Knowledge Management: Can it Exist in a Law Office? Discusses how knowledge management could be applied in law offices and what needs to happen for knowledge management to occur. By Nina Platt; published in LLRX.com.
Publications in Knowledge Management Articles by Dick Stenmark in knowledge management, Internet usage, and information awareness. Features abstracts and full text versions available for download.
The Duality of Knowledge Essay that argues that KM approaches should stress human interaction rather than simply codifying and storing knowledge. By Paul M. Hildreth and Chris Kimble, published in Information Research.
What is Knowledge and Can It be Managed? By Craig S. Mullins - Platinum technology, inc. Knowledge management is over-hyped and misunderstood. It is not a technology, but an amalgamation of strategy, technology, and people.
The Knowledge Factor Companies in the Information Age need to systematically manage what they know. By Perry Glasser, in CIO Magazine.
Knowledge Management: Are We Missing Something? Essay makes the distinction between hard and soft knowledge within an organisation and argues that much of what is called Knowledge Management emphasises the capture-codification-storage of such knowledge.
Knowledge Management: Making Sense of an Oxymoron David Skyrme Associates. Can knowledge be managed? The words management and knowledge at first sight appear uneasy bedfellows. Knowledge is largely cognitive and highly personal, while management involves organisational processes.
What is Knowledge Management (KM)? KM is a newly emerging, interdisciplinary business model dealing with all aspects of knowledge within the context of the firm, including knowledge creation, codification, sharing, and how these activities promote learning and innovation.
Developing a Knowledge Strategy A framework for making the link between knowledge and strategy. Written by Michael H. Zack, College of Business Administration, Northeastern University; published in California Management Review , Vol. 41, No. 3.
Knowledge Management, Round Two Thomas H. Davenport. The good news is that the knowledge management movement is more than the fad some had predicted. The question now is where is it headed? CIO Magazine.
Heralding ICT-enabled Knowledge Societies Provides a two-way global perspective on knowledge and the information rich-poor. By Vikas Nath, Inlaks Scholar, London School of Economics.
Making Knowledge Management Work With Service Management Discusses how knowledge management in the IT world has always suffered from a lack of context that KM is clearly designed to fix and suggests that service management may be the answer. By Michael Pastore.