Donald Clark puts up a post about the ‘fadness’ of Learning 2.0. He feels that if it was all it was cracked up to be, we would see it mainstream.
“If informal learning was really all that dominant, then the adaptation and satisfaction rates of web 2.0 would be much higher as the learners would have been absolutely primed for this type of technology, no matter what flaws were in the implementation.”
As someone who has worked on implementing these technologies into an organization and a customer base, adoption of the technology does not depend upon previous use of technology nearly as much as the culture that surrounds it. I have seen plenty of people not use it – even thought they use it frequently in their personal lives – because their culture does not support it. To semi-quote many different people: when technology and culture clash, culture always wins.
This explains the quote he uses from McKinsey Global Survey Results,
“Companies are coming to understand the difficulty of realizing some of Web 2.0′s benefits. Only 21 percent of the respondents say they are satisfied overall with Web 2.0 tools, while 22 percent voice clear dissatisfaction. Further, some disappointed companies have stopped using certain technologies altogether”
“A higher level of usage is found at companies that encourage it by using tactics such as integrating the tools into existing workflows, launching Web 2.0 in conjunction with other strategic initiatives, and getting senior managers to act as role models for adoption.”
Look at paragraph #1 and think “Their culture doesn’t support it.” Now read #2 and you get the opposite. The higher levels of usage are because the culture DOES support it.
Through my research (although limited) the #1 correlation between using web2.0 tools and not – independent of previous knowledge or even willingness – was if they replaced current processes and tools with the new. One culture won’t change, the other will. One won’t integrate, the other will.
Very much a part of the culture is the willingness to change and do things differently. Those who are better at adapting will be much more successful at adopting.
I can’t say this enough – the technology is the easy part. The culture can be your best friend or your worst enemy (and often both).
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