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Strategic mapping for networks
published on: 2010-03-17 | written by: ninaderoo | 0 comments.
Strategic mapping for networks - Blog by Steve Waddell
We can easily be overwhelmed by the complexity of large networks where there are many different organizations and people involved. Clearly “seeing” relationships between organizations, people, and key concepts is important for successful network strategies.
To vastly enhance and speed understanding of these relationships, I’ve worked with various forms of “mapping”. Network maps are diagrams of lines or arrows (representing connections) and nodes (representing individuals, organizations, ideas) that can visually communicate tremendous amounts of information much more easily than volumes of text. Here are some approaches I’ve found useful:
Web crawls
This approach maps and analyzes relationships between URLs. This gives a picture of how organizations and issues are connected virtually that is increasingly important in any strategy. Since URLs are usually associated with organizations, crawls quickly identify organizations working in a particular issue system. The crawls maps links on one web-site to another webs-site.
Example: Working with a tool developed at the University of Amsterdam, we did crawls to identify networks in the global finance system for the Global Finance Initiative in order to identify key organizations and people to develop a change strategy. Map 1 is of NGOs engaged in the global finance debate; it suggests that surprisingly they do not have well defined relationships with perhaps the most influential players in global finance, including the Bank for International Settlements and the Financial Stability Board.

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