Monthly Archives: April 2010

I received an advance copy of “Delivering Happiness” the new book of Zappos’ Tony Hsieh

Yesterday I received an advance copy of Tony Hsieh’s book “Delivering Happiness”. (Note: I already published a post about Tony Hsieh and corporate policies.) UPS brought it in an express envelope to my doorstep. I have never bought anything at Zappos but although the package was a bit damaged it felt a little bit like the “Zappos” experience. Why? Because they sent a nice letter and two(!) copies of the book. Surprise!

Well, I am very exited that I was approved as a reviewer of the book. It will officially launch on June 7th. I will read it sometime in May and will publish my review here on this blog.

Integration of the Facebook Like Button in WordPress

I just integrated the new Facebook Like button on LeanEntrepreneur. You can find it at the bottom of each post.

If you take the code snippet from Facebook’s generator you will get a code for an individual page. If you like a universal WordPress implementation you can use this code (which I found here):

<iframe src=”http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=<?php echo urlencode(get_permalink($post->ID)); ?>&amp;layout=standard&amp;show-faces=true&amp;width=500&amp;action=like&amp;colorscheme=light” scrolling=”no” frameborder=”0″ allowTransparency=”true” style=”border:none; overflow:hidden; width:500px; height:px”></iframe>

Hope you guys like it (and use it of course).

A Definition of Enterprise 2.0

Together with a German college we are conducting a study on Enterprise 2.0. It is an exciting project. The students have prepared a first draft of the questionnaire. And they have done a pretty good job too. However, one of the first questions – obviously – is the definition of Enterprise 2.0.

Since a couple of years Enterprise 2.0 has been keeping me busy and I have read and talked a great deal about it. I still haven’t found the right definition though. Andrew McAfee, who coined the term Enterprise 2.0, defines it as:

Enterprise 2.0 is the use of emergent social software platforms within companies, or between companies and their partners or customers.

While this may have been the case in 2006 I don’t think that this definition comprises the scope Enterprise 2.0 (should) have today. As I have already posted in my short post on the basics of Enterprise 2.0:

“Enterprise 2.0 is not about the tools, its about the culture” and “Enterprise 2.0 is really about the conversation, not the medium”.

Or to put this into other words: It is not about “what” tools you use, it is about “how” you use them. Having a blog does not make a company an Enterprise 2.0 company neither does having a Wiki.

Therefore, I was thinking of a definition somewhat along these lines:

Enterprise 2.0 is the use of web 2.0 concepts and technologies within companies, or between companies and their partners or customers.

Instead of concepts one could also write “mindsets” or “ideas”. With these mindsets I mean: credibility, authenticity, decentralization and openness.

What do you think? I would love to hear your suggestions for a good definition.

What Tony Zsieh thinks about corporate policies

In an interesting interview with Tony Hsieh – CEO of Zappos – on Mashable.com he talks about “how to deliver happiness with social media”. While the whole interview is quite interesting and insightful, the part about corporate policies especially sticked. It goes in line with my belief of “letting go” and “relinquishing” control as much as possible:

We don’t have a specific social media policy. In fact, we try to avoid policies about anything as much as possible, because usually policies are used to address the 1% of people causing a problem at the expense and inconvenience of the 99% of people that are not.

By the way: Tony has written a book called “Delivering Happiness”, which will be released around 7 June. Here is a short video about it.

Eric Ries talks about the lean startup

Lean management for the “enterprise” is taught in many MBA programs. What is not very common is teaching entrepreneurship – especially the parts that really matter – to startups. With Startup Lessons Learned Eric Ries has started a nice initiative to change just that.

Robert Scoble has visited him in his office and they have an intensive talk about “real” progress in a startup, the minimum viable product, the five “whys”, startup metrics, scaling of the lean startup ideas, continous deployment and a lot more. I really recommend you watch both videos. It’s an hour well spent.