When an idea goes viral, it becomes a meme, and when two memes are associated for long enough to be part of a trend, a portmanteau is created. Webster's defines it as “a word or morpheme whose form and meaning are derived from a blending of two or more distinct forms (as smog from smoke and fog).” Thus, “socialytics.”
Deloitte’s John Hagel introduces this term in an article titled Helping Make the Invisible Visible with Socialytics. He’s describing “the integration of social software and big data analytics to create insight from unstructured information.”
We
all try to make sense – especially business sense – from social
interaction, relationships, interests, demographics and location;
there’s plenty of data to be run through whatever data management mills
are being invented, but until recently that social data provided only a
foggy picture of the business value that most CEOs and managers require.
In
his article Hagel describes a study Deloitte performed on a business
with 6,000 employees in Australia. Looking at social patterns, the
company assumed that teams that were highly integrated and connected
internally (“insulated”) would perform best. But after applying
socialytics, they found that the highest performing teams “were very
highly integrated outside of the team as well. In other words, high performing teams had a high number of connections beyond the team.”
Socialaytics,
Hagel says, “systematically track what kinds of interactions lead to
high performance and what kinds don’t.” That’s valuable stuff and is
just one example of how we’re learning to better analyze relationships
and human interactivity. Hagel’s interpretation of these findings also
recommend greater engagement and knowledge sharing, establishing
relationships that enhance overall performance in the company.
“Success
can increasingly depend upon our availability to participate
effectively in a diverse set of knowledge flows. By participating fully
and socially and applying socialytics to create connected outcomes, we
have the opportunity reimagine relationships and make the invisible
visible.”
Original article
Socialytics: Social Analytics Earns Its Portmanteau
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