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October 06, 2006

SNCR Symposium & Awards Gala in 3 Weeks

Why go to Boston on November 1-2?  To attend the SNCR Symposium and Gala, of course!  Good food, good company, interesting discussion topics - it has it all.   Our gala and awards ceremony will take place the evening of Nov. 1, then Paul Gillen will kick things off the next morning, with his keynote presentation: “The New Influencers: How Social Media is Revolutionizing Media and Markets.”

You'll also hear from Soc. for New Communications Research members on best practices for corporate blogging policies, the emergence of blogging in university admissions and recruiting, the state of the art in social media and the legal implications of podcasting.  (See complete event description here.)

The total cost for both the gala and the symposium is $325 if you register online here.  The SNCR is a non-profit organization, and we'd certainly appreciate your support!  Thank you to our event sponsors Backbone Media and BusinessWire.

September 08, 2006

Deadline Extended for SNCR Awards

You now have until Sept. 15 to get in your case studies for the Society for New Communications Research Awards.  You can find the latest information on the awards and how to submit here.

August 22, 2006

Don't Forget to Submit Your Case Studies for SNCR Awards!

Just a reminder to everyone that the deadline is fast approaching for the first annual SNCR Awards program.  It is Sept. 8.  You can find the submission form here.  The original press release is here.

June 22, 2006

SNCR Updates and More...

Much has happened during the weeks I was in school, and I am trying to catch up, albeit slowly.  But here are a few tidbits, if you weren't already aware:

1)  The call for nominations for the first annual SNCR awards has been announced.  You can read the press release here.  The deadline for entries is Sept. 8, 2006. The online submission form can be found at http://www.sncr.org/awards/use/awardssubmission/submission.html .

2)  The call for papers for the first edition of the SNCR Journal of New Communications Research has also been announced.  Those interested should submit a project abstract of approximately 500 words via email to journal_submission [at] sncr.org by August 1, 2006.

I certainly hope you choose to participate in these efforts.

In the near future, I will be writing more about my school experiences, describing the many fantastic lectures and speakers we had, as well as sharing some insights.  My thesis topic was accepted, so you will be hearing more about digital identity (from a philosophical point of view) over the coming months.  I am still trying to catch up on things here, and preparing for another 2 weeks on the road, so posting will be light until the second week of July.  Then there will likely be a flood of information coming your way.

I look forward to more interactions with all of you!

February 16, 2006

Thinking About Wikis

I wrote a lengthy (2500+ words) article for the latest issue of the New Communications Review based on the reading I have been doing on wikis as we get ready to begin our wiki survey.  I have copied the introduction below.  For the whole article, visit here.  As usual, I am interested in your feedback.

Thinking About Wikis

Many of us who are early adopters of this technology believe that the wiki is an intriguing collaborative tool that has the potential for vastly improving knowledge worker productivity. This goal, improving knowledge worker productivity, is one of the major organizational challenges of the 21st century, as recently discussed in the Economist survey of “The New Organization” in its January 21, 2006 issue. While there are a plethora of collaborative tools and technologies available today, what makes the wiki so interesting, and such a good candidate for research studies, is that it is the most radically open of all tools, enabling anyone to change anyone else's content in mere seconds. Therefore, it very quickly gets at the heart of the human, social challenges to managing and creating knowledge.

We at the Society for New Communications Research are about to embark on a study of wiki use. Our goal in our project is to study how knowledge workers in creative roles (advertising, marketing, public relations, design, etc.) are actually using wikis in the context of their everyday work. This should enable us to make some judgments about what features are helpful and what features are not. At that point, we can start making recommendations about best practices for wiki design.

In preparation for this study, we conducted a review of recent research and scholarly papers that have been produced on the topic of wikis.

As we evaluate the potential of wikis in organizations, several broad topic areas have presented themselves to us as critical to the success of a wiki. We won't have our results on our study for a few months, but in the meantime, we thought it would be useful to share with you these broad topic areas and some of the thinking and research that has been done to address them.

At the outset of our reading, it became very clear that any analysis of wiki usage will be multidisciplinary in focus. This, of course, did not surprise us, as all of these new participatory communications tools have the same attributes. In order to understand, design and successfully roll out a wiki, a familiarity with current knowledge and practices in areas as diverse as small group cooperation, knowledge management, individual psychology, societal norms and behaviors, and management skills and technical design. Below, we have identified some interesting sources of information that link each discipline with participatory communications. We share some of this thinking with you below. But first, we'll start off with a summary of some of the key challenges of collaborative systems that must be kept in mind when embarking on a wiki adventure.

Continued...

[Comments are closed due to comment spam.]

January 19, 2006

Wiki Study - A Request for Help

We are getting ready to embark on a close study of the use of wikis in teams as a collaborative platform.  In preparation, I have been gathering some scholarly work and case studies on wikis, tagging them wikistudies in del.icio.us.

I'd appreciate it (if you are so interested) if you'd take a look at what I have found, and let me know if I am missing anything important.  Thanks!

November 10, 2005

PR Week Story on SNCR

PR Week covers the launch of the Society for New Communications Research here.

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