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Research Rap: Are Engineers Social? Online They Are!

June 18, 2009

A quick peek into some research on … how active engineers are with social networks. While attending the PROuser conference, I heard Robin Saitz of PTC talk about a study that they commissioned Forrester Research to develop. The goal of the study was to better understand how active PTC’s customers are in social networks. The results surprised me and they didn’t, it turns out that engineers and product developers are very active with social computing!

The Research

Forrester, from what I can see, has taken a significant lead in researching social computing. I hear and read frequently about their research and their books. Robin discusses some of this background and provides links in her blog on this research, “Think Engineers and Web 2.0 Don’t Mix? Think Again.” Forrester has developed some interesting frameworks on social computing, including their “Social Technographics Profile.” I won’t attempt to explain it because it is their framework and they are the experts. What interests me is turning this lens on engineers to see how they interact with social media. That is what the study did. To be honest, I have only seen a few publicly released pieces of the report, so I can’t go into detail about methodology or specifics. But the results I have seen are pretty amazing.

About nine out of ten (specifically 89%) of those surveyed use social media and Web 2.0.

There is clearly more to the research about how they use it, whether they use it personally or professionally, and other factors. Robin did make it clear that they are using social computing for work as well as personal reasons. I am hopeful that PTC will share more of this over time. But this is enough for me. The clear takeaway is that the industry is on the right track with social computing in PLM, or “Social Product Development.”

My Thoughts

Let me keep this short. My biggest concern about the move towards social computing in product development and engineering was whether people would be comfortable participating. I believe the use of social computing is inevitable (see more of my thoughts on social computing in PLM in this post, and related links). But what this tells me is that the adoption of social computing techniques will not be slowed by engineers’ discomfort with the concepts. In fact, the opposite is true. As Robin said in her blog, they are ready.

Why am I surprised? We like to be online. We sit behind our “glowing rectangles” all day - some of us with several monitors going at once. Engineers are comfortable being online and communicating electronically. Maybe some of us like it more than interacting personally, but this is not a psychology blog so I won’t head down that path. After thinking about the results, I can’t remember why I was surprised. What better community to adopt social computing?

Implications for Manufacturers

Developing products is an inherently “social” activity. Collaboration is a best practice. We know these things. Now add that fact that engineers and product developers are comfortable with online communities, social networking, and general “Web 2.o” activities. Social computing is going to be fundamental to the way we go about the business of product development in the not-too-distant future.

So that was a quick peek into some recent research on product developers use of social computing, I hope you found it interesting. Does the research reflect reality? Do you see it differently? Let us know what it looks like from your perspective.

Posted by Jim Brown on June 18, 2009 | Comments (1)

June 18, 2009
In response to: Research Rap: Are Engineers Social? Online They Are!
Stan Przybylinski commented:

I participated in the Forrester survey and, as a Forrester subscriber, can attest to Jim's comments about their focus on social media vs. the other large analyst firms.
As far as readiness, I agree with their results that people use it PERSONALLY. But I think there is a big difference between that and using it professionally. What is the product equivalent of the drunken party picture you did not mean your employer/parents/whoever to see? People get awfully quiet at times when they know others will see it at work. There needs to be a match between the tools and the corporate culture. (Forrester has a report on this too, although not in a product development content.) Will you get shot on the next project if you made disparaging comments on a design in the last one?

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