« SLA Notes: News Division Vendors' Roundtable | Main | SLA Notes: Click University Launch »

June 12, 2005

SLA Notes: Monday's General Session

SLA Opening General Session
Monday
June 6, 2005
9:30 - 11:00 AM
Guest speaker: Don Tapscott, "The Naked Corporation"

Welcome film
(roving spotlights -- is Bono in the audience?)
Juanita Richardson - Chair, Conference Planning Committee
* Wealth of opportunity in the programming for this conference
* Thanks to all of the 2005 conference planners (and their employers), the SLA staff, Cindy Hill and Ethel Salonen, and the Toronto chapter
* June 3-8th, Special Librarians Week in the City of Toronto

Ethel Salonen - 2004/2005 President
* It's about impact
* 400 booths in the Info-Expo
* Click University to be launched today
* SLA President's Showcase: Dan Pink

Intro to Speaker - Elizabeth Rector, LexisNexis
Speaker - Don Tapscott

* Mom was a teacher and librarian for 30 years
* Book: The Naked Corporation: How the Age of Transparency Will Revolutionize Business

* We're in an emerging business: the transparency age
- Does transparency = disclosure? No, it's even more than disclosure
- There is unprecedented access to pertinent information about companies, within and outside of those firms
- Your value needs to be evident and your values need to be evident
* By embracing transparency and sharing pertinent information with stakeholders, companies can do really good things
* Special librarians can play an important role in helping companies embrace transparency

Drivers of Transparency:
*Technological
- Digital access to information and new tools have made thing
- The internet is becoming a hypernet - ubiquitous connectivity to high-speed broadband; doors as info appliances
- "They should have called [the Blackberry] the Crackberry ..."
- Growing ambient intelligence
- Explosion in bandwidth: Plain Ole Telephone Service -> ISDN -> T1 -> T3 -> OC3 -> ...
- Wireless and RDID, WiMax
- Integration of servers
- The Internet is becoming a service platform, not just a medium
* Economic
Corporations are undergoing the biggest change in a century, since the peak of the industrial age; vertical integrations
- Transactional costs and collaboration were greater than
- The boundary of the corporation is becoming more porous
- Industrial age corp. -> Semi-porous corp. -> Business webs
* Demographic
- First generation to grow up digital - they are different
-- they use digital applications more seamlessly; it's not "technology" to them; it's like the air
- Boom - bust - echo: the society isn't aging, it's bifurcating; the echo is louder than the original
- Time is spent a lot less time watching TV
- First time that kids are authorities about something important; kids are lapping their parents on the information track
- N-Gen in the Workforce
-- new thinking on authority
-- new approaches to work
-- unprecedented mobility - loyal to their peers, the content of the work, but not to the company per se
- N-Gen as Consumers
-- They want options
-- They want customization
-- They want to change their minds
-- They want to try before they buy
-- Interactive relationships
-- The scrutinizers
* Socio-Political
- Global interdependence: tranparency all around the world
- The civil foundation on a global basis are on the rise
- Science and the knowable - exponential growth
- The corporate trust crisis

Obstacles to technology:
* Limits to knowledge
* Business value of secrets
* Deceit
* Privacy concerns
* Cost of openness
* Transparency literacy
* Fear of litigation
* Risk - vulnerability
* Transparency fatigue (choice/values overload)
* Geopolitical context

Librarians are part of why we have transparency, but companies tend to improvise as to who gets information

5 classes of stakeholders
1. Employees
- companies that share info with employees get all sorts of bennies: increase loyalty, decrease office politics, increase collaboration
- rethinking knowledge mgmt (which has been unsuccessful): containerized like a finite resource, internal; collaboration and across the web, instead
2. Business partners: transparencies in the supply chain, between partners
3. Customers
4. Shareholders - they know more now; 60 years ago, some companies didn't open their books to stockholders
- Shareholder activism: from passive to active investors
- The integrity premium
- Governance premium
5. Communities - companies can scrutinize communities and vice versa

Stakeholder Webs - the embodiment of transparency

Corporate Values
Honesty, consideration, accountability, openness -- the foundation of trust

Corporate values can build trust, which builds relationships which build value

The new business integrity -- sustainability models

Honesty - better visibility; single version of the truth
Consideration - understanding customers' interest; enterprise planning
Accountability - effective scorecarding
Openness - Better, more accurate reporting, valid non-financial info; supply chain transparency; internal info portals

Crises of leadership

Paradigm shifts are scary
Paradigm shifts can be met with indifference, mockery and outright hostility
Those with vested interests tend to fight the hardest

Posted by misseli at June 12, 2005 02:59 PM