Social tagging systems provide users with the opportunity to employ tags in a communicative manner. To explore the use of tags for communication in these systems, we report results from 33 user interviews and employ the concept of social roles to describe audience-oriented tagging, including roles of community-seeker, community-builder, evangelist, publisher, and team-leader. These roles contribute to our understanding of the motivations and rationales behind social tagging in an international company, and suggest new features and services to support social software in the enterprise.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 citeulike:2854840
%A Thom-Santelli, Jennifer
%A Muller, Michael J.
%A Millen, David R.
%B CHI '08: Proceeding of the twenty-sixth annual SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems
%C New York, NY, USA
%D 2008
%I ACM
%K social-web tagging web\_20
%P 1041--1044
%R 10.1145/1357054.1357215
%T Social tagging roles: publishers, evangelists, leaders
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1357054.1357215
%X Social tagging systems provide users with the opportunity to employ tags in a communicative manner. To explore the use of tags for communication in these systems, we report results from 33 user interviews and employ the concept of social roles to describe audience-oriented tagging, including roles of community-seeker, community-builder, evangelist, publisher, and team-leader. These roles contribute to our understanding of the motivations and rationales behind social tagging in an international company, and suggest new features and services to support social software in the enterprise.
%@ 978-1-60558-011-1
@inproceedings{citeulike:2854840,
abstract = {{Social tagging systems provide users with the opportunity to employ tags in a communicative manner. To explore the use of tags for communication in these systems, we report results from 33 user interviews and employ the concept of social roles to describe audience-oriented tagging, including roles of community-seeker, community-builder, evangelist, publisher, and team-leader. These roles contribute to our understanding of the motivations and rationales behind social tagging in an international company, and suggest new features and services to support social software in the enterprise.}},
added-at = {2018-03-19T12:24:51.000+0100},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
author = {Thom-Santelli, Jennifer and Muller, Michael J. and Millen, David R.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2878b722298c27faa46f04df7beaaf1ac/aho},
booktitle = {CHI '08: Proceeding of the twenty-sixth annual SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems},
citeulike-article-id = {2854840},
citeulike-linkout-0 = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1357054.1357215},
citeulike-linkout-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1357054.1357215},
doi = {10.1145/1357054.1357215},
interhash = {211c5afb67e7f4ddb12cf522de959568},
intrahash = {878b722298c27faa46f04df7beaaf1ac},
isbn = {978-1-60558-011-1},
keywords = {social-web tagging web\_20},
location = {Florence, Italy},
pages = {1041--1044},
posted-at = {2008-06-26 16:56:44},
priority = {2},
publisher = {ACM},
timestamp = {2018-03-19T12:24:51.000+0100},
title = {{Social tagging roles: publishers, evangelists, leaders}},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1357054.1357215},
year = 2008
}