ROI discussion at Web 2.0 Strategies
Posted 2 months ago by Jon Mell
12/06/2008
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Following on from Ed's post, was at the Web 2.0 Strategies forum today and took part in a social software ROI discussion. The discussion wandered quite easily onto the ROI of blogging or the ROI of wikis, and the features and functions which add business value. This has never really helped develop the ROI case for Web 2.0 or Enterprise 2.0 and didn't in this case. It got more interesting when we turned our attention to a problem that Web 2.0 could solve (maybe using blogs or wikis).
For example, if a software company has a problem where support calls cost too much, a wiki may be a good tool to lower the cost of fielding support calls. Jive Software recently quoted an organisation where phone support cost the organisation $12 per incident, whereas wiki support cost $0.25. A wiki therefore supports the ROI case for the reducing teh cost of providing support - there's no ROI for the wiki in it's own right. It's just that organisations that adopt Enterprise 2.0 can improve the ROI's on many different projects.
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For example, if a software company has a problem where support calls cost too much, a wiki may be a good tool to lower the cost of fielding support calls. Jive Software recently quoted an organisation where phone support cost the organisation $12 per incident, whereas wiki support cost $0.25. A wiki therefore supports the ROI case for the reducing teh cost of providing support - there's no ROI for the wiki in it's own right. It's just that organisations that adopt Enterprise 2.0 can improve the ROI's on many different projects.
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