With
all of the new web technology around, even the best of us get confused
with the latest acronyms. Wiki's amd blogs are becoming more common for
internal use as well as externally focusing for websites. Many portal
software like Microsoft SharePoint now incorporate Wiki's and Blogs as
a part of their core products. This technology is here to stay (at
least as long as most Internet based technologies...) so it may be time
to embrace then rather than ignore it.
I found this article and though it did a good job explaining things so I figured I would share.
By John K. Waters
— CIO
—
- What are blogs?
- What are wikis?
- What is social software?
- Why should I care about blogs and
wikis?
- How can blogs and wikis benefit my
business?
- What blog- or wiki-related challenges
should I watch out for?
- What types of blog technologies should
I know about?
- What types of wiki technologies should
I know about?
- What blog terminology should I
know?
- What wiki terminology should I
know?

What are blogs?
"Blog" is a contraction of Web log, which is a website where users post
journal-like entries that are displayed in reverse chronological order, with the
most recent posting at the top of the page. Blogs can take the form of online
diaries, personal chronicles, travel logs, newsy columns and reports from
special events. They can include graphics, pictures, and even music and video
clips. Blog postings often contain links to other blogs or websites. Blogs can
be publicly viewable, or tucked safely behind the company firewall. Both public
and internal blogs are often focused on a particular topic or issue. Virtually
all blogs provide a vehicle for comments from readers, and the best ones-those
that are most popular with readers, and therefore generate the most
traffic-develop into a kind of conversation. And good blogs are frequently
updated.
What are wikis?
A "wiki" is a website comprising text-based content that can be edited
collectively by users at will. Unlike a blog, in which the authored posts remain
unaltered, wiki documents can be modified by anyone with access to the website.
It's a shared-authorship model; users can add new content and revise existing
content without asking for permission to do so.
Typical wikis are based on a Web server, which can be left open to public
access via the Internet, or restricted on a company's local area network. One of
the largest and best-known examples of a wiki is the Wikipedia free
online encyclopedia. In business, wikis are increasingly employed as a new type
of collaboration tool.
The term "wiki" is derived from wiki wiki, which is Hawaiian for quick, which
underscores one of the model's key benefits: Documents on a wiki can be edited
very fast. Fans of the form claim that the whole of this kind of collaborative
authorship is greater than the sum of its parts.
What is social software?
Both blogs and wikis are examples of social software, an emerging IT category
currently being applied to a range of application and platform types or genres
designed to facilitate personal interactions over computer networks. Blogs and
wikis are types of social software, as are social networking websites, such as
MySpace and Friendster.
For the moment, social software is a flexible category under which some
industry watchers would include virtual worlds, such as Second Life, instant
messaging and even e-mail. However, at the heart of all social software worthy
of the label is a dynamic group environment that allows individuals to interact
in a way that essentially combines their intelligence and/or capabilities. As
pioneering blogger and social software expert Tom Coates has defined it, social
software supports, extends or derives added value from human social behavior.
The groups of individuals gathered in this environment have been called "smart
mobs." Author James Surowiecki has described this kind of collective
intelligence as "the wisdom of crowds."
The current flexibility of space is exemplified in the emergence of the
wikiblog, a hybrid of the blog and the wiki. Also known as "wikiweblogs,"
"wikilogs," "blikis" and even "wogs," wikiblogs combine the features of the two
models: The entries or articles are arranged in reverse chronological order on
the main page like a blog, but the content can be edited like a wiki.
Within this context, blogs and wikis have been compared to e-mail in terms of
their potential impact on the enterprise. Instant messaging, which was once
thought of as irrelevant teeny-bopper tech, only to evolve into an essential
business tool, also comes to mind. Each form provides nontechnical users with
uniquely accessible platforms for fast and easy information publication,
interpersonal communication and team collaboration.
Why should I care about blogs and wikis?
