FaceTime, a vendor of security solutions, discovered -- how surprising -- that those in charge of IT decisions within businesses would like social networking to be secure. Yawn.
The other results are interesting, though:
[from FaceTime Survey: IT Managers OK Social Networking, as Long as it's Secure and Compliant]
- 30 percent would not consider a Web security platform that did not have the ability to secure and manage social networking and Web 2.0 applications
- 32 percent said social networking is a critical business collaboration tool
- 87 percent personally use social networks on the corporate network
- 80 percent said information leakage is a primary concern with social networking use
- 15 percent said social networking is "blocked" on the corporate network
- 51 percent estimate that employees use social networks at work more than an hour per day
Only 32% see it as a critical business tool. I wonder what the numbers would be if you asked the employees that use these networks more than an hour a day?
These figures are also not consistent with Forrester research that Jeremiah Owyang cited in a recent interview at the Enterprise 2.0 blog. He said that a partner of his reported that social networking was the number one Web technology that surveyed managers reported putting into their 2009 IT plans.
What about Collaborative Networking? http://cli.gs/cn I'll wager a surprising number are rolling their own from scratch or using SharePoint or another portal as a framework.
Posted by: Aaron Fulkerson | July 07, 2009 at 02:12 AM