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Euan Semple has selected several posts for our latest featured blog. Euan has extensive real world experience of Enterprise 2.0 cultural adoption in the enterprise. He uses his experience as an independent social computing consultant. Euan has a personal and business blog, he also writes for the Fastforward blog. Euan is a regular international speaker on Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0.  | Euan Semple
| | Independent advisor and consultant | | Euan Semple is an independent advisor on social computing for business. He is a well known writer, thinker and public speaker on the subject and in recognition of his many accomplishments he was voted Information Professional Of The Year (2005) by Information World Review. |
Euan has selected five of his most interesting and thought-provoking blog posts from the past two years. In these featured entries Euan explores the easiest way to do Enterprise 2.0, individual responsiveness and openness to change, and how to actively encouraged the adoption of Enterprise 2.0. He also looks at the reasons why companies fail at Enterprise 2.0. The posts can be read in full by following the title links below . . . |
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In the third of our series of Enterprise 2.0 Blogs we feature Dion Hinchliffe. Dion Hinchcliffe is the founder and chief technology officer for the Enterprise Web 2.0 advisory and consulting firm Hinchcliffe & Company. He is a regular speaker on the topics of Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0, and authors blogs at Social Computing Magazine and ZDNet.  | Dion Hinchcliffe | | Founder and CTO, Hinchcliffe & Company | | A veteran of software development, Dion has been working for two decades with leading-edge methods to accelerate project schedules and raise the bar for software quality. He has extensive practical experience with enterprise technologies and he consults, speaks, and writes prolifically on IT and software architecture. |
Dion's has helped us select five of his ZDNet posts from the past two years. In these entries Dion discusses the evolving Enterprise 2.0 landscape, key differences between the web and the enterprise, and provides a framework for successful Enterprise 2.0 adoption. The posts can be read in full by following the title links below . . . |
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This is the second in a series of articles in which E20portal.com will be featuring some of the best blog's from the world of Enterprise 2.0. Andrew McAfee is an Associate Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School. He coined the term 'Enterprise 2.0' in the Spring 2006 MIT Sloan Management Review article: Enterprise 2.0: The Dawn of Emergent Collaboration. Andrew discusses the impact of information technology (IT) on businesses and their leaders at his influential Harvard Business School Blog.  | Andrew P. McAfee | | Associate Professor of Business Administration | | Andrew McAfee joined the faculty of the Technology and Operations Management Unit at Harvard Business School in 1998. His current research includes an exploration of how Web 2.0 technologies can be used within the enterprise, and what their impact is likely to be. |
We have selected five of Andrew's most informative and thought-provoking blog posts from the past two years. In these featured entries Andrew explores alternatives to overloaded email and discusses the organisational challenges of technological and cultural change. The posts can be read in full by following the title links below . . . |
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This is the first of a series of articles in which E20portal.com will be featuring some of the best blog's from the world of Enterprise 2.0. The authors will be helping us by personally selecting some of their favourite posts. Our first featured blog is from Bill Ives.
Bill is a prolific and well known industry blogger contributing to leading group blogs including Corante, The App Gap and the Fast Forward Blog. Bill also shares ideas and generates discussion on Enterprise 2.0, business blogs, Web 2.0 and knowledge management at his own Portals and KM blog.  | Bill Ives | | Independent consultant, writer, and speaker | | Bill has spent over 25 years as a consultant and writer working with Fortune 100 companies in knowledge management, portals, and learning, and most recently is helping firms with their market facing blogs. For several years he led the client Knowledge Management Practice within the Human Performance Service Line at Accenture. |
Bill has selected some of his top blog posts to be featured on E20portal.com. His first selection examines the different approach needed to trust blogs compared with old media. His second post explores the fundamental differences between Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0, and the real business value this new social approach can bring. These posts can be read in full by following the title links below . . . |
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