Introduction.
by Greif, Irene^Rhodin, Michael
Collaboration in today's global business environment is being
highlighted by management experts and financial analysts as critical to
innovation and the creation of new business models. Successful
collaborations that were created outside the traditional business world,
such as Wikipedia[R] and open-source development, are being held up as
models for enterprises as they meet the challenges of a connected world
involving customers, partners, and competitors. These models can help
enable enterprises to be more flexible and creative and more responsive
to customer needs in the connected world. Research into new
organizational structures and the technologies that facilitate change
provides the foundation for implementing future business
transformations.
IBM and IBM Lotus[R]-branded products for collaboration
support--Lotus Notes[R] and Domino[R], Workplace[TM] and WebSphere[R]
Portal--have always been leading-edge products. Starting in the days
when Lotus products shifted from personal productivity to team support,
Lotus Development and the IBM Research Division have had a close
relationship, whose focus was to apply research insights to product
development. The benefits have been reciprocal, as the employment of
Lotus' industry-leading groupware products has provided some of the
most interesting field sites for researchers examining the impact of
technology on work practices, in recent years, this partnership has led
to a new level of understanding of how enterprises operate and to a
product strategy that is evolving from team support to enterprise
productivity enhancement. Key to that transformation is the concept of
activity-centered collaboration, which is highlighted in this special
issue. Activity-centered collaboration is a way to support everyday work
that benefits individuals, teams, and entire organizations, and which
will scale up by integrating local processes with formal distributed
business processes.
The Business Collaboration theme of this issue of the IBM Systems
Journal is timely. In addition to offering a sample from a range of
projects, this issue provides a comprehensive overview of
activity-centered collaboration just as customers are starting to use
and evaluate the first products based on this concept. The work
presented here is the result of collaboration at several levels. Some of
the papers are co-authored by groups that cut across the research and
product lines. Some of the work is interdisciplinary; on the research
side, the contributions are from both computer scientists and social
scientists; in both organizations, strategic designers have shaped the
vision and tested it with customers. We hope you will share our
enthusiasm, regardless of your point of view and background.
Irene Greif
IBM Fellow and Department Group Manager
Collaborative User Experience
IBM Research Division
Michael Rhodin
General Manager
Workplace, Portal, and Collaboration Software
IBM Software Group
COPYRIGHT 2006 All Rights
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Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.