Wikis In Knowledge Management Enabling Effective Collaboration
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Wikis in Knowledge Management: Enabling Effective
Collaboration
Colin MooneyDIT, Kevin Street.
07/11/2009
Topics Introduction
How Knowledge Management Works?
Knowledge Management & Web 2.0
AIB ‘OnePlace’ Wiki Pilot
Conclusions & Future Work
Q&A
Introduction
2008
MSc: Computing (Knowledge Management) at the Dublin Institute of Technology.
Dissertation: “Wiki-Based Collaboration in a large Organisation: An Enabler of Effective Knowledge Management.”
2009
MSc: Operations & Technology Management at Dublin City University Centre for Executive Education.
Dissertation: “Strategic Options for Captive O&T Divisions towards becoming BPO providers.”
How KM Works?What is knowledge Management?
KM
What is Knowledge Management? “... what people know, and how what they know can support business
and organisational objectives. It draws on human competency, intuition, ideas, and motivations.”
“is a collective process of capturing, modelling and organising individuals knowledge into an organisations’ single repository so as to facilitate its reuse and sharing among the employees and other stakeholders for the purposes of new insights.”
“Is creating an environment where people have ease of access to knowledge which makes a difference to their everyday working lives.
“It is not just about the systems we use to make knowledge available. It is how we share that knowledge – the processes and procedures that surround those systems that enable effective knowledge sharing. It’s interacting and thinking outside the box and having the tools to collaborate on these ideas.”
What is Knowledge Management?
Tacit Knowledge Knowledge Sharing Collaboration Knowledge Retention Team Work Productivity Communication Expertise
KM Systems Content
Management Document
Management Knowledge
Discovery Knowledge Bases Web 2.0 Enabling Virtual
Teams ICT Tools
1. PEOPLE PERSPECTIVE
2. TECHNOLOGY PERSPECTIVE
3. Organisational Perspective
KM Cycle
KM
CaptureIdentifyAnalyse
TaxonomyMetadataStructure
Make VisibleConsistentAccessible
PromoteRewardEncourage
Spiral of Knowledge
Tacit to Tacit
Tacit to Explicit
Explicit to Explicit
Explicit to Tacit
Knowledge Networks: Collaboration Knowledge Management is about connecting people
together, therefore collaboration is key to successful knowledge management.
Large Organisations are made up of many networks, with key players who act as information brokers, boundary spanners, central connectors, and peripheral specialists. (Cross & Prusak 2002)
By analysing these networks, we can understand the knowledge flows in an organisation.
Collaboration - Email
Benefits of KM
Avoiding Redundant Effort
Avoiding Repeated Mistakes
Taking Advantage of Existing Expertise
Making Individuals More Effective
Making Teams More Effective
(Garfield 2008)
KM & Web 2.0A New Era
“The world wide web has been instrumental in catalysing the knowledge management movement. Since knowledge and the value of harnessing it have always been with us, it must be the availability of these newer technologies that has stoked the knowledge fire.” (Davenport and Prusak 2000)
Web 2.0 “The internet is evolving from a channel for
content distribution to a platform for collaboration, sharing and innovation.” (Gilroy and Ives 2006)
3 Principles:
1. The Web has become a collaboration space.
2. The Web is now a platform to publish and create.
3. The Web has become an innovation platform, which enables increased idea sharing.
Web 2.0 Features - SLATES Searching – Enabling people to find what they are
looking for.
Linking – Connecting knowledge.
Authoring – Everyone becomes an expert.
Tagging – Recommending and rating content.
Extensions – Plugins, Inter-Connectivity.
Signals – Notification and Syndication (McAfee 2006)
The Wiki Way! Wikis make it easy to keep all your information current
and accurate. Information stored in a wiki is dynamic. With wikis,
anyone can edit a page (depending on their access privileges / role).
Wikis keep your information safe. You can view changes made by different users or rollback to previous versions.
Even as members of your team turn over and new employees are hired, the wiki can be an unbroken repository of knowledge that evolves with your organisation.
Enterprise Wiki Requirements Control & Security
Spaces
Permissions and Roles
Enterprise Integration
LDAP Integration and Single sign-on
Application & Database options
Content Organisation Hierarchy
Attachments: Automatic versioning & WebDAV (Attachments at the desktop) Fast and Accurate
Searching All content (pages, attachments, comments, etc) controlled by user permissions
Full-text attachment searching
Collaboration – Wiki / Portal
Enterprise Wiki PilotOnePlace Wiki Pilot at AIB Bank
OnePlace
Knowledge Management
OnePlace
Director of O&T
General Manager
Executive
Senior Manag
er
Manager
Author
Drivers of SuccessTop-Down From
Senior Management
Bottom-Up from
Grassroots
Laterally through COP’s
The Approach
Engage Senior Management to back the initiative.
Secure exclusive, high profile use-cases for the portal.
Brand the portal to promote its use.
Meet with prospective teams and user groups to gauge reaction.
Drive wiki adoption by becoming a ‘Wiki Champion’.
“Selling KM”: Language is Key To demonstrate the commercial wiki products were now
ready for use in an enterprise environment for business applications.
To encourage collaboration between teams in the “O&T Community” through the use of the “OnePlace” wiki portal.
To position wiki technology as part of the overall suite of collaboration tools in the pilot organisation.
To analyse the reaction and comments of users involved in the pilot.
Wiki Champion
Be a Clear Communicator: Keep things simple ...
Be A Coach: You will need to coach the early users ...
Be Patient: Be patient with your early adopters ...
Be Enthusiastic: People will react to your enthusiasm ...
Be Engaging: Be available to discuss or help ...
Have Fun!: It will help you succeed.
https://oneplace.aib.pri
Conclusions & Future WorkCollaboration, Knowledge Management, Wikis....
Conclusions Knowledge Management is much more about people
and the processes which enable knowledge management than specific technologies.
Simplicity is important, providing knowledge workers with the tools to quickly capture, organise, share and reuse knowledge which is important to their work.
Portals and Web-based tools are enabling and improving virtual collaboration for virtual teams.
Conclusions ctnd.. Success Factors:
Starting with high-value or exclusive knowledge.
Engaging senior ranking users.
Target focused pilot group(s) within each department.
Securing use across a wide variety of departments.
“Social Computing Changes The EnterpriseCollaboration Landscape”
Email: mooneycol@gmail.com Blog: http://www.extacit.blogspot.comLinkedIn: http://ie.linkedin.com/in/colinmooney
References Cross, R. And Prusak L. 2002. The People Who Make Organisations Go - or
Stop. Harvard Business Review. 80 (6) , pp105-112.
Davenport, T. and Prusak, L. 2000. Working Knowledge: How Organisations Manage What They Know. United States of America: Harvard Business Press.
Garfield, S. 2008. Weekly Knowledge Management blog by Stan Garfield. [Online]. Available from: http://h20325.www2.hp.com/blogs/garfield/archive/2008/02/13/5734.html
Gilroy, K. and Ives, B. 2006. Preparing for “intranet 2.0” – how to integrate new communication technology into your intranet IN:Transforming your intranet. United States of America:Melcrum.
Koplowitz, R. Brown, M. And Barnett, J. 2008. “Social Computing Changes The Enterprise Collaboration Landscape”, Forrester Research
McAfee, A. 2006.Enterprise 2.0: The Dawn of Emergent Collaboration. MIT Sloan Management Review. 47 (3), pp21-28.
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