|
|
Line 12: |
Line 12: |
| | | |
| | | |
− | Common Social Network Analysis Applications are: <ref> The Hidden Power of Social Networks, Rob Cross, Andrew Parker, 2004. </ref>}}
| + | }} |
− | | + | |
− | {| style="border:1px solid #D87A35;background:#D87A35;color:white;"
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | ! width= "300pt" | <font color= white> Applications </font>
| + | |
− | ! width= "750pt" | <font color= white> Content </font>
| + | |
− | |- style="border:1px solid #D87A35;background:white;color:black;"
| + | |
− | | '''Supporting partnership and alliances'''
| + | |
− | |Executives are increasingly employing cross-organizational initiatives such as alliances or other forms of strategic partnerships to leverage their organization's unique capabilities. Social network analysis can illuminate the effectiveness of such initiatives in terms of information flow, knowledge transfer, and decision making.
| + | |
− | |- style="border:1px solid #D87A35;background:white;color:black;"
| + | |
− | |'''Assessing strategy execution'''|| Core competencies or capabilities in knowledge-intensive work are usually a product of collaboration across functional or divisional boundaries. [[Social Network|Social network]] analysis allows executives to determine whether the appropriate cross-functional or departmental collaborations are occurring to support strategic objectives.
| + | |
− | |- style="border:1px solid #D87A35;background:white;color:black;"
| + | |
− | |'''Improving strategic decision making in top leadership networks''' || A core function of top executive teams is to acquire information, make sound decisions, and convey those decisions effectively to broader organization. Social network analysis, when done with both the top [[leadership|leadership]] team and the next layer down, can provide valuable diagnostic information to leadership. Not only can it help assess connections within a top leadership team, but it can also reveal how information is entering and leaving this group.
| + | |
− | |- style="border:1px solid #D87A35;background:white;color:black;"
| + | |
− | |'''Integrating networks across core processes''' || Informal networks across core processes are often fragmented by functional boundaries. Both cognitive and organizational barriers often keep groups from effectively integrating unique expertise, which can damage quality, efficiency, and [[Innovation|innovation]]. As the process map did for reengineering, social network analysis provides a diagnostic [[Assessment|assessment]] of information and knowledge flow both within and across functions critical to a core process.
| + | |
− | |- style="border:1px solid #D87A35;background:white;color:black;"
| + | |
− | |'''Promoting innovation''' || Most innovation of importance is a collaborative endeavor. Whether concerned with new-product development or process improvement initiatives, social network analysis can be particularly insightful in assessing both how a team is integrating its expertise and the effectiveness with which it is drawing on the expertise of others within the organization.
| + | |
− | |- style="border:1px solid #D87A35;background:white;color:black;"
| + | |
− | |'''Ensuring integration post-merger or large-scale change'''||Particularly in knowledge-intensive settings, large-scale change is fundamentally an issue of network integration. Social network analysis, done before a change initiative, can help inform the change process as well as identify central people within the network whom a sponsor might want to engage in design because of their ability to convey information to others. Social network analysis can also be done as follow-up six to nine months after implementation. Quite often these assessments reveal significant issues that leaders need to address for the initiative to be successful.
| + | |
− | |- style="border:1px solid #D87A35;background:white;color:black;"
| + | |
− | |'''Developing communities of practice'''||[[Communities of Practice|communities of practice]] are usually not formally recognized within an organization but can be critical to an organization's ability to leverage expertise distributed by virtue of physical location or organizational design. Social network analysis can be used to uncover the key members of the community as well as assess overall health in terms of connectivity.
| + | |
− | |}
| + | |
| | | |
| | | |