]> ia/ - Knowledge management http://iaslash.org/taxonomy/term/46/0 The discipline and practice of information management concerned with knowledge communication and access, especially within the context of corporate or other organized bodies. en Enterprise Metadata Blog http://iaslash.org/node/7671 <p><a href="http://www.rtodd.com/blog.htm">Enterprise Metadata Blog by R. Todd Stephens</a></p> <p>Todd has got a nice mix of enterprise metadata from both theory and practice since he did his dissertation at the same as working at Bell South on real enterprise metadata needs. He has presented at several conferences involving both the more techie stuff at DAMA International as well as Dublin Core and other related conferences. I believe this intesection of the techie/practical world and the theory/academic world gives us a good mix of the challenges we face at managing information systems. He's definitely in the mix of things I'd like to be involved. It will be interesting to see where his blog goes in sharing his experiences. Many of his previous presentations and handouts are also available on his site.</p> Tue, 17 May 2005 13:38:29 -0700 Formal knowledge management ontology: Conduct, activities, resources, and influences http://iaslash.org/node/7578 <p>This article by CW Holsapple and KD Joshi describes an ontology for knowledge management. The abstract below is taken from the <span class="caps">JASIST TOC </span>for <a href="http://www.asis.org/Publications/JASIS/vol55n07.html">Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology <span class="caps">V55,</span> 7, <span class="caps">MAY,</span> 2004, p593-612</a>.</p> <blockquote><p>This article describes a collaboratively engineered general-purpose knowledge management (KM) ontology that can be used by practitioners, researchers, and educators. The ontology is formally characterized in terms of nearly one hundred definitions and axioms that evolved from a Delphi-like process involving a diverse panel of over 30 KM practitioners and researchers. The ontology identifies and relates knowledge manipulation activities that an entity (e.g., an organization) can perform to operate on knowledge resources. It introduces a taxonomy for these resources, which indicates classes of knowledge that may be stored, embedded, and/or represented in an entity. It recognizes factors that influence the conduct of KM both within and across KM episodes. The Delphi panelists judge the ontology favorably overall: its ability to unify KM concepts, its comprehensiveness, and utility. Moreover, various implications of the ontology for the KM field are examined as indicators of its utility for practitioners, educators, and researchers.</p></blockquote> Tue, 18 May 2004 06:14:14 -0700 A roadmap for enterprise weblog services http://iaslash.org/node/7546 <p>I recently presented <a href="http://urlgreyhot.com/drupal/node/view/1481">a roadmap for providing enterprise information services related to weblogs (k-logs)</a>. This is in the realm of what I think Lou calls "Guerrilla IA" in his Enterprise Information Architecture talks. The presentation, given at Computers in Libraries, is aimed at Library/Information Services organizations in corporations, but is applicable elsewhere. It's really an untested discussion starter that proposes near term goals for supporting individuals doing bottom-up knowledge creation. It also discusses a mode of progress that aims at integration of many types of enterprise information in the long term. I'd be interested in getting feedback on these ideas, especially comments that point out weaknesses.</p> Fri, 12 Mar 2004 18:06:53 -0800 Information Work Productivity Forum Notes http://iaslash.org/node/7533 <p>I attended the Information Work Productivity Forum and <a href="http://urlgreyhot.com/drupal/node/view/1413">posted some thoughts (lengthy notes) about the presentations</a>. The day consisted of sponsors of the council and some academics presenting their thoughts on Information Work productivity. A few speakers took the opportunity to talk about their products, which was unfortunate, but some individuals stayed on topic and discussed the real issues related to measuring information work productivity at a high level.</p> Fri, 06 Feb 2004 08:22:21 -0800 Information Work Productivity Council http://iaslash.org/node/7527 <p>The <a href="http://www.iwproductivity.org/">Information Work Productivity Council</a> are an independent group of companies and academics that have joined together to study the issue of information work productivity and profitability.