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He's @CIOchris on Twitter.
Thinkernetter
Want to mesh complaints by customers with operational systems (was the wiat late) and match that with check for customer (lost sales).
Thinkernetter
CARR: How doe senterprise social network overlapp with what you externally for customers?
Thinkernetter
LAPING: Yammer has a book, 43 ways to use Yammmer. "I thought really Seriously? 45 ways?" He was skeptical. Now he could write the book with a lot more ways. Lots of unstructured content about menu items with videos. usrse have expored many use cases that go beyond things they would ahve even thought about. "I would have guese dtha resturant copany couldn't make that 43 wyas to use Yammer happen."
Thinkernetter
LAPING: Other players not as interesteing.
Thinkernetter
LAPING: Selection process for Yammer. They looked at tother platforms. Looked at many. Amaing if you build a continuum of options there werre those taht wer still in ath Project collaboration portal look and feel, adn therew was the silly simple stuff, like Chatter or Yammer. We were trying ot be as unstructured as possible -- he was user #6 -- I got really interted in really fast. Bought admin account, and they set things up with a VP colleage in a half-day. They said no memos, no policies, let's just see what happens. Weeks later, The VP was in there -- his face gets pale -- they were doing $5/user/month and users started joining fast.
Thinkernetter
Laping: IMpact of social: When employees, team memmers, are enaged at work it changes the way they interact with customers.
Thinkernetter
2,500 total users, about 50% are actively engaged. There is a study by Deloitte taht talks about active engagement. People that actively engage in social networks are 10x more likely to stay. Retention rate is much higher. The closest they are to guets in resturants are more engaged on Yammer. Assistant maangers more engaged than regional amangers and so forth.
Thinkernetter
CEO isn't comforgbale on Yammer. He's Boomer, doesn't communicate that way. Laping, on the other hand, will record a video while driving to work and upload it to Yammer.
Thinkernetter
CARR: And people get benefit from the positive. LAPING: Yes, "When I think back on my career the bst things I learned was form the managers I despised the most."
Thinkernetter
LAPING: one team member came on and made a lot of noise. People said that's what would happen. But the inappropraite conversation was happening at the water cooler before. CARR: NOw he has a bigger microphone. LAPING: Very quickly the community self-polices. When he saw the comments he thought somethign shoudl be done, but the community shut it down faster than he did.
Thinkernetter
LAPING: It's cultural. He wwent ot YamJam Yammer user conference. People wantd to know how to get people engaged on Yammer. HE said that doesn't come from Yammer, it's got to be there That builds success. Four core values: Honor, integrity, continuously seeking knowledge, and having fun. Now I can ask why did you pos tthat video on Yammer, that wouldn't be the honorable thing to do. BUt it's self-policing.
Thinkernetter
CARR: How do you keep people from videotaing themslves doing disgusting things like at Dominos.
Thinkernetter
LAPING: Yammer is internally branded as Yummer. Yummerversity is a socail training platform for team members to engage with each other, and they can use iPads to video each other doing things taht they think shoudl be the new best practices. Like maybe a new effective way of cleaning ice machines. "They would then videotape each other."
Thinkernetter
LAPING: "Yummerversity" (sp.?) training platfomr rolling out in January. All iPad, to deplooy a thousand ipads across restaurant. "The training manual we will burn in parking lots in bonfires . Welll, hopefully we won't burn them. WE'll put them asaide." Giving millennial workfoce tools they use: Simulations, games, etc. on the iPad. Underpinnings is Oracle.
Thinkernetter
Enterprise technology tools are like a swiss army knife. More tools than you need.
Thinkernetter
BUt now home laps business for tech. Better INternet connectivity and devices. He thought: how does he use that to get people working together in a single-purppose wourld using the tools they're used to.
Thinkernetter
LAPING: The reason mobile works is that it takes the multifounction device at work and distills it to a single purpose like home appliances: MIcrosoave, diswhasher, etc, hav eone purpose. Social: Enterprsie content management, forums, blogs, discussion groups, all these things are trying to get people to work together more effectively. For me the Yammer was a social experiement form the beginning. "I want people to workgether using the toosl they have at home." The n there's no learning curve. 10-15 years ago the workplace was where you ahd cool technology -- if you wanted to email grandma you did it at work because the Internet was better there.
Thinkernetter
