The InformationWeek -- Blogs
Welcome Guest. | Log In| Register | Membership Benefits

Outsourcing

Topics:   Outsourcing

  • Email this page E-mail this page
  • Print this page Print this page
  • Bookmark and Share
  • icon

When Web 2.0 Met The Flat World


Posted by Paul McDougall, Dec 1, 2006 12:13 PM

The scene is a back alley in Bangalore. Two shadowy figures meet warily. "I'm Thomas," says the man with the mustache. "I'm with a syndicate called Globalization, Inc." The other nods. He's taller, weathered like the Irish hills. "Tim's the name," he says. "I run a gang called the Collaborators. It's time we did a deal."


If you haven't guessed, this is a story about what happens when the collaborative technologies that underpin Web 2.0 intersect with the infrastructure and business models that are driving global outsourcing. The short answer is, "You ain't seen nothing yet" when it comes to the destruction of old business models.

Late Thursday I took in a panel on global business that featured Thomas 'The World Is Flat' Friedman and Tim 'Web 2.0' O'Reilly. It was hard not to come away with the feeling that what we've been thinking about as revolutions in their own rights--offshoring and the participatory Web--are really just evolutions that have set the stage for a more profound change that will occur when those phenomena are combined. We’re set for a "whatever can be done, will be done" future said Friedman.

And there's a lot that can be done when you mix technologies that make online collaboration frictionless with those that enable that collaboration to take place across the globe. O'Reilly said that Web 2.0 is all about "building systems that harness the network effect so that the systems get better the more people use them." Well, suddenly there's a lot "more people" when India, China and other emerging countries that are just starting to get fully wired (thanks to outsourcing) enter the equation. Under this scenario, Web 2.0 becomes WWW 2.0--that is, it's the truly worldwide version.

One company that's begun harnessing the synergies that happen when you get Tim and Thomas in the same room (literally and metaphorically) is news agency Reuters. Using a platform from Brisbane, CA-based Collabnet that engenders Web 2.0-style collaboration among geographically dispersed workers, the company has created an internal software team that unites developers in Beijing, Bangkok and parts of Europe and the U.S.

This is more than just farming out routine coding to the workers in the low-cost countries. (Not to further confuse things, but I'm going to call that model Outsourcing 1.0.). With a robust collaboration platform in place, the company's programmers in Thailand and China are as central to product development as those in the West. Using Wikis, blogs and other Web 2.0 tools supported by Collabnet, Reuters' developers in Asia are as about in the loop as you can get. "We're horizontal flatteners," said Reuters' COO Devin Wenig, who was sitting alongside O'Reilly and Friedman Thursday in New York.

It's my bet that Darwinian evolution will ensure that this kind of Web 2.0-powered globalization will become the business model of the future. Any major company that fails to create an infrastructure and culture through which it can absorb brainpower from the world's best and brightest, regardless of location, will be at an enormous disadvantage to competitors who do just that.

Said Friedman: "If you have a CEO that is outsourcing just to save money, tell me who it is so I can short their stock." On the other hand, expect a bull market for WWW 2.0 companies.

« Post Vista: Microsoft Hints At What Comes Next | Main | What Should Google Do With It's Homepage? »



Sign Up Now
For InformationWeek News Alerts




This is a public forum. United Business Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. United Business Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.

Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of United Business Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in United Business Media's Terms of Service.

Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.




 
 

  1. No Silver Bullet for Parallelism
  2. Think Parallel 2010, Five Years of Multicore
  3. It's All In the Strategy, It's All About the Design


Join The InformationWeek Group On LinkedIn


  1. Verizon Wireless Details Android 2.1 Update For Droid
  2. Google Overhauls Maps For Android
  3. 'Hundreds Of Thousands' Of iPads Ordered So Far
  4. Advantages Of PCI-Based SSDs


  1. 2010 Data Center Trends Report
  2. App-Aware Networks Get Closer To Reality
  3. 10 Steps To Ace A FISMA Audit
  4. CIO Profiles: David Wennergren, Deputy CIO Of The Department Of Defense
  5. Google Releases Free Web Security Scanner
  6. GAO: Multiple Failures Sunk Border Security System

 

  Ars Technica
Boing Boing
Channel 9 Forums
CRN Blogs
Dr.Dobb's Portal: Blogs
Engadget
Gizmodo
GrokLaw
  Lifehacker
Schneier on Security
Slashdot
TechCrunch
Techdirt
Techmeme
Valleywag

  DECEMBER 2008
NOVEMBER 2008
OCTOBER 2008
SEPTEMBER 2008
AUGUST 2008
JULY 2008
JUNE 2008
MAY 2008
  APRIL 2008
MARCH 2008
FEBRUARY 2008
JANUARY 2008
DECEMBER 2007
NOVEMBER 2007
OCTOBER 2007
SEPTEMBER 2007