article thumbnail

LearnTrends: Personal Knowledge Management

Experiencing eLearning

These are my live blogged notes from Harold Jarche’s LearnTrends session on Personal Knowledge Management. Big KM = enterprise KM, lots of structure. Little KM = processes used by distributed teams. Personal KM = ad hoc, DIY, cheap/free. My side comments are in italics. Sense-making with PKM.

article thumbnail

Knowledge Management vs. Knowledge Creation

The Performance Improvement Blog

Is KM dead? Knowledge Management) have failed to advance learning. They write: The best KM systems succeeded at capturing and institutionalizing the knowledge of the firm. The folks seeking the knowledge often had trouble finding what they needed.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Gurteen Knowledge: 10 Years in KM

ID Reflections

Gurteen Knowledge: 10 Years in KM Related articles by Zemanta David Gurteen: Isn't KM everyone's job? nickmilton.com) David Gurteen: Harvard Business Review on Knowledge Management (opsregs.com) David Gurteen: Measuring KM: Measures, Targets and Rewards (slideshare.net) David Gurteen: People 2.0:

KM 110
article thumbnail

KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT IS A SIMPLE PROCESS ONCE THE RHETORIC IS REMOVED

Wonderful Brain

The benefits of knowledge management (KM) are a monster value-add to any organization. Some might think large enterprises require significant resources to carry forward a KM initiative. A Flash History of Knowledge Management. Consider this KM for Dummies—No offense intended. I’m not one of them.

article thumbnail

The big blindspot

Clark Quinn

Regardless, it’s easy to get ignored as soon as they hear ‘learning’ So then you can look at another channel to come in, and the obvious alternative is knowledge management (KM). So, KM also is a difficult sell. Tags: strategy. Except that, too, has a real easy knee-jerk rejection.

KM 145
article thumbnail

Learning and KM: Separated at birth?

Jay Cross

T wo years ago, DevLearn and KM World took place simultaneously in downtown San Jose. I sensed that learning and knowledge management were converging and invited bloggers form both sides to get together at the Tidehouse to share viewpoints and guzzle beer. KM World 2009 is next week.

KM 38
article thumbnail

When Knowledge Management Hurts

Jay Cross

Lately, I’ve been thinking we’re ready to pull down the silos housing, respectively, Training, CLO, KM, OD, and Corporate Communications. Strategically re-configuring the CLO+KM+OD+Com function needs to bolster the worthwhile functions and shut down the unworthy ones. Often, marketing would be lumped in, too.