Remove KM Remove Knowledge Remove Knowledge Management Remove Organizational Learning
article thumbnail

Knowledge Management vs. Knowledge Creation

The Performance Improvement Blog

Is KM dead? John Hagel III, John Seely Brown, and Lang Davison , all with Deloitte’s Center for the Edge,   argue that passive repositories of organizational information (i.e., Knowledge Management) have failed to advance learning. This doesn’t happen in the typical knowledge management system.

article thumbnail

How to speed up Knowledge Transfer  

CrossKnowledge

billion a year by failing to share knowledge” ( Babcock , 2004). A very confronting figure, but actively managing knowledge can help companies increase their chances of success by facilitating decision-making, building learning environments by making learning routine, and stimulating cultural change and innovation.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

The big blindspot

Clark Quinn

I was talking with a colleague over lunch the other day about her company, platform, and organizational learning issues. In orgs, there’s a real tendency to bucket any discussion of learning into ‘training’, and dismiss it. So, KM also is a difficult sell. The problem, then, is where do you come in?

KM 145
article thumbnail

So many thoughts, so little time

Jay Cross

KM Tweeters! Gurteen Knowledge-Log , January 2, 2009. Ten years after - Informal Learning , January 10, 2009. CEO: Just Say No to Layoffs - Knowledge@Wharton , February 10, 2009. Dimensions of Social Groups - Workplace Learning Today , May 18, 2009. The future of e-learning is social learning , April 25, 2009.

article thumbnail

Top 40 eLearning Articles and 5 Hot Topics for Early March

eLearning Learning Posts

Envisioning the Post-LMS Era: The Open Learning Network , March 4, 2010 Educase piece. Social snake oil - Learning and Working on the Web , March 1, 2010 Knowledge management (KM) was a most promising field until it was hijacked by software vendors who were selling IT systems for six figures. Good stuff.