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Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005
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Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Jan 05, 2016

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Page 1: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Getting started with wikis.

By Sunir Shah

San Diego, CaliforniaOctober 18, 2005

Page 2: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Part I.Background

Page 3: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Working together

How do we work together before the Internet?

(or telephones)• Face-to-face (f2f)

• Meetings (incl. ad hoc)• Encounters

• Documents• Messages• Reports• Binders

• Artifacts• Thing we are building• Thing we are using

• Space• Walls, doors• Tables, chairs• Bookshelves, cabinets

Page 4: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Working together on the Internet

How is the Internet different from f2f?Distance

Here/there/anywhere/everywhere; local/global.

Time Instantly and/or asynchronously.Persistent, searchable.

Control Our communication is shaped by the media we use.(Our media are rarely shaped by our communication.)

Page 5: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Top-down vs. bottom-up

Who owns, uses the network?

Networks are expensive. Use is dictated top-down by investors (i.e. your boss).

• ERP, CRM, …

Networks are ubiquitous. Use is dictated bottom-up by people talking to people.

• E-mail, instant messaging, blogs, wikis…

Page 6: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Working online

We do what we are told to do.

As employees, we follow the process given to us.

As users, we follow the structure coded for us.

We do what we need to do.

As workers, we work around the process.As creatives, we build new, better processes.

Page 7: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Too much e-mail

E-mail is the default exception handler.

Software often fails, or doesn’t exist, We use e-mail to cover the gap.

E-mail is under our control.vs.

Our e-mail is out of control.

Page 8: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Problem stated

We need more appropriate tools•within our control•that structure communication•flexibly like furniture.

(Think tables, chairs, bookshelves, corkboards, flipcharts, rooms, walls, doors, binders, cabinets, envelopes, paper.)

Page 9: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

“Social software”

…e-mail, instant messaging, chat, blogs, wikis.

Software that mediates relationships between people.

• Simple, small, flexible. • Constructed (by you) vs. structured (for you)

• Bottom-up vs. top-down.

Page 10: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

E-mail

Distance Time Control

Page 11: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

E-mail

Distance Time Control

Structure• Person-to-person conversations, encounters. Group discussions are a like a crowd.

Page 12: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Wikis

Distance Time Control

Page 13: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Wikis

Distance Time Control

Structure• Central focus of a ‘conversation’. (Like a flipchart, corkboard, whiteboard.) Group discussions are teamwork.

Page 14: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

What is a wiki?

Like a whiteboard:

• A wiki is a centralized resource. (web service)

• Content is persistent, but editable.

• Openly editable by everyone with access.

Page 15: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

What is a wiki?

Unlike a whiteboard:

• A wiki has ‘infinite’ space (rather than 3’x4’).

• All versions are saved and tracked.

• A hypertext, not a drawing surface. Document-centric.

• You can use what you haven’t built yet.

Page 16: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

How wikis fit in

Whenever you need an • open space • of common focus • for a group • constructing a common outcome,• working over the Net,

use a wiki.

Page 17: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Part II.Use cases

Page 18: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Knowledge preservation

Ideas from conversations by a crowd are lost.

Ideas are lost in your e-mail inbox. Conversations are repeated.

Therefore, move conversations into a wiki. Common space, focus, outcome. Preserve and edit into knowledge.

Knowledge base, FAQ, support Q&A, sales dossier, internal documentation, competitve intelligence.

Page 19: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Document writing

Using e-mail for collaborative document writing is document tennis.

• Everyone is blocked waiting for the current author to finish. (Power struggle.)

• Lose track of too many versions.

Therefore, use a wiki to write the document.

Paper, report, contract, RfP, standard.

Page 20: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Process management

Teams often use e-mail for ad-hoc processes.

• E-mail is best for one-on-one, private conversations.

• E-mail workflow is structured in our heads.

Therefore, use a wiki for ad-hoc processes.

• Do group process in a common space.• Build a workflow in a common

artifact.

Page 21: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Decision-making

Group decision making involves:• Collecting resources, ideas,

positions.• Organizing points.• Resolving positions.• Writing common outcome.• Building on top of the outcome

Therefore, use a wiki to collect, organize, resolve, write, and build.

Page 22: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Part III.Growing a wiki

Page 23: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Gardening as a metaphor

content

Page 24: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Need

Can only move workflowCan’t just install itLook for where your workflow hurts or problems you need to build new workflow for

Page 25: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Objective

Identify your objective

Page 26: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Layout

content

Page 27: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Seed posting

content

Page 28: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Launch

content

Page 29: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Marketing

content

Page 30: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Norms

content

Page 31: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Renorming

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Page 32: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Part IV.Tending a wiki

Page 33: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Discussion and discussed

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Page 34: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Restructure: top-down

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Page 35: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Restructure: bottom-up

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Page 36: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Brainstorm-point form-reform

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Page 37: Getting started with wikis. By Sunir Shah San Diego, California October 18, 2005.

Stripping

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