</p> <blockquote><p><a href="http://www.iwproductivity.org/iwforum.htm">The Information Work Forum</a>, sponsored by the Information Work Productivity Council, brings together academia, industry and government to discuss productivity as a key factor in achieving global competitive advantage; demonstrate how companies can maximize business performance and profitability through Information Work strategies; and showcase technology solutions and services that help companies achieve the greatest ROI to achieve maximum productivity. Information Work is the act of creating, using or sharing information as a part of a business process. Combined with new information technologies and tools, information work is structurally changing labor markets, business and economies around the globe. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics there are roughly 100 million information workers in the U.S. alone. Any broad-based improvements to information work productivity could lead to substantial benefits to both the economy and society.</p></blockquote> Fri, 30 Jan 2004 07:37:33 -0800 K-Collector v. 1.0 http://iaslash.org/node/7508 <p>evectors <a href="http://www.evectors.com/itkcollector/story$num=5&#038;sec=1&#038;data=kcollector">announces k-collector version 1.0</a>, an RSS aggregator aimed at the enterprise market. If you haven't seen <a href="http://k-collector.evectors.it/">k-collector in action</a>, it's worth checking out. The aggregator organizes weblog entries on four dimensions: what (subject/topic), who (as subject or author), where (events, geographic location) and when (date of publication). More about k-collector from their "About" page:</p> <blockquote><p>k-collector is an enterprise news aggregator that leverages the power of shared topics to present new ways of finding and combining the real knowledge in your organisation.</p> <p>Weblogs are most commonly published by individuals and organised chronologically. This presents a challenge when considering weblogging in the context of business groups which might expect information to be organised in more meaningful categories. The k-collector architecture, and applications based upon it, deliver an interface targetted at business users.</p> <p>The k-collector archicture combines clients for leading weblogging software with a server based aggregator and web application. WWWW is the first such application and is aimed at small business groups.</p> <p>An author can associate posts with relevant topics such as project names, people, etc.. The server automatically shares each newly created topic with every other user allowing them to use those topics themselves. News topics are created in one of four intuitive categories: Who, What, When, and Where. The server then uses these categories and topics to provide an effective interface for navigating posts.</p></blockquote> Mon, 24 Nov 2003 13:29:19 -0800 I.B.M. Systems Journal on Knowledge Management http://iaslash.org/node/7436 <p><a href="http://www.reloade.com.au/main/4.0/entries/archives/2003/08/002039.php">Fredy D. Ore (Reloade)</a> points to <a href="http://www.research.ibm.com/journal/sj40-4.html">IBM Systems Journal, Vol. 40, No. 4, 2001</a>, a special issue devoted to Knowledge Management articles.</p> Fri, 08 Aug 2003 05:52:09 -0700 ROI calculations: K-Logs vs. traditional Intranet Portals http://iaslash.org/node/7425 <p><a href="http://jrobb.mindplex.org/stories/2003/07/29/roiCalculationsKlogsVsTraditionalIntranetPortals.html">John Robb summarizes an ROI</a> document produced by <a href="http://www.plumtree.com">PlumTree Software</a> estimating the value of portal software and compares with his estimation of the value of K-Log software. He puts the total ROI of a K-Log system at 1,170% compared to the total ROI of a traditional Portal system at 240%.</p> Wed, 30 Jul 2003 04:29:13 -0700 Knowledge Management glossary, primer and bibliography http://iaslash.org/node/7390 <p><a href="http://www.kwork.org/Ezines/strategy/strategy20.html#Briefs">AOK: Knowledge Strategy newsletter</a> (login required) pointed to these resources for knowledge management:</p> <ul> <li><a href="http://www.nelh.nhs.uk/knowledge_management/glossary/glossary.asp">Knowledge Management Glossary</a> from National electronic Library for Health.</li> <li><a href="http://www.gurteen.com/gurteen/gurteen.nsf/ID/X00006DBA?open&#038;r=3&#038;p=0">Knowledge Management bibliography</a> from Gurteen Knowledge Conference.</li> <li><a href="http://www.fis.utoronto.ca/kmi/primer/pintro.htm">An Introduction to the Key Principles of Knowledge Management</a>, from Cathy Lindsey-Kin's "Knowledge Management Primer".</li> </ul> Thu, 19 Jun 2003 08:22:52 -0700 Data Management meets Unstructured Information http://iaslash.org/node/7357 <p>Just came back from a conference on <a href="http://www.wilshireconferences.com/MD2003/">data management(Wilshire Metadata/DAMA International 2003 Conference</a>. A recurring topic that surfaced about data management was the relevance of their work in relation to unstructured information. A reality check for everyone was that most corporate information actually existed in semi-structured of unstructured information and not in databases. From this thought, I was directed to DM Review and in particular this article. <a href="http://www.dmreview.com/master.cfm?NavID=193&#038;EdID=6638">Digging Into the Web: XML, Meta Data and Other Paths to Unstructured Data</a> - By Robert Blumberg and Shaku Atre. I definitely see an opportunity between IA(metadata/ux) type folks cross-pollinating with data modelers and data managers. It will be interesting to see and I look forward to hearing more from here. Thoughts?