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Making Social Media the Corporate Norm for a Fortune 500 Company: Diane Bryant, Intel’s CIO July 13, 2009

Posted by qua in Uncategorized.
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Intel CIO, Diane Bryant expresses support for social computing in a recent podcast.    The following is an excerpt from the post at EnterpriseLeadership.org

As a globally diverse company with more 83,000 employees, numerous suppliers, and millions of external customers, Intel has continued to keep pace with effective ways for all constituencies to collaborate effectively. In 2004, the company began internal blogging with the CEO leading the charge. Two years later, Intel opened up external blogging as a way to reach out and communicate directly with specific manufacturers that use Intel products, and with end users. Bryant says, “As the devices based on the Intel architecture have become more solutions-based and directed at end users around the world, we needed to have direct connection with these end users. Social media or social networking provided us access to this external community.”

In 2008, Intel launched Open Port, a series of external communities for end users. Bryant says that today more than 75 percent of all the content on these communities comes from end users, not Intel. “We have seen a strong viral pick up on solutions. We have examples of customers coming together to solve their real problems.” Intel also uses social media for software development. Some of these software development communities allow people to collaborate about how they have optimized their software suite for the Intel architecture.”

While Intel has begun to reap the benefits of social media, this company knows that the pervasive nature of social media means that proper controls need to exist.  Bryant says, “Most executives I talk to say that their social media initiatives tend to self-police themselves.” Intel has adopted a code of conduct that defines how people must act when they engage in all forms of Intel electronic communications, both internally and externally. The code also has provisions for maintaining legal compliance.

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