Service Networking: Difference between revisions

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==Description==


=Description=
From Wikipedia:
 
From the Wikipedia:


"A service network is a collection of people and information brought together on the internet to provide a specific service or achieve a common business objective. It is an evolving extension of service systems and applies Enterprise 2.0 technologies, also known as enterprise social software, to enable corporations to leverage the advances of the consumer internet for the benefit of business.
"A service network is a collection of people and information brought together on the internet to provide a specific service or achieve a common business objective. It is an evolving extension of service systems and applies Enterprise 2.0 technologies, also known as enterprise social software, to enable corporations to leverage the advances of the consumer internet for the benefit of business.
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(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_network)
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_network)


=Example=
==Example==


perhaps intepreted in a different way, see: [[Task Rabbit]], which considers itself a service network
perhaps intepreted in a different way, see: [[Task Rabbit]], which considers itself a service network
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[[Category:Labor]]
[[Category:Labor]]


[[Category;Urbanism]]
[[Category:Urbanism]]


[[Category:P2P Infrastructure]]
[[Category:P2P Infrastructure]]


[[Category:Encyclopedia]]
[[Category:Encyclopedia]]

Latest revision as of 09:49, 18 July 2019

Description

From Wikipedia:

"A service network is a collection of people and information brought together on the internet to provide a specific service or achieve a common business objective. It is an evolving extension of service systems and applies Enterprise 2.0 technologies, also known as enterprise social software, to enable corporations to leverage the advances of the consumer internet for the benefit of business.

A service network is designed to benefit from the wisdom of crowds and a human's natural tendency and desire to share information, collaborate, and self organize into communities of common interests and objectives. In business, the value of collaboration is clearly recognized, but the ability is often hampered by rigid organizational boundaries and fragmented information systems. A service network enables businesses to realize the benefits of mass collaboration despite the constraints of modern organizational structures and systems.

The term service network is increasingly being used within the context of service innovation initiatives that span academia, business, and government." (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_network)

Example

perhaps intepreted in a different way, see: Task Rabbit, which considers itself a service network