ConcourseConnect

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Ideas, the module, just got better!

Posted by Matt Rajkowski on February 23, 2011, 8:00 AM EST
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When I think of social business software, I think of all the ways that collaborating can improve a business and give it a leg over the competition. Perhaps the simplest is the age-old suggestion box, brought into the next generation.

Ideas in ConcourseConnect is a glorified suggestion box, with a twist. When a suggestion is made, other employees have the opportunity to express an opinion. It's the cumulative rating and review process that helps an idea get fleshed out and adopted. The community effect can quickly squash a mediocre suggestion, but also draw attention to the most important ones.

To improve the Ideas module, we learned from our recent development of Challenges. Read on for a screen shot and a link to see Ideas in action.

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Challenges is a new module from Concursive that helps drive users to your community in an interesting and unique way. The premise is that users suggest various challenges, with the most popular suggestions being activated. The Challenge of the Day may take several days to accomplish, and users indicate when they've met the goals of the challenge.

Popular Suggestions Example.png

Some example challenges might be:

  • Walk 3 miles today
  • Take a picture with your boss
  • Meet a sales objective

You can try out Challenges here:

http://social.preview.concursive.com/challenges.shtml

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New Features: Project Assignments and Tasks

Posted by Matt Rajkowski on February 10, 2011, 2:30 PM EST
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In this week's update to ConcourseConnect (available for ConcourseCloud.com and Enterprise customers), we have rolled out a personalized Assignments page and have made the Task module a standard configuration for newly created Projects.

Read on for screenshots and more information.

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What is ConcourseConnect 3.0?

Posted by Matt Rajkowski on September 27, 2010, 9:25 AM EDT
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ConcourseConnect 3.0 is taking shape and includes features like Importing Users, a Photo Gallery, Streamlined Invitations, 3rd party client API for mobile clients, UI improvements and a video module for the final release. Concursive has done some integrations that users can try in the early access version, like OpenMeetings support.

ConcourseConnect 3.0 is in active development. Concursive customers receive early access to ConcourseConnect 3.0. Once the release has been finalized, the binary and source will be available for download. The commercial versions of our products include the ConcourseConnect Management plug-in which allows ConcourseConnect user data to be visualized in ConcourseSuite and for ConcourseSuite to be able to market to ConcourseConnect users. Another option we have is a tools plug-in for enabling groups in ConcourseConnect to have their own CRM tools.

If you are interested in the latest commercial versions of ConcourseConnect and ConcourseSuite, please contact us so we can get in touch with you. Customers can switch to CC 3.0 and CS 6.1 by following our upgrade procedure (backup everything, then the new versions will auto-upgrade the database). There might be some fine tuning of preferences afterwards, but that's it.

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ConcourseConnect 2.0 Is Here!

Posted by Matt Rajkowski on June 18, 2010, 10:00 AM EDT
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Today is an important milestone for ConcourseConnect. ConcourseConnect 2.0 has been in development for over a year and has had early-access releases to customers, partners, and enthusiasts – now that code is available to everyone! ConcourseConnect 2.0 uses the AGPL3 Open Source license.

ConcourseConnect 2.0 has over 40 major improvements, and hundreds of smaller improvements.

(Direct Download Link – 36.3 MB) 

Concursive is also announcing that an early release of ConcourseConnect 3.0 is now available to customers – contact us to get the latest version.

ConcourseConnect 2.0
Latest Release

ConcourseConnect 3.0
Early Access

  • Activity Streams
  • Email Updates
  • Twitter, YouTube, Vimeo
  • Ustream, Livestream, Justin.tv, Qik
  • Ideation
  • Follow/Subscribe
  • Community Management Plug-in
  • Content Management
  • Wiki

All the features of 2.0 plus...

  • Mobile
  • Advanced Discussion Forum
  • Photo Gallery
  • Two-way Video
  • Enhanced User Registration
  • Importing Users
  • WSRP Portlets

and more.

