Web meeting tools
What’s on offer: WebEx, LiveMeeting, Dimdim, iLinc and approximately 125 others
What they’re supposed to do: Save travel costs and help speed collaboration.
What they do well: Used correctly, these tools are powerful, interactive, engaging ways to share information in multiple ways. If you’re a skilled user, you can share documents, assess your learners, train just in time, see each other via Webcam and do most things you can do in a real face to face meeting with a lot less wasted time and fewer calories. They also allow bored attendees to catch up on emails while the meeting drones on. That may qualify as something they don’t do well, come to think of it.
What they don’t do well: Create automatically skilled users or fast adoption. The dirty little secret of this world is that over half the people who are “licensed” to use the technology don’t use it — ever. This is partly good old technophobia, but mostly it’s because using this stuff takes practice and feedback which many people don’t get. The tools are most effective in the hands of someone who’s comfortable and practiced with the platform so they think about their content and the meeting’s goal — not which button to push. Most companies don’t build that into the learning curve. No-one knows this stuff instinctively and, until they invent an implant for everyone, lots of managers just won’t use it.
Knowledge capture and group collaboration tools
What’s on offer: Google groups, Ning, SharePoint, dozens of others, ranging from the insanely expensive to the free.
What they’re supposed to do: Does everyone on the team know what everyone else knows? Instead of emailing, why not put it up on a shared file system that notifies the whole team via email or IM when new information is posted. Ask and answer questions, give everyone the latest version of what you’re working on, and overcome time zones and distance. Oh, and when you lose that attachment you thought you’d saved, you can find it without having to ask the sender and admitting you’ve lost their hard work.
What they do well: When used properly, these become the life blood of a team’s communication. If you need a question answered in a hurry, post it. If you want to know you’re working with the latest data, there it is. People can build critical trust in each other’s competency and rely on each other to work as a team even across continents.
What they don’t do well: Fill themselves with data. These systems are only as good as the human input. If people are taught/ encouraged to use the system properly and the right measures are in place to reinforce that message — like when you get an email with an attachment, send it back and tell them to put it on the group page — they can boost productivity. Otherwise one or two of your early adopters use it, everyone else pretends it will go away (because such initiatives usually do) and critical information goes there to die.
So let’s hear it what have you experienced? Does your company help you use these tools or are you left to your own devices?









