Corporate Intranet / Portal: Weather Forecast, World News - Yes or No?
Analyst: Nicolas Buerki
Issue:
Is there any value to provide non-company related information on the
corporate Intranet or portal home page?
Response
Non-corporate related information on intranets or portals,
such as weather forecast, general stock news, or any other non-business
supporting information can increase business efficiency. Many companies
however, dedicate too much space on their Intranet or portal home page
for it, wasting valuable space to link to business content and tools
that improve employees’ productiveness. Intranet and portal owners
should keep at least two third of the home page body space for links to
support business tasks. This allows employees to start - with one click -
their business tasks. One third of the home page body content can be
devoted to a mix of corporate announcements and non-company related
information. Dedicating more space results in a decreased Intranet or
portal effectiveness.
Our intranet /portal content survey revealed that 73% of
European companies provide financial, corporate and industry news on
their intranet or portal (see PracticeByte, “Intranet /
Portal Content Survey” , Nicolas Bürki).
Every content piece on an Intranet needs to have a business
value. For business related tools and content such as:
online self-service tools (e.g.
expense & time reporting, facility reservation, travel booking,
specific automated business processes, human resource applications) business content (e.g. corporate
templates, guidelines, project information, employee directories) company related news (e.g.
corporate news, competitive news, local news)
business values are straightforward and their return on
investment (ROI) can be quite well estimated or even well calculated.
Determining the business value of non-company related
information such as customizable stock symbols,
weather forecast, time
zones display, world news is challenging to state in monetary value.
If
you apply a cost / benefit matrix such as our cost and business
assessment matrix on such content, the outcome disfavours these content
types (see PracticeByte, “Intranet
/ Portal Content – Use a Business and Cost Matrix to Prioritize Content
and Develop an Effective Linking Strategy” , Nicolas Bürki).
The main driver to provide non-company related content on the
corporate Intranet home page is to motivate employees who:
do not yet use the Intranet (e.g.
resistant Intranet / portal users, which amount based on our consulting
experience up to 10% within a global company) do not need the Intranet on a
daily basis for their business tasks.
For this specific Intranet audience, non-corporate
information proofed to act as an incentive to regularly return to the
corporate Intranet (even if they do not yet use the Intranet for their
work). As they return more frequently, is much more likely that they
start using the Intranet for their work. This tactic works especially
well, if Web designer and information architects have developed an
effective home page (see PracticeByte, “Common
Mistakes: Home Page Design” , Nicolas Bürki).
Especially companies that launch:
their first corporate wide
Intranet or consolidated their Intranets into
one global Intranet,
should seriously consider to provide non-company related
information. This increases employees’ buy-in to regularly return and
use the Intranet in their daily tasks.
Intranet / Portal Content
Recommendations:
Link non-company related
information from the home page in less then one third of the home page
body content space.
Customize non-company related
information based on user profiles.
Allow employees to personalize
news. However, don’t allow employees to personalize all news items. Best
practice is that about two third of news items are customized and can
be personalized by the employees and that one third is defined by your
Intranet steering committee (e.g. dedicated for global, corporate
messages and announcements).