So....how are things changing since Tariq left?
Are there new personnel in the works?
Are there changes to Project14 coming?
Are there changes to other programs?
Is there a schedule?
So....how are things changing since Tariq left?
Are there new personnel in the works?
Are there changes to Project14 coming?
Are there changes to other programs?
Is there a schedule?
Hey doug!
So....how are things changing since Tariq left?
We have had changes in the team after we restructured. There has been a lot of work that needed to be picked up, processes put in place and documentation written that was not written. We are still going through this process.
Are there new personnel in the works?
Haven't you met Addy: Hello! element14 Community Members or Jordan: Hi everyone!? They joined the team recently. We are still hiring for a designer and video editor based out of our Bangalore office in India.
Are there changes to Project14 coming?
The political answer would be "There are no changes to Project14" to be " technically correct, " but I suspect your real question is "When is the next Project14 going to be?" I'll address this in a moment.
Are there changes to other programs?
They are currently reduced in number while we transition workloads, but we're still doing RoadTests, Webinars, Design Challenges, element14 presents, Tech Spotlights, Essentials, Quizzes, and thinking up new ideas.
Is there a schedule?
Was there ever a schedule? I believe we've never posted one to the site before. We are planning our activities for the next fiscal year, and we have not set in stone what we are working on yet, that includes Project14. We are also still onboarding the new staff, recently we resolved issues with shipping out prizes and managed to get the Project14 Time and Space prizes out of the door to the winners - which took up to a year before for some reason!? That should also answer your first question.
For me I come to this thinking "What's the most rewarding for our members? And what makes sense for the website?" for example, we currently keep creating groups to support different programmes and that saturates and dilutes navigating the website. I'd like to consolidate it all down a bit to support the same programmes but not get lost when navigating.
As always I appreciate the time and attentiveness given by our members to the Community and asking the engaging, difficult questions. We appreciate you.
Thanks for the update! I've only been "active" here for a handful of months, despite having an account since forever. The site's structure is definitely a bit intimidating and confusing, so it's good to hear that some consolidation efforts are happening. And visibility of all of the initiatives becomes a bit of an issue when there's so many sections. For example, I didn't even know about Project 14 until quite recently when someone mentioned it.
The more I browse this community the more I like it, but the site is not particularly easy to navigate, so I feel like I might be missing out on a bunch of cool stuff, and that I'm discovering them at a very slow pace.
It's a pity the Jive version of the site was not viable any longer. Towards the end it was really pretty much perfect from a user experience.
Oh, it had its issues too, but it did have a lot of customisations. It would have been nice to be able to say "Sure, give us the source code, we'll support it ourselves and run it in-house" - I feel that has a 'here be dragons' caution around it.
Have a look at it if you can
Is it not working that way for them either then, wouldn't surprise me, but my first, limited impression it did? TBH, I can't work out if E14's What's New widget is actually working to filter posts with latest comments to the top.
As for software, something actually geared towards Forums would be my first go-to; blogs are typically just a longer form of that and can be presented, sorted, searched and filtered in similar ways. Even if it had its own Content Type for additional metadata the underlying engine could be the same. On the more expensive side, any Content Management solution that had built in Forum functionality - by which, I mean functionality that works to deliver Forums as they have been for decades. Verint seems more geared to Knowledge Management activities where content is more article based rather than dynamic. Of course I can't tell what is built-in Verint functionality and what is customised but the UX is awkward.
Also, from the weird restrictions (like not being able to modify some comments after ~10 mins), I'm wondering if some parts of it were originally designed for online product support forums etc, which sadly to a salesperson, might be no different from a community where the users might create substantial content.
Yes - more KM focussed. What jumps to mind are things like Epson's support for its Printers, Scanners etc. Lot's of knowledge articles that form a database of information that can expand but which existing entries are pretty much static. Possibly even an organisation's intranet where policies, processes etc are stored and which might have some KM and collaboration features. Verint feels "stretched" or shoe-horned.
Back then I recall seeing a post about recommendations but at the time I wasn't familiar with any sites using them to be able to comment either way.
I don't recall having ever used a community board that is absolutely perfect though, most have their weaknesses (some more than others).
What platform would you have suggested back then and which community sites were actively using it ?
The big thing about element14 for me though is the content/community contained within.
To be fair I don't recall anyone stating the software was any good : (
Yup, just found that post... you're off the hook...
I thought there were some posts from people that had used the Verint/Telligent platform before though. Perhaps that was only after the migration had started.
There didn't appear to be many alternatives suggested at the time though. No-one was exactly raving about platforms that were working well for other community sites, with similar functionality to Jive.
That would have been interesting! I've had to work with such software in the past, i.e. some other firm's source code, which I had to get up-to-speed with and self-support, but admittedly the firm continued to be paid for at least a year (maybe two) for a few hours support each week, plus they were responsible for bug-fixes for at least a few months from memory. We also used third party code that was fully supported, but we still occasionally self-fixed issues in it, until the supplier could supply their fix.
There didn't appear to be many alternatives suggested at the time though
I kept winding up the community team/dev team by suggesting we use Discourse and Wordpress.
Is Drupal still a thing
I believe it's up to version 11 now.