Knowledge Management : Development and discussion around knowledge management and knowledge work
Updated: 9/7/2002; 3:42:31 PM.

 

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Saturday, August 03, 2002

Ray Ozzie's blog
Ray Ozzie's blog. Ray Ozzie has fired up his Radio blog again, at a new location. He asks: ... [Jon's Radio]
 2:37:17 PM Google It!   

Simple-minded knowledge management

KM Systems are to Treacle as Weblogs are to Honey..

It ain't easy to get and order knowledge.

Motivation is the key. Just ask KM pioneer Tomás de Torquemada, the first to combine the rack, thumbscrews, foot roasting and suffocation to get subjects to talk. You'd better have formal authority, claim KM regulars. Respondents from KM mailing lists wrote last month that executive sponsorship, management mandate, and top down support are prerequisite to KM project survival. It's like we're dishing out cod liver oil. You know it's good for you; take it or else.

In creeps bonehead KM.

Weblogs. Stupid. Disorganized. Unstructured. Incomplete. An English comp nightmare. Scattered. Ugly. Mixed with cat, baby, football, and politics stories.

A sticky mess.

But people blog. They just do.

Blogging is its own reward. It's like leaving candy around in kindergarten; they just pick it up, and start buzzing with it. Soon everyone is yelling for more.

Fun. Easy. Fast. Compelling.

Virtuous cycles of personal and collective behavior.  

The best exercise is the one you do. The best KM is the one people practice.

For all I know, klogging may address only ten percent of your KM goals. But try it. It is a critical ten percent. This wedge gets people owning their expertise, sharing it willingly, getting credit, getting feedback, being social about knowledge. How does this compare to any other tools you've ever introduced?

Klogs are a spoonful of honey.

[a klog apart]

Spot on. This is why weblogs are so critical to knowledge management success.

It's also why they'll  fight an uphill battle in most organizations; they don't fit in with anyone's power agenda. Simple and elegant doesn't help someone advance their organizational agenda. It also makes it more difficult to justify lots of technology consulting help.

Implementing k-logs can benefit from outside help. But the help needs to focus on nurturing the development of new work practices and voice. It must be oriented toward organizational behavior not technology features.

The entry costs are minimal. Where k-logs are likely to face the greatest risk is in the transition from new toy to routine practice. There will be a hump that individual k-loggers and organizations will need to get over. That is what will take energy and attention from whoever chooses to champion the idea in the organization.


 2:16:21 PM Google It!   

KM resources from Column Two

Powerpoint presentations. For those of you who didn't make it to my talks this week, you can at least download the Powerpoint [Column Two]

More useful KM resources


 12:02:21 PM Google It!   

Blogs in business

Step-by-step to blogs in business. Blogroots devotes a whole chapter to Using Blogs in Business. This is the most comprehensive discussion I have seen of [Column Two]

I think I caught the Blogroots pointer somewhere else, but can't remember for sure. Easier to post this to be sure. Besides, consider it an example of blogs as a tool for triangulating good stuff.


 12:01:47 PM Google It!   

Community at work
The dws.RadioFAQ - create a Radio FAQ Category and the indefatigable dws wil answer it. (SOURCE:Xian's Radio Free Blogistan)-Wow! Thanks dws! Don't know how you find the energy and time to do this.Radio Tip: The dws.RadioFAQ was born in response to this wish by Ernest Svenson. Responding (perhaps impeded by sleep deprivation) I created the category RadioFAQ on my blog and the following simply suggestion. You can contribute tips, wishes and questions: 1. Create a category on your blog and name it Radio Questions. 2. Email me the url for Radio Questions on your blog. 3. Submit tips, wishes and questions by posting them to your Radio Quesitons. 4. I will ... * subscribe to your stream, * collect the quesitons, * post them to RadioFAQ in a consistent Q&A format, * answer the questions that I can answer. 5. Others can answer by sending me email or posting comments on RadioFAQ items. [Roland Tanglao's Weblog]
 11:57:53 AM Google It!   

Still more Traction
Traction vs. Radio -- A Personal View. (SOURCE:Blunt Force Trauma)-Excellent. Agreed 100%. Need to lower the barriers and bootstrap the culture. If you have the money and the culture, then Traction may be the way to go. But most organizations don't have the money nor the blogging culture so Traction is *not* the way to go. I've said it before: I like Radio a lot as a framework for KM, but there are some things that could be improved. Traction seems to improve on several of these. But Radio is still a lot closer to reaching the mythical Zero Contribution Barrier that I believe is critical to any long-term KM success. Given that you can purchase 4-8 Radio clients for the cost of a single seat for Traction, I have to say it's a clear winner unless you work for the CIA or other information intensive enterprise with highly disciplined information professionals. Even if money isn't an obstacle, if you work in the normal business world, with the regular people I see day-in and day-out at computer terminals across America, you're likely to have better long-term adoption with Radio. [Roland Tanglao's Weblog]
 11:50:11 AM Google It!   


Radio as a Content Management App.

