DoubleDutch – GeoSocial Apps for Enterprises
October 19, 2010
As of January, 2012, DoubleDutch has discontinued the partnership with Ning.
DoubleDutch no longer makes Ning community mobile apps.
DoubleDutch is focused entirely on mobile, cloud-based, geosocial applications for events and enterprise workgroups. These applications are designed to engage employees, capture real-time data, and unlock valuable enterprise insight. Products include Flock (white-label mobile conference/event app) and Hive (mobile CRM engagement app).
DoubleDutch mobile apps empower users to seamlessly share their work activities (like visiting a customer, attending a keynote presentation, making a sales call, etc) on an interactive mobile platform. This engagement supercharges existing enterprise systems (like event management systems, customer relationship management systems, etc) and gathers more accurate, real-time data. This data unlocks valuable insight into your event, sales team, or other enterprise workgroup.
In use by some of the world’s most innovative organizations, including HP, ad:Tech, Interop, IDG, Cisco Systems, Adobe, RightNow Technologies, UBM, and Lowe’s, DoubleDutch helps companies tap into mobile, social functionality to maximize engagement, boost productivity and create radical transparency across every line of business.
To learn more about our enterprise products, please feel free to contact us.

Mark,Thanks for a very tftughohul comment.Implementation steps is something that is coming in the future. If you follow my convoluted reasoning, first comes definitions, then the strategy, then the implementation. I am not sure I want to tackle that as a series, but I probably will do something similar if you go back in time, I did a series on a methodology for experience management, so it may just be something akin to updating that to incorporate some of these new concepts. Alas, not much changes from CRM to CEM to SCRM I agree with your comments on individuals and their power, but am not sure I missed the social object communities. We may not call it the same, but somewhere in between an impromptu community and an ideation community is covered. Although, I will give you this, I think it is a cool idea and a good way for a company to earn trust from customers allow them to create communities (my impromptu style, your SOC) and interact with them that way.There was a time oh, like 3-4 months ago when I would have even made the case that those were the only community interactions an organization needed to worry about I am beginning to see two layers or two types of interactions to worry about: individual and community. more on that coming up soon.I appreciate your 2 cents and will certainly continue to think of the SOC you mention, may just bring it into the fold in future installments.Thanks for the read!