Company blogs are fast becoming a corporate commonplace. Because they're
inexpensive to set up and maintain, enterprises of virtually all sizes have
them. Modern corporate websites look naked without at least one executive blog.
General Motors has a corporate blog page; Wal-Mart maintains several. Mark
Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks basketball team, blogs; so does Boeing
executive Randy Baseler. Blogs are now an essential part of mainstream business.
Consequently, if for no other reason, you should care about blogging because the
chances are very good that your competitors are doing it.
In the corporate world, wikis are emerging as flexible, easy-to-implement
systems for shared-document collaboration and content management. These systems
are inexpensive (if not free), relatively easy to implement and accessible from
a Web browser. Because they're browser-based, wikis present virtually no
learning curve, and they work as well behind the firewall as they do on the
World Wide Web. Instead of exchanging e-mails and attachments, corporate wiki
users can work together on private webpages in near real-time. Wikis serve as
unusually dynamic communication environments that can help corporate teams
remain agile and competitive.
How can blogs and wikis benefit my business?
The most obvious benefit derived from a blog is its ability to communicate a
corporate position or message to the public. Through blogs, companies can also
share expertise and experience in a way that positions the organization as an
authority and a resource, and ultimately promotes the brand. Microsoft, for
example, uses its blogs to provide tips and technical information to its
customers, to answer customer questions and to host conversations among product
users. Blogs have an advantage over websites for this purpose, because they're
much easier to update. But perhaps more important, a blog can accept reader
responses and comments. The result is a kind of conversation that can give a
company invaluable information about how the public sees its products and
services.
Purists will shudder at this suggestion, but no business can afford to ignore
the marketing potential of corporate blogs. Unlike other traditional direct
marketing media (mail campaigns, website advertising, e-mail), blogs generate
feedback from customers, which companies are finding useful for taking the
public pulse. Blogs can help a company refine its approach to the markets it
knows, and even tap into markets it may not have considered.
Internally, blogs can be a convenient means for harried managers to get to
know their employees and partners better, and to get a better sense of their
customers' needs. Internal blogs are also proving to be useful communication
tools that link members of distributed project teams, especially when those
members are based in different time zones. They can save time by substituting
for face-to-face meetings among parties with crowded schedules. And they can
create a sense of community within a company.
Corporate wikis, on the other hand, provide project teams with a highly
flexible medium for internal collaboration and document management. They are a
central location for managing meeting notes, team agendas and company calendars.
The content on a wiki can be updated with no real lag time and little to no
administrative intervention. Wikis are browser-based, so distribution is
automatic, and they can centralize a range of corporate data types-everything
from spreadsheets to PowerPoint presentations
to PDF files.
Wikis can be used to create "wiki communities" of special interest and
limited accessibility within an organization. Companies are increasingly using
wiki communities as ongoing collaborative spaces, typically devoted to
particular products or product areas. IT organizations are using wikis to
develop and maintain the documentation for their in-house software and
systems.
What blog- or wiki-related challenges should I watch out for?
The most successful blogs are conversational, personal, newsy and friendly.
Individuals blog about their passions, and a corporate blog should have the same
feel. No one visits a blog that sounds like a press release or an annual report.
And direct sales pitches are simply off-putting to blog readers.
Some companies encourage their employees to blog because of the buzz that can
be generated about the company in a wide-ranging conversation. More bloggers
means more hits, which means more people are talking about your company. Many
consultants even warn against establishing a corporate blog culture in which
only executives post.
However, corporate blogs must exist within boundaries established by
management that aren't necessary for the individual, free-range blogger. You
don't want a corporate blog to become a spigot from which your company's
proprietary information gushes into the wide world. Neither do you want your
employees posting embarrassing photos or making untoward comments. Without a
clearly defined corporate blogging policy, this very useful tool can become a
source of trouble.
