Monday, February 23, 2009

Lights Out

Thanks for commenting, reading and stopping by.

With the launch of my new Compliance Building blog, I have decided to stopped blogging here at KM Space. Since Blogger is free, I will keep the site up. Feel free to keep coming back and using the content here.


















Image by Hashc0de under Creative Commons.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Redirected Feed

Since I still have some posts on my new Compliance Building blog about social networking, enterprise 2.0, web 2.0 and knowledge management, I am going to try to push that information out in a separate RSS feed for those of you interested in those areas.

I switch the Feedburner feed from KM Space to a limited feed from Compliance Building. If you get this feed through feedburner, you should not have to do anything. Otherwise you can subscribe here: http://feeds2.feedburner.com/kmspace.

You should have received the post on the The Ben Bernanke Interchange. If not, click below one of the icons below.

I heart FeedBurner
Add to Google Reader or Homepage
Subscribe in NewsGator Online
Subscribe to KM Space (now from Compliance Building)

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

My New Blog: Compliance Building

With my move from Goodwin Procter to be Chief Compliance Officer at a private equity real estate company, I have been using a blog to keep my notes. I have just open up this blog to the public. You can see what I have been up to at Compliance Building.








It was an interesting experience using a blog as a learning tool. The blog was a very convenient way to link to relevant articles, cases, statutes and regulations that play a role in my job.

If I were in law school now, I would use a blog to keep me notes. The blog platform is just a great way to keep information organized and retrievable. The blog posts are arranged in chronological order, making them easy to find based on date. I use the categories to keep the posts organized by topic. I use the tags to organize the posts around sub-topic, author and publication. Pages provide an overview, with easy editing.

I don't expect that too many of you will be interested in compliance and business ethics. To spare my readers (that's you) I started a new blog rather than putting all of the new information here. By using a new blog, I could also keep it private until I was ready (and the new company) was ready for it to be public.

I also really like the WordPress blogging platform. It offers much more funtionality and flexibility than Blogger.

Please take a look at Compliance Building. If it interests you, please keep going back or subscribe to the blog feed. If it interests anyone at your firm or anyone you know, feel free to pass along the link.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Web 2.0 - Leveraging New Media to Maximize Your Securities & Compliance Practice


On February 17, 2009, Securities Docket is sponsoring a webcast that will look at the numerous ways that securities and compliance counsel and professionals can now use web 2.0 to promote, market, and network themselves, their practices and their firms as never before.

Please join Bruce Carton, Editor of Securities Docket, and me for a webcast that will discuss the best new tools and strategies available to securities and compliance counsel and professionals, including:
  • RSS;
  • Social Media, such as Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook;
  • Blogs;
  • and much more.
To attend this webcast scheduled for February 17, at 2 pm Eastern, please sign up on the Securities Docket website.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Thank You

As things continue to wind down here at KM Space, I wanted to say THANK YOU to many of the people who contributed to this experience.

Luis Suarez. Besides his great thoughts at ELSUA.net, Luis also gave me a pass to the 2007 Enterprise 2.0 conference in Boston. What I learned there blew my mind on the possibilities of combining knowledge management and enterprise 2.0. This blog has continued on that path ever since.

Matthew Hodgson a/k/a Magia3e for making the first comment on my Obstacles to Enterprise 2.0 - Perception of Blogs post. It was great to hear that first voice back from the darkness.

David Hobbie of Caselines for listening to my rants and jumping on the KM 2.0 bandwagon with me.

Ron Friedmann - The first legal KM blogger I knew

Joy London - for being the second.

Steve Matthews - for bestowing KM Space with a 2007 CLawbie and a 2008 CLawBie

Dennis Kennedy - for bestowing KM Space with a 2007 Blawggie

Jack Vinson - for sharing how to mix web 2.0 and knowledge management

Jessica Lipnack - for emphasizing the people side of things and inviting me to speak at Enterprise 2.0 2008.

Trudy Ernst - for supporting this blogging habit while I was at Goodwin Procter.


All of you Commenters over the past two years:

Sorry if I missed any other commenters. Blogger does not make it easy to find out who made comments.

And a special thanks to The Wife for putting up with my blogging habits.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Professionals and Web 2.0

CCH gathered some great information on "professionals" using Web 2.0: Professionals and Web 2.0 (.pdf).

They interviewed 229 professionals within organizations across the Asia-Pacific region. The report addresses the use of wikis, blogs, social networks, and RSS in Australia, New Zealand and Asia. The respondents consisted of professionals in tax & accounting, legal, HR and business. Most of them were employed by orgainzation with over 200 employees. the report indicates taht web 2.0 is becoming a way for you to start research and keep up with developments in your industry.
Web 2.0 is rapidly changing the landscape of professional information, with 43.7% of professionals using Web 2.0 tools at least once a week. While results show there is some reluctance for many organisations to adopt Web 2.0 before value can be established, a high percentage of ad-hoc use (at least 25.8%) is occurring due to the accessibility and functionality of the tools. This suggests Web 2.0 applications have gained a significant share of time spent online. We are increasingly using these tools to search, communicate and contribute to the web in both a personal and professional context.
Some highlights from the report:
  • 33% of the respondents in the legal field said they used a wiki for professional purposes at least once a week.
  • 35% of the respondents in the legal field use a blog for professional use at least once a week.
  • 20% of the respondents in the legal field use a social network for professional use at least once a week.
Sure, you can look at the numbers and say that they have not reached early adoption. But, two years ago these numbers would probably be close to zero. I predict we will see these numbers crossing into the majority within two years.

Thanks to James Mullan of the Running Librarian for pointing out the report.