</p> Thu, 08 May 2003 04:18:17 -0700 disinfojournal for February 2003 http://iaslash.org/node/7328 <p>The second issue of <a href="http://www.disinfojournal.net">disinformation</a> is out. Especially interesting is <a href="http://www.disinfojournal.net/issue2_4.htm">Don't trust your eyes - a laboratory study investigating consumer behavior on the net</a>:</p> <blockquote><p><i>Responding pictures of secondhand goods or used vehicles, which are offered in the Internet e.g. with Ebay deceive frequently over the true quality of a commodity away. ...In our laboratory study which runs over a period of 3 months we logged the Internet purchase behavior of 859 persons with a customized XMosiac 10.5 browser. We can show in this study that during identical description of a product the preference was given to the article with a photo, in 87 percent of the cases. ... We can significantly show that a worse product with photo can be sold thus better than a better without photo.</i></p></blockquote> <p>This very clearly shows the power that information architects and web designers have to persuade visitors, which is what <a href="http://www.uie.com/Articles/chak_interview.htm">Andrew Chak</a> and <a href="http://www.grokdotcom.com/persuasive-architecture.htm">FutureNow</a> (and <a href="http://www.digital-web.com/columns/ianythinggoes/ianythinggoes_2002-12.shtml">I</a>) have been saying for a while.</p> <p>And, yes, as <a href="http://iaslash.org/node.php?id=7250">someone commented last time</a>, disinfojournal is a bit strange, but that's what I think I like about it...</p> Tue, 08 Apr 2003 10:52:59 -0700 disinfojournal http://iaslash.org/node/7250 <p><a href="http://www.disinfojournal.net/">disinformation</a>, &#8220;the first international e-journal of disinformation on the net,&#8221; has launched, and the first issue is available online. From their home page</p> <blockquote><p>There is obviously a huge lack of quality information on behavior, amount and usage regarding disinformation on the internet. As information has been increasingly invested with value, people have tried to manipulate, destroy, or acquire it in any way possible. Circumstances and instances cover a broad range of disinformation on the net or IP-based networks. The disinfojournal deals with topics in all areas of disinformation. This includes, but is not limited to library and information science, information technology, electronic publishing, database management, data mining, knowledge production, knowledge dissemination and of course malinformation and disinformation approached from sociological, psychological, philosophical, theoretical, technical, and applied perspectives.</p></blockquote> <p>The <a href="http://www.disinfojournal.net/free.htm">first issue</a> includes <a href="http://www.disinfojournal.net/issue1_2.htm">About 5 percent of your intranet information is malicious or wrong</a> and <a href="http://www.disinfojournal.net/issue1_3.htm">The usage of forms and false data: a field study</a>, among others.</p> <p>Unfortunately, the only way to get the full text is via email (?); HTML and PDF abstracts are available online.</p> Tue, 18 Feb 2003 16:29:32 -0800 Ideagraph - interesting project for semantic/RDF/topic map folks http://iaslash.org/node/7235 <p><a href="http://www.ideagraph.net">Ideagraph</a> is a "Personal Knowledge Manager" that is in early beta. It is intended to eventually be a commercial product, but is currently free to download.</p> Sat, 01 Feb 2003 05:29:14 -0800 Collaborative Knowledge Networks http://iaslash.org/node/7220 <p>Gunnar pointed me to Deloitte Consulting report, <a href="http://www.dc.com/obx/pages.php?Name=allresearch_sub_ckn">Collaborative Knowledge Networks: Driving Workforce Performance Through Web-enabled Communities</a>, which I'm reading today. (Warning, lengthy regisration process to download the PDF). A lot of <a href="http://www.dc.com/obx/pages.php?Name=AllResearch">research reports</a> available there for free if you register. This one is helping me with a KM article I'm writing presently.</p> Fri, 24 Jan 2003 14:02:46 -0800 Content, KM tools collaborate http://iaslash.org/node/7060 <p><a href="http://www.infoworld.com/articles/pl/xml/02/11/04/021104plcollab.xml">Article in InfoWorld</a> about vendor efforts to capture content at point of creation.</p> <ul>In an effort to strengthen control over collaborative content inside enterprises, content and knowledge management tools are fortifying integration with e-mail and business applications to capture content at its point of creation.</ul> Tue, 28 Oct 2003 05:40:34 -0800