The majority of Concursive's supported installations are Enterprise 2.0 installations that run on a company's intranet. These installations are members-only sites that have further customizations and graphic design that integrate with the enterprise and increase adoption.

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Integrated Video

Posted by Tom Manos on May 24, 2010, 10:15 AM EDT
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As you've no doubt seen (and if you haven't, check out Connect757), we've been more than just experimenting with video in the last few weeks.

The results have been pretty spectacular.

It's no big feat to embed a flash video player into a web page, it seems like everyone does that. What makes videos in Concourse Connect so special is that we can schedule them, we can chat and comment about them in real time, and we've integrated them both at the highest level in a Connect system, and at the individual levels of Groups, Businesses, and other profiles.

We started with the simplest and most pervasive: youtube. Including a youtube video in a blog or wiki is as simple as including a graphic file in our WYSIWYG editor. Youtube is built in.

But that didn't remain very fun for very long, and pretty soon we were wanting live video. Embedding a basic, live video stream turned out to be almost comically simple. Once you knew how to produce live broadcasts using your preferred provider and how to work with the embed codes, you could just copy and paste into the html editor, and you had a viewer. Nice, but still not what we wanted.

So next we integrated the various live video services (ustream, watershed, youtube, justin.tv, mystream) into the configuration for each profile. This allows our users to set them up once, and then very transparently access their video streams on any of the services on their own pages. Services like ustream allow our users to do free live broadcasts to their Connect profile. It's quite impressive.

We're still getting all the use cases sorted out for the video services, but we're using it all now to great effect in Connect757.

But I still don't like the idea of relying solely on 3rd party services to stream video, so we've been working on a fully integrated streaming video server for ConcourseConnect. The work is going very well, and you can even see the results in one of my blog posts. This video is one I took at my daughter's school using a tiny hand-held camera, and uploaded to our beta video server. It plays great and the server gives us lots of capabilities with respect to branding the videos, monitoring the server, and extracting usage statistics. Our server will handle just about any kind of video you throw at it: Windows Media, Quicktime, all the various mpeg standards, and more. It does on the fly transcoding, and has lots of other useful and cool features. We'll be testing and incorporating more of those features in the next week or so.

Maintaining your own streaming video server may not be for everyone running a Connect system - it takes work, hardware, and bandwidth. But for our larger customers, a complete, integrated system with video server is a very powerful tool.

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An Enterprise 2.0 Comparison, Part 2

Posted by Matt Rajkowski on March 12, 2010, 2:00 PM EST
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In a previous blog, I proclaimed my excitement for Enterprise 2.0 and introduced the story behind Concursive's approach. As I mentioned, I'll now compare ConcourseConnect to Jive SBS.

Concursive's ConcourseConnect enables organizations to create dynamic communities and involve various stakeholders in a collaborative environment.  ConcourseConnect is developed by the Concursive Corporation, and Concursive's products are used by large enterprises and thousands of small businesses alike.  As Chief Architect of ConcourseConnect, I have intimate knowledge of how it works.  I spend a lot of time researching collaboration and over the years I have played a role in designing, deploying and on-boarding various community building tools.  So let me tell you about ConcourseConnect and how it compares to the competition.

The first product I want to compare it to is Jive SBS.  Jive SBS made a splash in 2009 with the release of its SBS brand.  Jive Software is also a private company with thousands of customers.  Personally, as an avid user around Jive's social business software, including Clearspace and SBS, I can explain some of the nuances between Jive and ConcourseConnect.  I can't be completely objective, but I can provide specific examples to back up my thoughts.  I have been a consultant to Fortune 500 and Global 1000 companies using Jive so I have a sense of how large enterprises use it.  I have also helped companies migrate off of Jive onto ConcourseConnect and other platforms.  The Jive installations that I have seen use community tools like pictures, videos, blogs, documents, and mostly discussion forums.

