Shrinking returns from business automation and the impact of web 2.0 will
revolutionise the workplace and change the way we do business forever, experts
predict.
Analysts at
Gartner's
Symposium/ITxpo in Cannes warned that organisations need to respond to these
changes urgently.
Companies need to open up to a wider collection of business and social
networks, in addition to creating more collaborative workplaces.
"Businesses have long understood the value of growing and supporting the
business environment in which they operate," said Nikos Drakos, a research
director at Gartner.
"Collaboration can be supported in new ways among customers, partners and
teams, and IT has a fundamental role in embedding these practices in the
business."
Gartner predicts that six out of 10 new collaboration-related IT projects
will seamlessly incorporate supplier, partner and customer personnel by 2009.
This will herald a move away from the traditional closed and inward-looking
organisation to a more open, collaborative and innovative environment.
The once-conservative pharmaceutical industry is already embracing this new
openness by decentralising decision making, collaborating across the ecosystem
and making proprietary information publicly available.
Pfizer
recently announced a collaboration project with
Sermo, the
fast-growing US social networking site for doctors.
Sermo and Pfizer will work together to establish how drug companies can best
communicate with physicians online, and provide drug and disease information
on-demand.
"Innovation in the future will depend increasingly on extending your business
to include a wider community and this will not be without risks," said Drakos.
"An active and managed approach to open innovation will enable organisations
to take collaboration to the next level and compete fully on a global level."
Gartner noted that demand for improved information sharing along business
functions is already driving solid growth for collaboration technologies. This
is reflected in the growth of the enterprise social software market.
The analyst firm estimates that the enterprise social software revenue market
will reach $226.9m in 2007 and will increase to more than $707.7m by 2011.
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