 2.0 content being created.
"Many organisations treated e-mail as special content outside their ECM strategy," added Forquer. "Consequently, this silo treatment has degenerated e-mail repositories into unmanaged chaos and unquantifiable risk. There is no need to repeat that experience with emerging 2.0 content and rich media."
"Open Text has the credentials to help organisations take this holistic approach for their Enterprise 2.0 aspirations," concluded to Forquer, "We have a track record of innovation in Web-centricity, collaboration and search. We're also leaders in helping organisations apply records and archiving rules to content across many systems, from e-mail to SharePoint to SAP to Oracle to our own content repositories. We can bring a holistic view of content that can tie Enterprise 2.0 into the broader ECM context, so that 2.0 content can be managed."
The fundamental elements of Open Text's Enterprise 2.0 strategy include:
* Experience optimisation: Optimise the end-user experience through personalisation, language preferences, analytics, voting, tagging, blogs and moderation.
* Workgroup optimisation: Optimise collaborative applications that enhance the variety of workgroup structures in an organisation such as teams, projects, communities of practice and program offices.
* Enterprise 2.0 content management: Provide flexible use of wikis, forums, blogs, tagging, and real-time collaboration. Provide advanced handling of rich-media content, with special emphasis on video, which is quickly becoming the de-facto format for 2.0 style work.
* Make Enterprise 2.0 content safe: Manage Enterprise 2.0 content holistically alongside other content repositories providing a consistent implementation of archiving, disposition, retention and compliance policies.
* Find before search: Intuitively find and deliver information relevant to the user's then-current context and present that information without the user explicitly searching for the same.
In line with its Enterprise 2.0 strategy, Open Text is emphasising product development and technology directions that support 2.0 fundamentals, with areas of focus that include:
* Meta-data to underpin experience optimisation: Deeper levels of meta-data handling will enrich the user experience. This includes richer meta-data handling for content, but with particular emphasis on richer meta-data for people and processes as well. It also includes blending the best of both top-down taxonomies with bottom-up tags.
* Relationships: Graphing interactions between people, processes and content that can reveal implicit, sometimes hidden, relationships that can be used to optimise business processes.
* Workgroups: Adapting technology to improve workgroup effectiveness. Additional workgroups include committees, governance boards, escalation teams, and exception management. This also includes blending collaborative escalation and exception handling within high-throughput applications such as Accounts Payable.
* Classification: Improved intuition to auto-classify content, particularly drawing on past user behaviours and current context.
* E-mail analytics: Building on classifications and graphing interaction, introduce or extend tools that reduce our e-mail dependency and burden, such as auto-promotion of e-mail threads to blogs.
For further information, please contact Rob Shaw: tel 083 626-3811, fax 086 646-4178, e-mail rshaw@opentext.co.za
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