7 steps to becoming a digital organisation

How do you move your organisation from slightly digital to very digital?

Nesta people in training

Nesta peeps learning the way of the digital ninja

Creating ninjas

Here at Nesta we’re in the middle of helping our people transform themselves into an elite group of digital ninjas.

The idea is to get better at sharing what we’re learning, and disseminating it on our new website. We’re also interested in putting our people front and centre of the experience, as they’re some of the best at what they do, and they deserve more credit.

Together we’re better

I took part recently in a great event hosted by Together We’re Better – a network of digital not-for-profit leaders who come together to share their thoughts and challenges.

Together we came up with 7 ways to help organisations move from slightly digital organisations, to ones that are digital first.

7 steps to digital success

Here are the 7 ways we crowd-sourced to help our organisations go digital by default.

  1. Make the Head of HR your new best friend
    Catch them while they’re young. All new recruits to your organisation have no idea what the culture is. If you work with your Head of HR to build in some basic digital literacy expectations into all job descriptions, you’re already setting the scene for a new culture.
  2. Move like a crab – go sideways and use lots of pincer movements
    Going digital is rarely a massive shove, it’s more a million small nudges. So move sideways through the organisation, sounding people out, getting their advice, finding out what drives them, seeing what they want. And then when you’ve sown enough seeds, get buy-in from the top, and mobilise your advocates from the bottom. It’ll be a classic pincer movement – just a very slow one.
  3. Set a clear vision and show the evidence, then circulate it so everyone knows where they’re heading
    No one’s going to do what you say unless you demonstrate how it can impact on them and the work they’re doing. You also need to set some crystal clear goals so everyone know where they’re all heading.
  4. Work with managers to put digital outputs into everyone’s objectives
    HR is first base – second base, third base and home runs are all about managers and directors getting on board and building in concrete objectives into their people’s work. If producing blogs is not part of their job, it’s unlikely to get done.
  5. Elect digital champions (and hand out special badges)
    This is an oldie, but it’s tried and tested. Having powerful advocates for the change you want to see dotted around the organisation really does help. As long as you’ve sold your vision to them coherently, this is a great way to keep the dream alive.
  6. Don’t do training – do way of life
    One-off training is great, but it won’t change people’s behaviour. For that you need a structural change in how everyone works. That means doing all of the above, and most importantly to…
  7. Keep showing the value of what everyone’s doing.
    This is really important. Unless people can see the benefit of the effort they’re putting in, they’re unlikely to continue. Give them access to Google Analytics, post regular stat updates in the kitchen. Show them the impact of what they’re doing, give them ownership of it, and they’ll keep doing it.

These are just a small selection of ways, but I’m currently trying them out at Nesta and they seem to be working (so far).

But, like always, different organisations need different tactics, and I’m lucky at Nesta that I’ve got such a talented and forward-looking group of people to work with to make this happen.

These are definitely just the tip of the iceberg, so if you know of any other tips or strategies that you’ve used to encourage an organisation to go more digital, let me know.


The final four

After three long weeks of waiting, the tenders came flooding in. We had an amazing response – 37 white hot digital agencies submitted a proposal for redesigning the Nesta site. Me and Sara spent the weekend, Monday and Tuesday whittling them down to a shortlist of 4. Now we’re heading into interview territory, so I can’t say any more until we’ve finished and chosen our 1 supplier. I’ll let you know…

In the meantime I’ve been keeping Nesta in the loop as much as possible about what’s happening. A common mistake I’ve found on these kind of projects is disappearing into your own little world, and forgetting about your main sponsor – the organisation you’re in.

So with that in mind I presented a high level view of the project so far – why we’re doing it, what it’s trying to achieve, and a glimpse of the sunlit uplands where they will all be able to publish to the site.

If you’ve got a spare 5 minutes, have a flick through – it’s without notes, so it’ll be a bit like listening to a silent movie:

Website presentation Nov 2012

One of the main ideas was borrowed from a really powerful talk given by a guy called Simon Sinek. In it he talks about getting the Why right before you start anything – whether that’s a small web project or a massive company rebrand.

Most organisations immediately get bogged down with the What and the How – and he used a comparison between Apple and Dell to drive home his point. Where Dell would talk about What they make (PCs), Apple would talk about Why they make them (we believe in beautiful design). Definintely worth checking out.


A pattern emerges

We’ve been doing some brisk soul-searching at Nesta to really figure out what it is we can offer people.

At an away day last week all Nesta staff were asked to bring a picture which for them summed up what Nesta does. Here’s an example of one of the slightly chaotic posters we created:

A mindmap of Nesta

A turbulent Nesta mindmap

(Ruth had the best explanation with her Transformers picture: “We may look a bit boring at first glance, but we can transform into something cool – honestly”).