As for wikis, at first blush they may seem to offer, well...chaos. But
corporate wikis are not free-for-alls. Even the world's largest wiki, Wikipedia,
has systems in place for source and version management. However, the structure
of a wiki is essentially organic; once it's set up, a wiki is controlled by its
users, not administrators. This can present some challenges. Consequently,
corporate wikis are primarily implemented behind the firewall-which makes sense.
Unless you're managing an open-source software project, there's little reason to
publish the work-in-progress documentation of a company's activities on the Web.
Also, limited-access wikis are simply less likely to be misused.
As with blogs, companies need to define their wiki policies. Some basic
guidelines-what might be thought of as wiki etiquette-are required around things
like deleting or modifying the contributions of others. The idea is to,
literally and figuratively, get everyone on the same page. The last thing you
want is team members keeping their own copies of earlier versions, which would
negate the benefits of wiki-style interactions. Corporate wikis are most
effective when the number of users is small, and the content is focused.
What types of blog technologies should I know about?
- Atom: Another type of Web/news feed format.
- Blog search engines: Used to surf the blogosphere. Technorati is one of the most
popular; Google and Yahoo also provide blog search
engines.
- Hosted blog sites: Websites like Blogger, Blog.com, Vox,
Typepad and Xanga handle all the heavy lifting, allowing multiple individual
bloggers simply to sign up for the service and start blogging.
- Movable Type: A popular, free (for personal blogs) blog
publishing system. The developers of this system, Six Apart, also created the
TrackBack feature.
- Permalink: A link that points to a specific blog posting.
The link is "permanent" because it remains intact even after the posting has
slipped off the front page and into the blog archive.
- Ping: A notification to another blogger that you have
linked to, or commented on, something in that person's blog. (Ping is an acronym
for Packet Internet Grouper.)
- RSS (Really Simple Syndication/Rich Site Summary): Also
called a Web or news feed, RSS technology syndicates website content and sends
updates to the end user via e-mail or through a news-feed reader application.
Used to provide users with the latest updates from news sites and blogs.
- TrackBack: A system that notifies you that another blogger
has mentioned your blog posting in his or her blog.
What types of wiki technologies should I know about?
- Tags: The content of a wiki is edited by multiple authors,
so the traditional hierarchical navigation systems you might expect on a webpage
are replaced with internal HTML syntax tokens called tags.
- Wiki engine: The software that runs a wiki system.
Typically implemented as a server-side script.
- Wiki software: Tools for developing group-editable
websites. Among the best known for corporate environments are Socialtext,
Clearspace, MediaWiki, MoinMoin, WakkaWiki, TikiWiki, Confluence and JotSpot,
which was recently acquired by Google.
- Wikitext: A simplified version of the Hypertext Markup
Language (HTML) used to write wiki pages.
What blog terminology should I know?
- Blogopotamus: An unusually long blog post.
- Blogosphere: All blogs, collectively, or what might be
called the universe of blogs.
- Blogroll: A list of links to other blogs, typically shown
in a sidebar on a blog index page.
- External blogs: Blogs that can be viewed and responded to
by the public at large through a Web browser.
- Index page: The first page of a blog site.
- Internal blogs: Nonpublic blogs, usually accessible only on
the corporate intranet by a company's employees.
- Linklog: A blog that is mainly a collection of hyperlinks
to other websites.
- Vlog: A video blog.
What wiki terminology should I know?
- Comment spam: Blog comments added to the discussion for the
sole purpose of driving traffic to a site.
- Wiki farm: A server farm designed specifically for wiki
hosting.
- Wiki node: Pages on a wiki that describe related
wikis.
- Wiki page: A single webpage on a wiki.
Wikis and blogs are harbingers of a paradigm shift that is already changing
the way people use computers and networks to interact. For the enterprise (for
now), they are the most immediately useful examples of a new genre of software
for personal interaction. Wikis can provide a uniquely dynamic environment for
collaboration that businesses are all but certain to find indispensable. And
blogs offer management an incredibly powerful means of communicating with
customers, partners and employees.

Shawna McAlearney
© 2007 CXO Media Inc.
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