Original Post on 05.06.2008
2:40pm – 3:30pm Friday, 04/25/2008
What makes Web 2.0 companies different? It’s all about the people. Web 2.0 companies and their technologies lower the barrier to membership, empower and engage community members, and develop a two-way communication channel between the community and the decision makers of the company. Online communities can vary from personal interests and hobbies to businesses building closer relationships with their customers, and even doing good for individuals and communities in need.
Caroline Dietz, Manager, Dell IdeaStorm IdeaStorm is an interactive web site that enables customers to generate ideas about technology they would like to see, along with suggestions for current and future Dell products, services, and operations—and ultimately challenge the way Dell does business. Customers post ideas and the community “promotes” or “demotes” their suggestions, causing the most popular ideas to rise to the top. The community also discusses ideas with one another to ultimately see how Dell is putting their ideas into action.
Kingsley Joseph, Senior Product Manager, salesforce.com IdeaExchange The recent winner of Forrester’s Groundswell Awards for excellence in business uses of social technologies, IdeaExchange has changed the face of product development by giving the salesforce.com community a voice in shaping future product releases through an ongoing, live public debate. With the goal of harnessing the power of community to drive business innovation, members of the salesforce.com community submit, vote, and comment on everything from new product features and branding to company strategy.
Kingsley Joseph
salesforce.com, inc.
Kingsley Jegan Joseph is a web strategist at salesforce.com and creator of the IdeaExchange. The recent winner of Forrester’s Groundswell Awards for excellence in business uses of social technologies, IdeaExchange has changed the face of product development by giving the salesforce.com community a voice in shaping future product releases through an ongoing, live public debate. With the goal of harnessing the power of community to drive business innovation, members of the salesforce.com community submit, vote, and comment on everything from new product features and branding to company strategy.
Web site
Kiva.org
Sam leads Kiva’s engineering team and is responsible for the day-to-day operations and ongoing development of the website. He comes to Kiva with almost 10 years of experience working with over a half-dozen technology startups, ranging from self-service kiosks and enterprise systems integration to digital tickets and online video sharing. Sam has traveled extensively through Southern Africa, Southeast Asia, and Central America. Sam graduated with a B.S. in Computer Science from Stanford University.
Web site
Yahoo!, Inc.
Matt is currently Director of Community Management for Yahoo’s Community and Communications Group – supporting products such as Groups, Messenger, Mail, Bix, 360, and Mash. Matt’s team is responsible for community input/advisory panels, product blogs, community events, and engagement programs.
Prior to joining Yahoo!, Matt spent 8 years working for eBay. While at eBay, Matt spent 3 years managing several components of eBay’s Community Managment team – input programs, events, and forums
Web site
Flickr
As the Director of Community at Flickr, Heather Champ oversees member activities for one of the world’s largest and most popular photo sharing communities. She joined the Flickr team in May 2005 and has seen the community grow to more than 23 million members who have shared more than 2 billion photos.
Heather is very much enamored with personal publishing on the Web, having launched her first home page in 1994 while working at the School of Architecture, Princeton University. She is an award-winning Web designer with more than ten years of experience maintaining her own site, hchamp.com, as well as the Mirror Project. Prior to joining Yahoo!, Heather also co-founded JPG Magazine with her husband Derek Powazek.
http://success.salesforce.com/
www.dell.com/community
http://www.flickr.com/
http://www.kiva.org/
http://www.yahoo.com/
http://ideas.salesforce.com/
Flickr – 25 million members, bought by yahoo, 260 million photos, just launched videos
Kiva – microfinancing and lending service, 275,000 lenders, 25 people staff (non profit)
Yahoo – Communication and Commuinty products, community team of 4,
Dell – ideastorm – online community
Yahoo – created a round table program in which they bring in users to meet with product managers and work on getting direct feedback and idea sharing with direct influencers for helping guide product directions.
Blogs to go along with your community group allows the ability to push important information content.