Boldly Going Where No Law Firm Has Gone Before - I have been wrestling with the idea of making my law firm's News & Events page of our website into a Radio Weblog.  The benefits are obvious (ease of posting, ability to add comments, XML feeds etc).  I mentioned this to Rick today in our brief phone conversation.  Rick said "oh, that's easy...just give me 10 minutes."  I'll skip over the whole back and forth with tweaking etc.  Bottom line: look at this page, and compare it to the other one.  Uh, Houston ... we've got liftoff. [Ernie the Attorney]

Yup, it was easy. And I like finding little wins like this. Give credit to the folks behind Radio - it was a simple tweak, an obvious extension of the platform they built. Once Ernie pulls the trigger (by using Radio's "upstreaming" capabilities to upload the page to his firm's web site, instead of his own weblog), he'll be feeding news directly from his blog to his firm's site. Nice. Let's make sure that Ernie's firm gets credit for being the first firm to use a weblogging system to power part of their public web site... this is definitely a sign of things to come.

By the way, this is what the bigshots like Vignette and Interwoven call a content management system. They'll charge you six figures for the privilege of using their system. Radio costs $40.

*shh*

[tins ::: Rick Klau's weblog]
 11:41:33 AM    


Third Day at the Western CIO Summit.

Here is my trip report from my third day at the Western CIO Summit.

The VoiceStream GSM card that I've been testig was a big let down. It dropped connection after about 4 minutes very consistently. At first I though it was the location, but I've tested it in Denver since then with the same result.

[Windley's Enterprise Computing Weblog]
 10:14:49 AM    

KM at scale

More content categorizers..

Information overload.

We cope but it isn't getting much better.

And sometimes finding what we're looking for is like a needle in a field of haystacks. Or a leaf in forest of trees.

Search alone is rarely enough to find what you need in very large data spaces. For example, Google search results and Monster candidate listings often return thousands of close hits. Matching engines efficiently apply criteria to a two-sided search (both employer and worker have demands to be met and supply ways to meet the others' demands).

Taxonomies are another approach. Yahoo! and Open Directory show the value of navigating through clumps and clusters of related sites. But you have your own data to mine. And creating a taxonomy by hand is expensive and slow. 

Enter taxonomy helpers. They do several things:

  • Analyze source files: Suck metadata from your diverse resources (documents, web pages, emails, news feeds, etc.) into a common and comparable format
  • Define clusters: Help define your topics and how the topics are related. This is compute and storage intense, so it is often done bit by bit. Starting with broad categories and refining and splitting them as they fill up.
  • Categorize: Assign each resource into one or more categories in the taxonomy, typically using metadata.
  • Serve: Manage a user experience for surfing or flying through the taxonomy.

Here's a roundup on some shipping categorizers.

First, I noted Quiver, a tool that recommends topics for human review and approval.

Back in April, eContent Magazine wrote a piece on Taxonomy's Role in Content Management.

Taxonomy technology greatly assists the sharing of enterprise knowledge. But don't expect to sit back and watch it go. Experts agree that those searching for an out-of-the-box solution shouldn't hold their breath. Count on adding a little elbow grease, but the results will be worth it.

They mentioned taxonomy vendors:

Autonomy creates and maintains outlines using pattern and cluster analysis. Separate components analyze documents for their content and categorize them to taxonomy branches and leaves.

Inxight Software's Categorizer filters, classifies and delivers content to users and corporate knowledge bases. It scales to millions of documents and thousands of topics in multiple languages. A sister product, MetaText Server elicits structured data from unstructured sources.   

Lotus Discovery Server extracts, analyzes, and categorizes structured and unstructured content to reveal the relationships between the information as well as the people, topics, and user activity in an organization.

Microsoft's SharePoint Portal Server has manual content categorization features.

Semio's SemioTagger autocategorizes content.

Sopheon autocategorizes content from multiple sources, including sources external to the enterprise.

They also pointed out taxonomy visualization sites.

Antarcti.ca uses cartography to map clusters of information spatially.

Inxight VizServer's Star Tree (shown here) and Table Lens help you to meaningfully surf large dataspaces.

TheBrain Technologies
www.thebrain.com

Now eWeek reviews three more products in this space:

eWeek's overview of the comparison findings is worth reading as is their eVal Scorecard: Content Categorization. Note they used very small record sets, the low thousands. Even a small company will organize hundreds of thousands of records, if not millions.

One last note. Standards in this area are few and rarely implemented. These few are RDF (Resource Description Framework), DAML (DARPA Agent Markup Language), and DAML+ OIL (Ontology Inference Layer).

Now where should I categorize this post?

[a klog apart]

An excellent overview and summary. These are critical issues to managing KM problems at scale.


 9:54:38 AM Google It!   


Academic Weblogging. Quote: "K-Logs are a close fit to the academic culture. Here are ten reasons why."

Comment: Read also this response from a recent PhD on why weblogs are not a good idea for certain scientific communities. [Serious Instructional Technology]
 9:18:59 AM    

More on Traction

Traction vs. Radio -- Not Exclusionary. Paul Kulchenko of toolbox makes some good additions to my quick-and-dirty overview "Radio vs. [Blunt Force Trauma]

More on Traction and an interesting new weblog to boot. I'm going to be visiting the folks at Traction on Monday, so I should have something to add to the conversation sometime next week.


 8:56:21 AM Google It!   


© Copyright 2002 Jim McGee.



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