Sharon O'Dea

digital communication and collaboration

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talk.gateway

Passing the baton

November 27, 2009November 29, 2009 / Sharon O'Dea / 1 Comment

Has it really been a month since I last wrote a proper blog post? What a busy month it’s been, too.

I’m moving on from my current job, taking a break before starting a new role in January.

This is my final day, so after the frantic period of activity running up to this week’s staff awards event I’ve settled down to write my handover notes.

Distilling two years’ work into a few pages is proving quite difficult. What’s struck me most is the frequency with which I’ve suggested my replacement “speak to so-and-so” to get a particular task done.

My email account will be closed and eventually deleted after I leave. That means the many detailed, lengthy and sometimes just plain weird discussions I’ve had with colleagues will vanish into the ether, just as the results of face-to-face conversations I’ve had will leave when I do.

This all underscores the value of human memory. I had no handover notes at all when I started here, so learning how to get even simple tasks done was a long and complicated process.

As people leave their employers they take with them detailed knowledge of people and processes, built up over years or even decades. While replacement staff may be easier to find in the current job market, their knowledge of the organisation will take much longer to develop.

Employers, as well as new employees, would benefit from finding improved ways to capture this organisational memory.

Internal social networking can enable that inter-generational transfer of knowledge between new employees and old-timers.

It needn’t be technologically complex, though. At an event I attended earlier this year, Euan Semple spoke about talk.gateway, the bulletin board he introduced at the BBC.

“Staff members shared more information outside the organisation and with people in other countries than they did with each other. We had to give them an infrastructure or mechanism to talk to each other online,” he says. “I wanted to introduce social computing tools on the intranet and started with a bulletin board.”

talk.gateway allowed staff to ask questions, find solutions and connect with each other. Crucially, though, it’s archived and searchable, which means discussions can be viewed even after the people involved in it have moved on.

More and more organisations are introducing internal Facebook-style social networking, including some in the public sector. Carl Haggerty’s innovative internal social networking pilot in Devon Country Council led to a sharp decrease in helpdesk calls, as employees solve problems by using each other’s knowledge.

Networks like this also enable newer employees to ask questions of and learn from longer-serving ones, helping people settle in and get up to speed with the job.

My (as yet unappointed) successor will have to make do with twelve pages detailing my key processes and projects. I wish them well, and look forward to the next challenge – watch this space!

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Digital Communications at Work: Designing channels for employee engagement and experience will be published by Kogan Page in July 2026

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© 2009-2025 Sharon O'Dea

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LinkedIn might be making us professionally deranged. Not in an obvious way - more like low-grade ambient derangement. Centuries-old Berber houses, sun-baked walls, faded doors, and a masterclass in architectural common sense. Climate-shaped design, history etched into every surface, and impeccable doorstep socialising. Tunisia has a way of making time feel both negotiable and entirely beside the point. Next stop on our North African adventure: Houmt Souk, Djerba. Where the Sahara meets the Mediterranean. Medinas, markets, minarets. And with almost everything closed for Ramadan, a touch of dystopia. Just how I like it. Visited the picturesque village of Sidi Bou Saïd. Famous for its iconic blue and white houses. But it turns out if you visit straight after a landslide, and on day of 2 of Ramadan, you get the place to yourself. 🇹🇳 I booked a trip to Tunis and, because one can never have too many obsessions, turned it into a full revision programme on the Punic Wars. In the middle of neon-soaked Akihabara sits Kanda Myojin — a 1,300-year-old shrine where, among other things, you can have your tech business blessed. A self-indulgent carousel of us two, for Valentines Day. Me 🤝 the grab machine 🤝 several minutes of intense negotiation 🤝 coaching from @rawkzyrawks Today is Holocaust Memorial Day.
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