
There’s a good deal of chatter on the web defending the rights of users to work and post anonymously, either with no identification (anonymity) or through aliases (or pseudonymity). I approve of online anonymity on general principle, and believe that it serves the common good far more than it threatens the balance. The possibility of anonymity in closed, proprietary enterprise collaboration platforms, however, is a different story.
For one thing, I find it fairly hard to believe that there can be true anonymity in a private, password-protected enterprise collaboration system. Setting aside the fact that everyone has a distinct style of writing that illuminates their identity to people who are familiar with their work (or can easily compare posts to archived docs), there is always IT department magic that can identify users fairly easily should the need arise. But more than that, choosing to allow anonymity sends a pretty distinct message to your users: “I don’t really care who you are or what you say, as long as the work gets done.” Sure, users might see it differently and glory in the ability to post away and comment and interact under a cloak of obscurity, free from ridicule and peer pressure, but it amounts to the same thing: fomenting discord, disharmony, and dysfunction within an organization.
The arguments for anonymity, as I understand them, go something like this:
1) Some people feel more comfortable being able to voice opinions and concerns without threat of reprisal or mockery.
2) Working in an anonymous capacity can free users to be more creative than otherwise might be possible.
3) Anonymity allows people to explore other aspects of their personalities and become involved in groups or projects that do not necessarily fall under their traditional bailiwick.
I beg to differ. To rebut each of these in turn…
1) If there is an issue an employee feels needs to be addressed that might either make their managers unhappy or offend their peers, an online collaborative community hardly seems like an appropriate venue to air the dirty laundry. If it’s a matter if whistle-blowing there’s the HR department (or the police or other legal aid if it’s a legal matter). The same goes for matters of dissatisfaction with company policies or practices: if it’s something an employee knows will ruffle feathers, then a more personal approach seems appropriate, and in cases where many employees feel the same the company should ideally be strong enough to take constructive criticism and respond diplomatically to it without threatening a person’s career or character.
2) I simply do not believe this one (despite the fact that I found references to this phenomenon in a few articles). I have not yet met the employee who did not want recognition for their own brilliant ideas, and an organization should likewise want to respond to and reward star thinkers for innovative thinking, work, and action.
3) Work is simply not the place to explore one’s alter ego. I am all for personal growth and exploration, but perhaps a different venue might allow for even greater freedom and progress in this arena.
It all goes back to your strategy for your enterprise community, and how you intend your online community to support the organization’s goals. If you feel there are a lot of problems and you want to identify and rectify them through the community forum, but feel like users will only post under the protection of anonymity, then it might make sense for you to provide the option. If your goal is collaboration and teamwork, however, anonymity does not make a great deal of sense as anonymous posts do more to undermine harmony and threaten the other users than it does to foster an environment of honesty and transparency.
I am certainly willing to be overruled here, if there is evidence to refute my argument. Has anyone experimented with anonymity in enterprise collaboration? What were the results? If you could, would you revoke it? Does anyone know of any other compelling reasons why an organization should or should not allow or encourage anonymity or pseudonymity
Blog Written by Courtney Steen, Diagram Designed by David Lee.