CARR: Is social in and of itself part of something bigger? LAPING: Its the means, not the end. There's a part of me that would really desire that it stays simple. Social and mobile he thinks of the same wy. So many engage by social via mobile. He gets nervous when peoiple talk about the uberapp taht would mimic the deskop on a tablet. They tried that in the ealry 2000s, it didn't work.
Thinkernetter
LAPING: "When [Steve] started two years ago, he said we're going to drive innovationin the organzation." One of the ways he innovates is to let people talk without repercussions.
Thinkernetter
LAPING: customers wanted to bring back the bar. Red Robin started 40 years ago and all they sold was booze and popcorn. Now it's afamily restaurant and customers don't know the have a bar. Drink son menu were outdated drinks "probably really happening drinks in teh 60s and 70s. That's no indictment on anyone's age." Managers started concocting new drinks, compliance said you can't talk about that. "We asked our compliance officeres to sort of retreat a little bit."
Thinkernetter
LAPING: "If you are not innovating as a company your company is not evolving."
Thinkernetter
LAPING: Carr's article with interview with STeve is the closest he's gotten to a performance review. (joke)
Thinkernetter
CARR: Compliance folks tried to shut down bar in restaurants.
Thinkernetter
MOAR BACON!! Sorry. I had to say that.
Thinkernetter
LAPING: RR is a $9.99 burger. #1 reason for customer lapses is affordabiliyty -- they'd rather spend $10 on a steaky. They have teh Tavern Burger, a $6.99 burger in April with bottomless fries and there is some topping. WE thought people would come in, eat the burgers, and go on Facebook and tell RR about it. But instead customers were verbal with "team members" about what they thought about the burgers, the team members told managers, managers went on Yammer. They had one burger called the Pigout, with aioli and bacon. But customers wanted more bacon. That got to the maangers, and within four weeks had kitchen-tested an improvement, taht would have been 18 months itn epast. Theyw ould hav sold it for three months, looked at disappointing sales data, brought in focus groups, iterated more focus groups. "This proces got condensed in four weeks. It wa a simple use cse for the power of social media, but in our business it was a transfomraive use case."
Thinkernetter
CARR: Store managers talk on store network about basics like rolling out a new burger product.
Thinkernetter
Carr: When you looked at Yammer you thought it was somethiing you coudl use in yoru own team? LAPING: He got enamored with "wanting a captive social network in the company" in 2009. He wanted someine on the orgainzaton to do it -- corpcomm, HR. But then he realized pushing change was his job. He realized he needs this tool. To engage feedback with team memberes. 26K team memrs in restaurnts, 289 in home office. "We're just outnumbered I neede peopel to evangelize change to each other, and I needed people to support each other."
Thinkernetter
Steve saw best practices in IT for driving strategy, executing with project management, and discipline and stuite around change managemnet. Why would they just run IT this way?
Thinkernetter
They operate in 44 states.
Thinkernetter
Role started two years ago when RR got a new CEO. The've been profitable a while, but they had stalled, weren't growing as fast as competitors. New CEO steve had new ideas as any new leadr does. But RR had no platfomr for stage.
Thinkernetter
LAPING: "The CIO role is execatly what you woudl expect in any organzation. I'm charged with focusioong on innovation and looking at emergin technologies anad figuring out how to integrate those technologies into the business and using it to drive business improvement." Biz transformation is "focused on change, on enabling and driving change."
Thinkernetter
Laping has taken the stage.
Thinkernetter
More info on Red Robin, Cemex, Bonobox, TD Bnk, Ford, Unisis, at TheBrainYard.com.
Thinkernetter
Laping articulated well how social and mobile could be an element of change. A store manager said it was wonderful to see RR adopt new technology (Carr says_)
Thinkernetter
Laping is CIO and SVP of business transformation at Red Robin. He got the addiitional title when a new CEO came in and the CEO heard that the company was dysfunctional in some ways. Laping stepped up.
Thinkernetter
Carr: Unisys is another leader at social media. It uses Newsgator.
Thinkernetter
Carr is now talking about how Ford uses Yammer. Ford ain't here, though.
Thinkernetter
Carr: They were looking for people who are exploiting social for core business purchases, not just pilot projects.
Thinkernetter
David Carr, editor of InformationWeek's BrainYard is introducing Chris Laping, their social media innovator of the year (?) (Need to check that.)
Thinkernetter
I'm here at E2Innovate conference in Santa Clara, about to liveblog a Q&A with Chris Laping, CIO of Red Robin restaurants.
Thinkernetter


