Yammer: Hanging Out at the ol’ iWater Cooler

17 10 2009

For about a year now my company has been using a social networking tool called Yammer.  Yammer describes the service as “enterprise microblogging”, but it’s basically a secure, private Twitter that an organization can use internally.  Yammer’s home page currently claims 40,000 companies use the service.  Like Twitter, each user can build a short profile about themselves, then shoot out little messages to everyone in their network (e.g. your company) regarding what they are doing or thinking including the ability to attach a file to the message.  There’s a way to subdivide the Yammer network into smaller groups (e.g. a group for office A and another for office B) so folks with common interests can communicate without everyone getting potentially unwelcome information.  Messages can be generated and viewed using an Adobe AIR-based client, a Blackberry or iPhone app or through a web browser.  There are other features, but these are the big ticket items.  In generally, it’s a well designed service.

I use Twitter in my personal network and mostly I get random messages from friends about their children’s strange behavior, plans for the coming weekend, current weather and so forth.  My own messages almost always fall within this same garden variety.  If you look at typical Twitter traffic, it’s essentially electronic chit chat.  How is Yammer traffic different?  By and large it isn’t and that’s precisely its value.  In today’s modern business place where employees often work remotely, by choice or due to travel, the proverbial water cooler conversation has largely disappeared.  For some businesses in particular (such as consulting) or in segments of businesses (such as sales), employees can be especially isolated from one another.  Tools like Yammer provides a way of maintaining a personal connection between far flung team members.  And that connection isn’t always idle conversation or gossip.  Often times, great ideas are generated or big problems solved by the casual hallway meeting that is increasingly uncommon.  An unlike regular instant messaging, many people can listen in and join the conversation, just like that hallway meeting.

My experience with Yammer has also shown that it’s a useful tool for:

  • disseminating information about what’s going on in the organization (“Hey! Didja hear we just won this deal with such and such new client?”),
  • quickly reaching out with a question to many colleagues via a channel that’s not as busy as e-mail (and which is logged away for future reference by everyone in the company) and
  • for simply sharing person tidbits.

It’s an impersonal way of making personal connections, if that makes sense.  There are people I only know on Yammer because they live in Seattle or some other city, but their personalities and interests show through across the Internet based on the comments they make and the way they make them.  It’s a little weird, but wonderful at the same time, because I’d not know them at all if it weren’t for my use of Yammer.

So, I like Yammer, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t offer that much of the basic functionality (if not all) could be recreated using direct competitor Present.ly, DIY social networking offerings such as Ning (which is more than messaging), the ageless Internet Relay Chat (IRC) or even Twitter (one can have a private account, you know).  You can even make your own with open source package StatusNet.  There are many options.  So it’s not so much the tool I like, but the idea.  I’m enamored with this type of communication capability, regardless of how you achieve it.  If you work in an organization where face-time is ever decreasing, you might want to strongly consider rolling-out a capability like this.

Want more?  Here’s a nice compilation of similar services from Mike Brevoort.





Trillian Astra

19 09 2009

It’s been a while since I wrote about a web service or product, so I thought I’d take a moment to put something out there about Trillian Astra.  Astra is the latest incarnation of a multi-protocol instant messenger (IM) client from Cerulean Studios.  I started using the original Trillian client several years ago when I got tired of managing multiple IM clients to connect with AIM, Y! Messenger, MSN Messenger (now Live Messenger) and private IRC chat rooms.  I discovered Trillian 3.1 and was immediately smitten by its ability to work with all these services while consuming as much computing resource as just a single client.  I was so impressed that I eventually paid to upgrade to the Trillian Pro version.  While there were a few additional features in Pro, I can’t remember what they were (integration with Google Talk?).  I upgraded to Pro because Cerulean Studios earned their $25 (and then some) for creating such a great product.

Fast forward to the fall of 2007 when Trillian began Alpha testing for its new Astra platform.  I immediately signed up to help test and I haven’t looked back.  While Astra has added additional plug-ins for newer social network services such as Facebook and Twitter (you can see FB status updates and Tweets as they are generated by your friends), the big feature is a browser-based client in addition to the locally installed client.  While most of the services already offer this to their users, it was a big advancement for Cerulean Studios to offer such a “works wherever you can get an Internet connection” type solution.  The browser client looks very much like the local client and their servers hold copies of your connections, buddy lists and so forth so you can IM on the go, even if you’re on another person’s PC.  Very handy.

I highly recommend Trillian and if you use more than one IM service, give it a shot as I think it’s the best solution amongst its group of competitors.





The New rockymtnfuller.com

21 12 2008

After years of procrastinating, I finally registered the rockymtnfuller.com domain.  With a few minutes of painstaking research, I selected the WordPress one-click install from the list of apps GoDaddy.com has available with its hosting packages.  I was already hosting with GoDaddy.com, so easy choice there.   For those familiar with OpenKimono, I’ve been blogging for a couple years now, mostly about  my business, gadgets, soccer and whatever.  RockyMtnFuller is more focused on family, in particular what my daughter’s Grace and Erin are up to as well as my wife Julie’s activities.  Anyway, check it out it if you like.  Or not.





Facebook: 1 Year Later

28 11 2008

It’s been a year since I signed up for Facebook so I figured it was time to provide an update.  The Facebook network has a lot of folks I can’t find on LinkedIn, particularly friends from college and high school.  There’s probably an interesting study in there somewhere to see how career paths, areas of the country and other factors influence which network you use or if you use both or none.

Growth of my Facebook network as has also been pretty good: I’ve gone from 0 to 160 friends in 365 days or about one new connection every 2.28 days.  Reasonably rapid given I haven’t really done a lot of trolling around looking for people.  I have also noticed a lot of friends have popped up when I search for my high school or college classes.  A year ago, there was just a handful.  Now there are dozens, so the timing of my joining Facebook seems to have coincided with that of many others.

Other than creating connections, I really don’t do a lot on Facebook.  I have a few applications loaded, but don’t play around with them much.  I’ve found the most basic features (like access to contact info and Groups) the most useful as a huge swath of the applications are really just for killing time.  And when I’m ready to kill time, there’s many other things I’d rather do than issue a SuperPoke or sent virtual cocktails.

Still, if you don’t already have a Facebook profile, give it a whirl.  It’s nice to reconnect with folks to learn where they are and what they are doing.

David Fuller's Facebook profile