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Are you making the most of your social collaboration pilot?

By Angela Ashenden posted 06-20-2016 04:58

  

While much of the advice about how to maximise your chances of success with social collaboration technology adoption focuses on the period following (and including) the launch of your platform, in practice you should be laying the groundwork for this success much earlier, as part of your pilot stage. Most organisations carry out a pilot of some sort before rolling the technology out to a wider audience within their organisation, but often not enough is done to take full advantage of this period. The default purpose of a pilot is typically to make sure that your chosen technology was the right choice for you - or at least that it meets the primary needs that you set out to address - by letting a few, carefully chosen people loose on it to try it out, and at the same time check for any problems or bugs in the application.

 

However, if that's all you use your pilot for, then you're missing some really huge opportunities that could give you a real head start in your adoption strategy. Here are six examples of the value that your pilot can bring if you are paying close enough attention:

 

#1 Getting early buy-in from across the business

While it might seem easier to limit your pilot users to people in your project team or IT department, the pilot provides a great way to demonstrate that your social collaboration initiative is about bringing different groups together and making connections. What's more, if you can create a pilot group made up of people from all across your organisation, you will start to build awareness across the different business divisions of the platform and what you are trying to do, providing a platform for your ongoing adoption efforts. This approach also helps to avoid the platform and the initiative being seen to be "owned" by just one part of the business, which can create friction and inhibit adoption within other groups.

 

#2 Getting a head start on viral adoption

While you can't rely on viral adoption alone to achieve enterprise-wide adoption of a social collaboration platform, it is an extremely valuable tool in your broader adoption strategy, and one which it is worth encouraging in any way possible. It might be tempting to restrict the number of people taking part in your pilot to retain control, but if there is demand from people to join in, this is a great indicator that there is a need for such a tool among your workforce, and this is something you should fully embrace and encourage. After all, the early enthusiasts will likely go on to be perfect candidates for an advocate network, and so the sooner you can identify who they are and build a relationship with them, the better.

 

#3 Populating the community prior to launch

An empty community is not a very inviting place, so the more you can populate your social collaboration environment with real, interactive content before the official launch, the easier it will be for people to see the value of the platform and how it is used. New members will be much more inclined to join an existing group or an existing conversation than they will to start a new one, and your pilot group are the perfect people to break the ice.

 

#4 Highlighting key use cases for the technology within your business

A major challenge for social collaboration platform adoption is helping people to understand - not how to use the tool, necessarily - but what to use it for, and in what context it can add value to the way they work with their immediate teams and with colleagues in the broader organisation. Your pilot provides a great opportunity to identify a few use cases to get you started - and ideally these will be very specific to your organisation's business or its processes, to help provide that context. The earlier you can identify and capture these types of examples, the earlier you can incorporate them into your training and education materials and workshops once you finally launch.

 

#5 Fine tuning the platform for launch

While ironing out kinks in the technology is important, this is not the only way the pilot can help you smooth the way prior to launch; it can also help you to work out which features you should - and, more importantly, should NOT - include in the launch version of your platform. Many social collaboration tools offer a wealth of features and functions, and this can be very overwhelming for new users to get to grips with, especially if they are not regular users of social tools in their non-work lives. See which features your pilot users embrace most quickly, and disable anything that doesn't grab their attention; this will also give you the opportunity to regularly "upgrade" the platform after launch to help retain visibility and keep people interested.

 

#6 Preparing your training and support materials

While your software vendor may (and hopefully does) provide help materials for using their technology, you will most likely need to tailor this for your own organisation's deployment, especially if you are disabling certain features or have customised it in any way. The pilot phase provides a great opportunity for creating this material, and more importantly for testing it on your pilot "guinea pigs". Your pilot users also provide a fantastic way to find out where the sticking points might be in adopting the tool - and while this might be something that you wish to change in the tool prior to launch, it could also simply be something you invest extra time in within your self-service help materials or your training courses.

 

Are you about to launch a social software platform in your organisation? What have you learned from your own pilot?

 

You can read about the approaches that other organisations have taken in the various social collaboration case studies I've published. If you have a story to share, please get in touch.

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