Enterprise 2.0 “Day Of Reckoning” Is On The Way, So What Now?

sharepoinitChris Lynch over at CIO Magazine has a nice write-up on the Enterprise 2.0 market that is likely to ruffle a few feathers — Microsoft Sharepoint vs. Enterprise 2.0 Start-ups: Day of Reckoning Arrives. All in all the article does a very nice job of aggregating a diverse set of viewpoints and there are a few quotes from me personally (turns out I was the one to call Sharepoint 2010 a “day of reckoning”).

There are few things that do need a little clarification:

  • The day of reckoning is at least a year off. SharePoint 2010 won’t be out this year, and it will take 4-6 months before a mass of companies actually complete their rollout. That said the SharePoint marketing machine will likely start working overtime in the next few months, so the impact will start to be felt before then. Then again I was speaking at the Gilbane Conference last week and noticed the Microsoft booth was still pushing SharePoint 2007.
  • Existing Enterprise 2.0 customers will be unlikely to sink a lot of resources into switching. For companies like Jive, Telligent, NewsGator, and Atlassian the problems with SharePoint 2010 are going to crop up with new deal flow. It is unlikely that existing customers will jump at the first opportunity to take on a major transition that will require major IT resources, content migration, and (most importantly) user training.
  • The market will be defined by incremental innovation for the foreseeable future. In the article Ross Mayfield, president and chairman at Socialtext, makes the important point that Microsoft is on a much longer development cycle than its smaller competitors: “A year ago, the idea of having micro-blogging and activity streams for the enterprise was a new concept. Well, that’s around the time they probably froze the spec for SharePoint 2010. Overnight, the demand for social software changed, and it will change again.” These innovations will have an impact on the usefulness and fidelity of Enterprise 2.0 tools, but I would not characterize these as major innovations; it seems unlikely that many companies will make a decision based on these incremental innovations.

Now, while I do believe that there is a base level of collaboration that will become a commodity (the broad collaboration that Microsoft and IBM will provide) there are some very important ways that the smaller vendors can stay relevant.

  • Focus on the customer facing market. The customer facing side of enterprise Web 2.0 — the use of these tools by marketing departments — is going to remain hot, and differentiated, for quite a while longer. There is big business here and most vendors in this space already play in both camps.
  • Tie the internal and external market together. Customer facing communities are great, but few thus far are having a real material impact on the business. Why? It’s a long manual process to take insight from the community and bring it into the business. Those vendors that can best tie these external marketing communities to internal productivity and collaboration communities will help their customers truly realize the value promised.
  • Provide customer and partner communities. The extranet has long been the red-headed stepchild of enterprise collaboration because, frankly, its costly to get customers and partners working alongside employees and so far the tooling has been poor. That problem is rapidly disappearing and the vendors that can best equip their customers to get real work done with outside groups stands to make a lot of hay — and unless Microsoft changes its licensing model this is not a place it can compete.
  • Get vertical specific or process specific. If the base level of collaboration is commodotized what is the next logical step? Get more relevant to the business. This will mean creating collaboration applications or modules specifically tuned to the industries and processes of the customer and providing a much improved out of the box experience for things like project management and innovation as well as a top shelf application for Law firms, doctor’s offices, and restaurants. NewsGator is already heading down this path with innovation and PbWorks is already heading down it for Law firms. Its a smart move and will save a lot of companies.

All told this market is set for a major change, and many of the vendors we know today will no longer exist — Microsoft is raising the bar and some vendors won’t get over it. But some will, and those that do should have solid businesses to show for it.

  • I’ll take your distinction of ‘day of reckoning’ over ‘Armageddon’ any day :). Did anyone predict that Facebook would so blatantly overtake MySpace a few years back? It’s tough to speculate on what users will like, not like, or outright reject in an application until they experience the veritable proof in the pudding. And I think the same is true for how SharePoint and Enterprise 2.0 startups will play out in the enterprise. Your relevancy points are right on, and speak to an Enterprise 2.0 Darwinism that I think we are about to experience – the best will stick around and continue to evolve, and the rest will get weeded out naturally.

    Phil Green
    CTO of Inmagic
    http://inmagicinc.blogspot.com/
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