Recent Entries
- Web 2.0 and human resources – who should drive Web 2.0 initiatives in the organization?
- Early insights from the Top 100 Australian Web 2.0 Applications list
- Registrations now open for Top 100 Australian Web 2.0 Applications Launch Event
- Enterprise 2.0 in Financial Services: upcoming keynote
- Interview on SkyBusiness: Facebook And Other Social Networking Sites Can Be Beneficial For Corporations
- Social networks in organizations: balancing risk, reward, and transparency
- More media coverage of Enterprise 2.0 Executive Forum
- Enterprise Twitter – or how to tap social networks for expertise without using email
- Video conversation with Euan Semple on Enterprise 2.0 governance and peer-to-peer
- Is business yet to harness Web 2.0, or not yet willing to talk about it?
Partners
Media Partners
« Previous Entry | Enterprise 2.0 Executive Forum Blog | Next Entry »
Enterprise 2.0 Executive Forum Blog
Enterprise 2.0 in Financial Services: upcoming keynote
I have long been interested in how collaboration technologies are applied in financial services, having come from a career largely at Merrill Lynch and Thomson Financial, and spent much time consulting to the instittutional financial services sector.
A few years ago now I ran the Collaboration in Financial Services conferences in New York and London, and wrote a white paper on How Collaborative Technologies are Transforming Financial Services. Since then I’ve been heavily involved in the Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0 spaces, and I’m finding that these are extremely relevant to the financial services sector.
I will be doing the opening keynote at this year's annual Financial Services Technology forum on Enterprise & Web 2.0 for Financial Services in Sydney on 29 May. In my presentation I will look at the big picture of the history and relevance of these technologies in the sector, and drawing on my recent work helping organizations with the governance issues of Enterprise 2.0.
Financial services are certainly very diverse, however many of the sectors within it handily illustrate the themes I have been discussing for some time: there is a deep layer of highly process-driven work, supplemented by a layer of connecting expertise to make highly time-sensitive decisions. Enterprise 2.0 technologies and approaches are outstanding in supporting the latter, which is where there is the most potential for competitive differentiation - which can be very fleeting in the world of money.
I’ll provide more details later on what I cover in my keynote.




















