Awareness, Inc. Unveils 2008 Report on Trends and Best Practices in Adopting Web 2.0
| Source: Awareness, Inc.
WALTHAM, MA--(Marketwire - September 15, 2008) - Awareness,
Inc., the leader in enterprise social media, today announced the release of
the second in a series of reports on enterprise social media, "Trends and
Best Practices in Adopting Web 2.0 in 2008." To download the free report,
click here.
The report indicates that community initiatives and requirements continue
to evolve, highlighted by an increased focus on the deeper and broader
integration of Web 2.0
technologies with other complementary enterprise systems and enabling
broader community participation from both internal and external audiences.
The report details the results of a survey conducted by an independent
third party of 160 professionals about their organizations' adoption of
social media and Web 2.0 technologies. More than half of the respondents
were management or senior-level executives, with their roles evenly between
marketing, business strategy development and technology/IT.
The report details many interesting developments in the corporate adoption
of social media over the last year, including:
-- Employers are starting to allow social media participation more freely
in their organizations: The number of organizations that allow social
networking for business purposes has increased dramatically to 69 percent
in 2008 -- up from 37 percent last year;
-- Employers are finding the benefits of using social media: 63 percent
are using social media to build and promote their brand, 61 percent are
using it to improve communication and collaboration, and 58 percent are
using it to increase consumer engagement;
-- 75 percent of employees are already using social
networking sites such as Facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn for business
purposes, up 15 percent from 2007;
-- Use of internal-facing communities is on the rise with 6 percent of
organizations already reporting they deployed internal-facing communities,
while 33 percent indicate their organization plans to implement
internal-facing social media initiatives;
-- Similarly, external-facing communities are increasing: 27 percent of
respondents said their companies were planning to deploy external-facing
communities while only 13 percent indicated their organizations already
have external-facing communities;
-- Online
communities directed at specific interests and groups of people allow
for more targeted marketing techniques and better results so for this
reason 37 percent of organizations have specific areas of focus for their
communities.
"Increasingly employers are realizing that social media can offer great
value in connecting both with people outside their company, and also
internally, enhancing employee communication and collaboration," said John
Bruce, CEO of Awareness. "It is no longer about convincing organizations of
the potential benefits that social networking, blogging, video, wikis and
other Web 2.0 technologies offer, but rather helping them to fully realize
the benefits with internal and external audiences. As the report concludes,
the development of best practices for companies to follow is key. Learning
how to encourage participation without forcing it, how to manage
communities without clamping down and discerning which technologies work
best in what contexts are our main focus points and essential to the
success of any enterprise social media deployment."
To learn more about the trends and best practices of social media marketing
and Web 2.0 adoption, the Awareness report is available for free download
here.
About Awareness
Awareness helps companies build and operate branded Web 2.0
communities. These online communities let customers, prospects,
employees and partners connect with each other and share content. At the
core of the Awareness solution is an on-demand social
media platform that combines the full range of Web 2.0 technologies --
blogs, wikis, discussion groups, social networking, podcasts, RSS, tagging,
photos, videos, mapping, etc. -- with security, control, and content
moderation. Awareness builds these features into complete communities for
companies, or customers use the Awareness API and widgets to integrate Web
2.0 technologies into their own web properties. Major corporations such as
McDonald's, Kodak, the New York Times Company, Northwestern Mutual and
Procter & Gamble use Awareness to build brand loyalty, generate revenue,
drive new forms of marketing, improve collaboration, encourage
knowledge-sharing and build a "corporate memory." Find out more at
http://www.awarenessnetworks.com.