Until the late spring of 2007, discussion about KM 2.0 had raised a number of issues and themes including: — KM 2.0 is KM which utilizes Web/Enterprise 2.0 tools to enable greater connectivity and self organization in one’s enterprise; — Before the introduction of Web/Enterprise 2.0 tools KM had been a command-and-control-oriented approach, but KM […]
Entries Tagged as 'Knowledge Integration'
KM 2.0 and Knowledge Management: Part Three, More Skepticism and Okimoto’s Conceptualization
August 6th, 2008 · Comments Off on KM 2.0 and Knowledge Management: Part Three, More Skepticism and Okimoto’s Conceptualization
Tags: Complexity · KM 2.0 · KM Software Tools · Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
KM 2.0 and Knowledge Management: Part Two, “Buzz” and Some Skepticism
August 3rd, 2008 · Comments Off on KM 2.0 and Knowledge Management: Part Two, “Buzz” and Some Skepticism
During 2007, the KM 2.0 meme began to spread more rapidly, but as it spread, some observers began to express skepticism about the identification of web 2.0 tools and a fundamentally new sort of KM. One sort of skepticism was expressed by David Weinberger in an article posted at KM World on February 1. David […]
Tags: Complexity · KM 2.0 · KM Software Tools · Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Management · Personal KM
KM 2.0 and Knowledge Management: Part One, Early KM 2.0
August 1st, 2008 · 2 Comments
For about three years now, the meme of “KM 2.0” has been circulating. It began with the introduction of the label “Web 2.0” to describe a collection of IT applications called social software. These applications first included blogs, wikis, social network analysis, social networking applications, collaborative content tagging, folksonomies, community support/collaboration software, and project collaboration […]
Tags: Complexity · KM 2.0 · KM Software Tools · Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Management · Personal KM
National Governmental Knowledge Management: A Guest Reply By Richard Vines
July 26th, 2008 · 1 Comment
I think your twin posts on knowledge management and its possible relevance to national governments raise some very interesting and creative ideas that warrant a serious pause for thought. I have just been in the United States and revisited the Washington Mall, and the axes of the Mall including the White House, the Congress and […]
Tags: Complexity · Epistemology/Ontology/Value Theory · KM Techniques · Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
National Governmental Knowledge Management: KM, Adaptation, and Complexity: Part Two
July 24th, 2008 · 8 Comments
The Organization of Knowledge Management in National Governments (continued) A second possible answer to the question of how to organize KM in National Governments is to organize it in a decentralized way across national governmental agencies and inter-agency teams. Each Governmental unit, or inter-agency group, would have some KM personnel and would be responsible for […]
Tags: Complexity · Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
National Governmental Knowledge Management: KM, Adaptation, and Complexity: Part One
July 23rd, 2008 · 6 Comments
National Governmental Knowledge Management The primary focus of Knowledge Management, thus far, has been on organizations, communities, and teams, with some emphasis on Personal Knowledge Management (PKM), and “Knowledge Cities.” Knowledge Management in Government has primarily continued the organizational focus of most work in the field. It is agency-based and project-focused, and has had little […]
Tags: Complexity · KM Techniques · Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
Problems of Shifting from KM to “Knowledge Sharing”
July 16th, 2008 · 4 Comments
The over-riding problem with shifting from a “KM” orientation to a “knowledge sharing” one, is that the words don’t mean the same thing, and focusing on one or the other may well lead to different policies, programs, and interventions. Put another way, since “Knowledge Sharing” and Knowledge Management are not the same thing, it’s possible […]
Tags: Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
Knowledge Sharing Is Not As Transparent As It Seems
July 15th, 2008 · Comments Off on Knowledge Sharing Is Not As Transparent As It Seems
I think that most, if not all, current knowledge sharing programs do not distinguish those knowledge claims that are just information, from those knowledge claims that are knowledge, because they don’t know how to do so. And I also think that the consequence of this is that most, if not all, current knowledge sharing programs, […]
Tags: KM Techniques · Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Management
Knowledge Sharing and the World Bank
July 14th, 2008 · 2 Comments
IBM was not the first large organization to decide that “knowledge sharing” is an easier sell than “KM.” The World Bank preceded IBM in this move by more than a decade, long before the advent of Web 2.0 or Enterprise 2.0. The Bank decided to use”knowledge sharing” as the orienting idea in their knowledge-related program […]
Tags: KM 2.0 · KM Software Tools · Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
“Knowledge Sharing:” IBM’s Change In Philosophy
July 14th, 2008 · Comments Off on “Knowledge Sharing:” IBM’s Change In Philosophy
IBM has placed Knowledge Sharing in the news again, by announcing that it has “philosophically repositioned” its Knowledge Management practice around Knowledge Sharing. According to IBM’s Chris Cooper, “Management suggests control: control of process and control of environment. The sharing tag is quite important to us.” Of course, “Management” suggests control, these days, only to […]
Tags: KM 2.0 · KM Techniques · Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Management