At a high-level, Connect and Jive both deliver many important elements of Enterprise 2.0, namely blogs, wikis, documents, activity streams and user empowerment.  In fact, on the surface the tools are very similar out-of-the-box.  Other features similar to both products include: public and private groups, discussion forums, document management capabilities, bookmarks and lists, project management, rich user profiles, searching, customization and ideation (added in ConcourseConnect 1.0 and announced for Jive SBS and soon available).

Instead of focusing on discrete features and putting checkmarks next to names, I've boiled the topics down to something I feel is much more important: How well does the application work?

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Enterprise 2.0 by Concursive, Part 1

Posted by Matt Rajkowski on February 23, 2010, 10:45 AM EST
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I just read Enterprise 2.0 by Andrew McAfee and when a smart guy tells you, "healthy and valuable online environments are likely to result when using emergent social software platforms," your organization should heed his advice because he's seen it work over and over again.  In fact, he coined the term Enterprise 2.0.  If there's any doubt, just read his book.  There's much to digest, so let me get to the point, as Andrew McAfee says, "Enterprise 2.0 is ultimately the result of a large number of individual choices about which technologies to use for communication, collaboration, and interaction."

So what Concursive did is put their heads together many years ago with some of the minds in the industry who care about collaboration and social networking to deliver something that ensures that a core social networking platform will keep advancing in ways that no single company can.  Concursive open sourced years worth of work and has already seen the vision of sharing this platform come to fruition.  So, while Concursive's ConcourseConnect doesn't do everything that every other social networking platform does, it does the important stuff well, it advances in many areas, and it innovates in others… ultimately you have a choice, and you can tailor and adapt the platform to your needs, as many other companies have already done today.

Once your organization has made the leap to learn more about using online collaboration, you ought to become familiar with the realities of available collaboration software.  So in the next part in this blog series I'll describe the benefits of using ConcourseConnect and begin to compare ConcourseConnect with other workplace solutions.  Based on Dion Hinchcliffe's Map of the 2009 Enterprise 2.0 Marketplace I've chosen to use a product from Jive Software, called Jive SBS, as the basis of my comparison.  Jive SBS is among a number of companies in which Dion has categorized in the 'Enterprise 2.0 Sweet Spot.'

Stay tuned for the upcoming review.

Update: The comparison between Jive SBS and ConcourseConnect has been posted.

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What makes Facebook and Twitter so useful?  I believe it's the capability to easily jot down tidbits of information and for curious others to see, interpret and act on what was written.  So, if you extend that idea to business, and you organize people by groups, divisions, departments, projects, and friendship, then a company has the means to quickly disseminate and share information, across many bounds, without the 'slowness' of email and in-person communication.  Meaningful communication can be achieved in just a few words and without taking up much time, and the results are immediate and context sensitive.

This streamlined form of communication, called Activity Streams, is the latest improvement to ConcourseConnect. Activity streams allow for users to enter information into a profile, and for followers to comment on and share their activity posts... whether a person, place, thing, group, event, division or department.

Here's a simple example...

activity stream example.png

Through a sophisticated arrangement of relationships and permissions, information immediately shows up for the intended audience.  We've also combined this feature with our previous Email Updates feature so that activity streams are also emailed.

Take a look at this example profile to see the activity stream in action.  Just scroll down to see the 'Recent Activity' section.

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New Feature - Receive Email Updates

Posted by Matt Rajkowski on December 18, 2009, 4:10 PM EST
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ConcourseConnect's latest feature: Email Updates

Email updates allow users to opt-in to receive emails about activity that is going on in the community.  For example, let's say you become a member of a project.  If you are an active participant, you might want to be notified several times a day about activity that is occurring in the project.  The email update is a list of who did what, including posts in the forums, blog posts, new files, announcements and more.  When joining a profile, the user sees the notification options...

Screen shot - email updates.png

Users can decide per profile (whether a project, group, department and more) as to whether that profile's activities are sent daily, weekly or monthly.  The notification preferences are also summarized on the user's own profile page for at-a-glance modifications and navigation.

There have also been many tweaks to the user interface.  Please explore and comment as to whether you like them or not!

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