White Papers
Business Communities: From External to Internal
Companies are witnessing adoption of community tools into many different business units such as marketing and support. For many of the same reasons other departments have picked up on social media, the corporate intranet is even starting to get involved as well.
Legal Communities: Collaboration and Social Networking for Practical Firms
Learn how communities can improve knowledge sharing in a profession that is fraught with volumes of data, and one where firms often have multiple practice areas.
Communities and Education: Connecting People, Sharing Knowledge & Driving Interest
With communities, schools can improve all facets of operation, from learning in virtual classrooms to alumni relations.
Blogging Tools: Keep it Simple and Rich
A description of key tools and features found in the Blogtronix blog editor. Also included, are supporting tools such as newsletters, RSS feeds, email notifications, commenting and content moderation modules which increase the value and richness of blogging.
Forget the Facelift; Enterprise Communication is Headed for an Overhaul: Why Email is a Four-Letter Word in Group Collaboration
Blogs as an effective tool for collaboration and communication within the enterprise. Blogs have numerous advantages over email including access control by group and user type, real-time posting, ordered commenting, tagging and categories, search capabilities, ratings, moderation tools to enable and promote group discussion and more.
Blogtronix Groups
An explanation of the Blogtronix platform groups structure (a.k.a. community or workplace). Their functionality, scalability and deployment costs.
Using Blogtronix
An overview of the Blogtronix platform: its key functionality, tools and architecture. Learn how blogs, wikis, document management, RSS, social networking and more are integrated into a Web 2.0 suite of tools that empower the individual, the group and the organization.
Web 2 as Core Infrastructure and Collaboration Tools in the Enterprise
The acceptance (and lack of acceptance) of Web 2.0 tools by the “mainstream” corporate world. A discussion on enterprise or business blogging, wikis and other Web 2.0 tools, and their value and use in the enterprise.