It’s hard to know where to start dissecting this approach; it’s just so wrong on so many levels.
Control is (almost) gone.
Burton believed his approach was one of openness and employee autonomy; he even went so far as to say that “…you have to treat employees as the responsible adults they are and it’s all part of building an ethos of trust. The worst thing is to clamp down and ban things, people will only find ways around it.” Yes, you read that right, the guy who is trying to control employee’s use of social networking to one hour in the workweek, and then limit it entirely to employees, is claiming that by doing so he’s treating employees as adults – talk about offerings crumbs to the starving!
Let’s face it, the days of centralized control within an organization are almost gone. Any organization that has workers whose roles require them to spend time on the web is crazy if it thinks it can control that web usage. Sure, you can lock down PC’s, give people corporate builds, and disallow downloads, but people have ways and means. All it takes is an SMS capable phone and people will Twitter.
But to fear this fact is to ignore the real benefits of the social web. In extolling the virtue of the electronic Starbucks, whilst at the same time trying to control the flavors of coffee people can have within the Starbucks, Burton missed the point entirely. The social web provides connection, meaning, context, and opportunity – don’t limit that, embrace it!
Choose the Right Tool for the Job
In using Facebook as some sort of quasi internal team building tool, Burton chose perhaps the least suitable tool for the job at hand. Sure, you can install a screw with a hammer, but it’s not the right tool for the job. Internal knowledge sharing and team building is a very valuable thing, but it’s something that happens beyond any sort of chronological framework, and it’s something that is enabled by internal tools. Even though Burton’s experiment was a few years ago, there’s a myriad of internal facing tools that would do the trick – from Jive to Yammer, from SocialCast to SharePoint.
Consumer Technologies are a Struggle
Employees are demanding the go-ahead to use “consumer” tools within an enterprise (or often using without permission). Organizations need to ensure employee productivity, privacy, and security while at the same time acknowledging shifting trends and leveraging the benefits that social brings. As a result, there are a number of organizations that are struggling to find a way through this quagmire.
It’s a difficult question but one that initiatives like Facebook Fridays does nothing to solve. We’ve come a long way since Serena’s nascent moves, but some would say not far enough. So we’re keen to hear how organizations out there are balancing the conflicting needs – what tools, rules, and approaches do you use in your situation?
Read the complete post @ DistractedEnterprise

Ben Kepes is an analyst, an entrepreneur, a commentator and a business adviser. His business interests include a diverse range of industries from manufacturing to property to technology. As a technology commentator he has a broad presence both in the traditional media and extensively online. Ben covers the convergance of technology, mobile, ubiquity and agility, all enabled by the Cloud. His areas of interest extend to enterprise software, software integration, financial/accounting software, platforms and infrastructure as well as articulating technology simply for everyday users.