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553 Articles match "Blog","KM"
The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Monday, March 15, 2010
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Monday, March 15, 2010
I’m sure that during the course of these first three months of the year you may have read already a few dozens of articles, blog posts, news items, etc. Either way, the reason why I am putting together this blog post today is because, as I have mentioned a couple of days back in another entry, last week I spent a few days on the road while participating on the Lotusphere Comes To You events in both Madrid and Barcelona and, once again, I experienced what it is like being disconnected for a good chunk of the week without remedy. etc. stating that this is it!
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Monday, March 15, 2010
The KM videos in our competition have been coming in slowly, so slowly that we almost gave up! But there have been a few interesting submissions, and so we’ve decided to extend the deadline to March 31st̷
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The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Wednesday, April 1, 2009
I think it’s getting us closer to the KM productivity (sense-making) aim that knowledge sharing and knowledge transfer has always aspired to, which is:
clarifying by reading and writing comments, and trackback/linkback blog posts
Google Blog Search (also Technorati , Backtype ) is similar to PageRank
- Social search is resurfacing as a hot topic of late , due to how effective Twitter has become in helping you find information, and how it is close to how we source information in the offline world (via our network). Twitter is being differentiated by being
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Tuesday, January 12, 2010
A little while ago I posted on how Communities of Practice (CoPs) can act as a sense-making model for KM . Which means the contents of this post is more focused on the online element of KM. The big difference here to past KM efforts is that it’s focus is on interactions, conversations and context (Just-in-time), rather than codifying and warehousing objects and then people seeking those objects (Just-in-case).
Here’s a direct link to the model .
NOTE: I used CoPs as a model as that’s what we are doing at work, but obviously this is a similar concept when
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Monday, December 21, 2009
One of the Forum’s members (who’s now left in high dudgeon) was testifying to the utility of NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming) in KM, which met with a notable lack of sympathy and a reading list from Dave Snowden on why NLP is a pseudoscience. Both helped me clarify for myself the characteristics and dangers of “magical thinking” in knowledge management, which I’ve blogged and spoken about before
There was a bit of a spat on the actKM forum over the past week or so. On that list was Barry Beyerstein’s wonderful paper “ Distinguishing
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Thursday, January 28, 2010
Mark’s post also covers some blog discussion on the difference between sharing and communication, which I may add to in another post.
Nick Milton says in a blog post:
"…there is no point in creating a culture of sharing, if you have no culture of re-use. This happens a lot in our tips and tricks blogs at work.
Mark Gould has a great post which has picked up on a thread in one of the LinkedIn forums on the "Pulling" and "Pushing" of information. Pull is a far more powerful driver for Knowledge Management than Push, and I would
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Monday, May 4, 2009
OK, it’s been a bit of a video tinkering period, partly stimulated by the launch of some new public workshops on knowledge audits, taxonomy development and this month, building a KM strategy. So here’s an introduction to some of our most important lessons learned over the years in how to approach a KM strategy exercise with some chance of it moving off the page of the consultant’s report and into some form of reality. Not to mention a new version of iMovie with some cool effects. Enjoy!
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Saturday, April 11, 2009
I think the deployment of our CoPs is a mix of a KM demand and supply strategy . Anyway, the KM Demand strategy is more at the micro-level. NOTE : Supply-based KM (predictability KM) can also relate to capture, codify, and information into a structured database; over the demand-style KM (adaptable/sense-making KM) which is more about creation than shelving, where efforts are more involved in creating conditions for people to share amongst each other, and successful transfer of know-how.
Our Communities of Practice at work are currently in the development stage.
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Sunday, November 1, 2009
My aim was to contrast traditional KM of conscripting best practices, with a new approach based on sensemaking pkm and networks …more appropriate tools, design for emergence and ambient awareness , and amplifying how we get things done offline…basically a more cognitive science approach over management science.
A great deal of my visual concept is based on the work of Dave Snowden , who looks at KM from a more anthropological, human behaviour perspective…a lot of his work deals with the notion of “context”, and I guess this is coupled with “intrinsic”
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Tuesday, October 13, 2009
And Social Computing doesn’t want to do anything with Knowledge Management because all of the "management" piece of knowledge and that willingness from KM to control both the flow of information and knowledge within an organisation.
Each of them placing the focus on the own key areas: KM on the processes and tools and Social Computing on the people themselves.
I know that for a good number of years Social Computing and Knowledge Management have been walking different paths. Even more, I would probably be able to state that all along they haven’t gotten on
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Wednesday, January 7, 2009
My previous post was a digest of what I think are the best parts of Chuck’s blog where he is documenting his experience, called A Journey in Social Media . Well now he has summarized all those blog posts into a white paper of the same name.
Need I say more…our implementation is under KM, which I feel is OK, as the KM team has always been about sense-making.
"Our belief was that our primary A while back I posted on Chuck Hollis’s journey in introducing Communities of Practice to EMC. Even though his social media journey has started
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Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Because there's no mention of blogs, wikis, social networks, Enterprise 2.0 or the dreaded "KM Architecture" (there might be one or more - but it is not an IT architecture in the traditional sense - I would consider a patterns-based argument for KM though). Technology Many of the failures of the KM hype of the nineties were a result of the exuberant belief that KM was a tooling problem (e.g., Excellent (the post below).
Why?
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