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Ron Miller
Ron Miller   5/17/2013   14 comments
Recently, the Obama administration has been of two minds where privacy rights are concerned. On one hand, you have an administration that vowed to veto CISPA and mandated open data for government websites. On the other hand, you have an increasingly out-of-control Department of Justice on a fishing expedition at AP and demanding legislation to let the FBI wiretap private, encrypted communications and levy fines if a company fails to comply.
Alan Reiter
Alan Reiter   5/16/2013   30 comments
The apartment and house sharing service, Airbnb, now requires members to verify their identities by demonstrating a presence on the web, and by either scanning a government ID or entering detailed personal details. Other enterprises should take a close look at Airbnb's verification policies.
Harry Hawk
Harry Hawk   5/15/2013   20 comments
Facebook advertising is a lightning rod. It seems neither brands nor consumers are 100 percent happy about the social media site's policies, placement, or procedures. But the real controversy about Facebook ads and promotions is over whether they work.
Rasheen A. Whidbee
By now, you've most likely heard about the 3D-printed gun that Texas-based Defense Distributed demonstrated last week. But we haven't heard the last about the censorship war that began soon afterward.
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Paul J. Fleuranges
Digital Signage Keeps NYC Subway Straphangers on Track

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Kim Davis
Fast Forward to the Future

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A look back at tech writing in the 90s makes us wonder where enterprise IT will be 20 years from now.
Mitch Wagner
Google Launches Its Most Depressing Service Yet

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Google's new Inactive Account Manager lets you control how Google disposes of your accounts when you die.
Second Shooter
Argument Over Top-Level Domains Is 'Stupid'

4|11|13   |   2:07   |   3 comments


The whole Amazon.reader debate is a double-stupid. It's stupid to think that there's any e-book buyer who doesn't know Amazon's URL, and it was stupider to let ICANN launch the whole free-form TLD initiative to start with.
Kim Davis
Ladies, Your Tablet Awaits

3|21|13   |   2:22   |   37 comments


ePad Femme is the world’s first tablet “made exclusively for women.”
Wisdom of the Big Chair
NFC Moves Into the Mainstream

3|20|13   |   2:16   |   No comments


While NFC's original goal was to enhance mobile commerce applications, it is finding its way into a number of other uses, which is creating both opportunity as well as challenges for IT departments.
Wisdom of the Big Chair
Integrating Security Into Your Cloud Contract

3|19|13   |   3:35   |   No comments


Enterprises would like to move to cloud computing but are hesitant because they are concerned about providers’ ability to secure company data. Here are some tips that help to ensure that if breaches occur, the business is not left holding the bag.
Brian Baron
How Edmunds.com Collects Customer Information

3|18|13   |   1:15   |   No comments


Edmunds separates customers into segments based on the info it collects on its site and from partners, and uses that to push out custom content, said Brian Baron, director of business analytics for Edmunds.com, at Predictive Analytics Innovation Summit.
Brian Baron
How Edmunds.com Uses Analytics to Customize Site

3|14|13   |   0:47   |   No comments


The automotive website uses propensity modeling to target ads and customer registration forms, said Brian Baron, director of business analytics for Edmunds.com, at Predictive Analytics Innovation Summit.
Second Shooter
Locked Handsets Aren't the Problem – Subsidies Are the Problem

3|13|13   |   2:09   |   10 comments


Subsidized handsets, rather than locked handsets, should be the focus of regulators. We're not getting good deals, not fostering innovation, and weakening our power as buyers.
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Todd Watson
Todd Watson   5/17/2013   1 comment
It's been 17 years since I've visited the city of Dublin, but I still have some very distinct impressions from my one and only visit.
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Keep Critical Data With a Knowledge Management System
Taimoor Zubair
Fortune 500 companies lose at least
$31.5 billion a year by failing to share knowledge. A Knowledge Management System (KMS) can help companies significantly reduce these costs.

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IT Suffers From Obama Admin's Jekyll & Hyde Approach to Privacy Rights
Ron Miller
Recently, the Obama administration has been of two minds where privacy rights are concerned. On one hand, you have an administration that vowed to
veto CISPA and mandated open data for government websites. On the other hand, you have an increasingly out-of-control Department of Justice on a fishing expedition at AP and demanding legislation to let the FBI wiretap private, encrypted communications and levy fines if a company fails to comply.

CLICK FOR MORE
IT Suffers From Obama Admin's Jekyll & Hyde Approach to Privacy Rights
Ron Miller
Recently, the Obama administration has been of two minds where privacy rights are concerned. On one hand, you have an administration that vowed to
veto CISPA and mandated open data for government websites. On the other hand, you have an increasingly out-of-control Department of Justice on a fishing expedition at AP and demanding legislation to let the FBI wiretap private, encrypted communications and levy fines if a company fails to comply.

CLICK FOR MORE
IT Suffers From Obama Admin's Jekyll & Hyde Approach to Privacy Rights
Ron Miller
Recently, the Obama administration has been of two minds where privacy rights are concerned. On one hand, you have an administration that vowed to
veto CISPA and mandated open data for government websites. On the other hand, you have an increasingly out-of-control Department of Justice on a fishing expedition at AP and demanding legislation to let the FBI wiretap private, encrypted communications and levy fines if a company fails to comply.

CLICK FOR MORE
Websites Should Consider Tougher ID Verification Policies
Alan Reiter
The apartment and house sharing service,
Airbnb, now requires members to verify their identities by demonstrating a presence on the web, and by either scanning a government ID or entering detailed personal details. Other enterprises should take a close look at Airbnb's verification policies.

CLICK FOR MORE