All this fed neatly into my website discovery process, as I could start to map what Nesta thought of itself with what our brilliant non-Nesta card sorters thought of what we actually produced.

Over the past week we’ve had some really helpful and creative people who have given up their lunch hour to help me and Sara (my trusty deputy) figure out the Nesta information puzzle.

Card sorters gallery of fame

Matt Clifford and Alice Bentinck and their team from Entrepreneur First were brilliant, and slightly ruthless, in sorting out the Nesta brain. Alice at one point shouted out: “You guys do a lot of really random stuff!”. Exactly.

James Lush from Biochemistry Society, Alice Clay from City of London Festival and Peter Feltham from Ethos Valuable Outcomes were great at piecing things together, and coming up with creative solutions for the IA – especially the idea of a random button that summons up a random article from the archive.

And finally design researcher Svenja Bickert, artist Carys Davies and creative professional Dina Gitziou found some interesting patterns in what we did and grouped things by looking at what outputs and take aways we produce.

The card sort, correlated

I promised you I’d share everything with you as I went in this project, so here is the final correlated Excel spreadsheet showing how all the cards got sorted into standardised categories. (WARNING: I found standardising is the hardest part of a card sort – don’t oversimplify your categories if you can help it).

Let me know what patterns you see:

Card name Projects About Us Advice News and Features Resources Events Reports Apply
Things we are currently funding 29% 57% 14%
Skills Review 14% 57% 29%
Mentoring programme for creative businesses 43% 29% 14% 14%
Destination Local 86% 14%
Your ideas 57% 43%
Impact Investment Fund – ageing 43% 29% 29%
Ways to get assistance 43% 43% 14%
Find out what we do 100%
People-Powered Health 86% 14%
Creative Councils 71% 29%
Press Office 71% 29%
Gallery of top 50 social innovators 14% 14% 57%
Predictions for the future 14% 57% 14%
Cycling challenge 86% 14%
Plan I 43% 29%
High growth firms 43% 43%
Collaborative Consumption 14% 71%
People in our organisation 100%
Information about us 100%
Innovation in Giving Fund 86% 14%
Digital Education 100%
Innovation news 71% 14%
Do-it-yourself guide to innovation 14% 71%
Opportunities to work with us 57% 29% 14%
Opportunities to work for us 71% 29%
Areas of expertise 100%
Current projects 71% 29%
Past projects 43% 29% 14%
Registration for Superhuman event 14% 71%
Venue hire 86% 14%
Newsletter 71% 29%
Join us 71% 29%
Find us 100%
Feedback 57% 29% 14%
John Whatmore’s blog 14% 57% 14%
Partner organisations 86% 14%
Innovation report 14% 29% 29%
India’s innovation system 14% 14% 14% 43%
Our mission 100%
News about innovation 71% 14%
Success stories 29% 29% 14% 29%
In converstaion with Mike Lynch 17% 33% 17%
Advanced prosthetics event 14% 14% 57%
Innovation in Labour market programmes 57% 14% 14% 14%
Big Green Challenge project blog 86% 14%
Expert’s view 71% 14%
Creative Enterprise Toolkit 29% 71%
Fashion Toolkit 29% 71%
Radical Efficiency booklet 14% 86%
Trustee biography 100%
CEO biography 100%
Impact Investment Fund – young people 67% 17% 17%
Nesta in Manchester 29% 71%
Hot Topics 83%
In conversation with Stephen Emmott 14% 43% 14%
Working papers 14% 43% 43%
Co-production catalogue 57% 29% 14%
Neighbourhood Challenge summary report 43% 43% 14%
Infratechnologies report 14% 14% 29% 43%

Top 5 content platforms

I want to tell you about the evolution of content platforms, from clay tablets to digital tablets.

Let me take you back to around 700 BC, to ancient Persia, and one of the greatest libraries ever built – the library of the scholar king Ashurbanipal.

In his library he had amassed over 40,000 separate works of knowledge, taken as prizes from the kingdoms he conquered. It was almost certainly only accessible to himself, his royal household, and perhaps a few select priests and scribes.

The works were stored on one of the simplest, yet most effective, platforms ever invented.

Clay.

Difficult to hold above your head in bed

This is the iPad of the Bronze Age.

A clay tablet was ingenious. It was cheap to produce, easily marked, and once hardened it was extremely resilient to compression and decay. The tablets could be stacked in columns or rows, allowing thousands to be crammed in to a small space.

But there was a big problem with this new technology. It had no network, and the content rights were closely guarded (quite literally – by big guards with heavy bronze swords and big taches).

King Ashurbanipal had succeeded in a huge act of coordinated theft, gathering together humanity’s communal knowledge under one roof and making sure he was the only reader.

Luckily, there was another platform that was around at the same time, which eventually superseded this first stage of platform evolution…

Read the rest of this entry »


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