RSS

Discover news, guides, and products for your business


  • Recommend:
  • 0 Comments
  • Print

HiveLive Unveils Corporate Social Networking Service

Startup HiveLive Monday emerged from stealth mode and unveiled its new social networking service designed to connect people and information around what the company calls Hives.

The Hives support activities between or among internal employees, partners and customers and can contain tools for collaboration, discussion, file sharing, voting and other social networking activities.

The company is angling, along with others, to define how Web 2.0 technologies such as social networking can align users and information to fulfill corporate needs for communication, collaboration, business intelligence and customer support.

HiveLive made its announcement at the inaugural DeFrag Conference being held Monday and Tuesday in Denver, Colo. The conference is aimed at highlighting Web-based tools that can pull users and information together. The conference features such companies as Medium, Newsgator, thinkfree, Adaptive Blue, AOL, Dapper, JackBe, Lijit, Near-Time and Siderean.

HiveLive's LiveConnect Community Platform is designed so users can quickly create Hives by assembling pre-built application modules using just mouse clicks. Communities can be built around people, relationships and shared information from document files to YouTube videos. The Hive, for which the company is seeking a patent, is the glue that holds together the social networking tools, community and the information it shares or creates.

HiveLive says its tools can be used as a next-generation CRM platform. The company has created four modules for getting, retaining and supporting customers, and for gathering market intelligence. The four are: LiveLeads, LiveLoyalty, LiveInsights, LiveAnswers.

"We take not a technology approach but a building block approach," says John Kembel, co-founder and CEO of HiveLive. "Our building block is a Hive, which can be infinitely configured to support a limitless range of social activity."

The Hive can support familiar social networking features such as blogging, search or wikis, but also things such as voting, cataloging and archiving of marketing intelligence.

Creators of Hives can control access to features and information or turn those responsibilities over to community members.

For more information about enterprise networking, go to NetworkWorld. Story copyright 2011 Network World Inc. All rights reserved.

Was this article useful? Yes 0 No 0

Comments

Follow us on:
Business News Daily

Get the latest technology news that's important to you and your business, fresh seven days a week.

Featured Webcasts

Free Whitepapers

Software and Services Whitepapers from PCWorld

More whitepapers »

Whitepaper Alerts

Get updates on white papers, case studies, and spotlights on tech products and solutions for your business.