Build a Social Network for Your Business
Upgrade from the break-room bulletin board and one-way customer e-mail lists--your business can take advantage of its own Facebook-like social network. You might try Facebook itself, of course, but the clash of business and personal communications could leave your vacation photos mingling with company news, and could lead to a lot of goofing off on company time. Instead, turn to a social network platform to make your own distinct site. Many services, including Grou.ps and SocialGO, offer functionality similar to that of Facebook; but in this tutorial I'll focus on Ning, which has been established for a few years and offers customization tools that can make your site behave almost any way you want.
Wed, October 07, 2009
PC World — Upgrade from the break-room bulletin board and one-way customer e-mail lists--your business can take advantage of its own Facebook-like social network. You might try Facebook itself, of course, but the clash of business and personal communications could leave your vacation photos mingling with company news, and could lead to a lot of goofing off on company time. Instead, turn to a social network platform to make your own distinct site. Many services, including Grou.ps and SocialGO, offer functionality similar to that of Facebook; but in this tutorial I'll focus on Ning, which has been established for a few years and offers customization tools that can make your site behave almost any way you want.
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Within your company, you could rely on a Ning social network to maintain schedules for anything from managing workgroup projects to organizing an office softball team. Calendar tools, blog-style posts, comments, and other systems could help connect people. And you could post photos and videos to recap events.
You could also use Ning to collaborate internally, updating everyone on a project's status, leaving ideas about new goals, recapping meetings, and otherwise keeping the office in sync. Best of all, nearly anyone can run the setup process, so you won't have to waste tech or design resources by getting those staffers involved.
But Ning is especially powerful for building a space in which to interact with customers. Think of the service as a companion to your company's Web presence. Your Ning social network can live at its own URL, as in mycompany.ning.com, or you can integrate it as a subdomain of your site, as in community.mycompany.com.
Build a Social Network
Ning's core functionality is free; you can create a site with a mycompany.ning.com URL in minutes. Such sites should be fine for most intra-office situations. To have Ning appear at a custom URL and to remove some of the site's branding and ads, however, you need to pay a monthly fee.
Whether you opt for the free basic service or choose premium options, the setup process is the same. After building a free community site, you can select premium options. Removing Ning's ads costs $25 per month (you could replace them with your own, if you want to); using a custom domain name, such as community.mycompany.com, is $5 a month; and removing all Ning branding from your site costs $25 each month. A free account includes 10GB of storage and 100GB of bandwidth per month, but you can pay $10 a month to double both amounts. (And each $10 you pay after that adds another 10GB and 100GB per month.)


