Learn – Remember – Recall. KM is as simple (and as complicated) as this.
The way that individuals remember is a small-scale analogue for Organisational Knowledge Management.
- We acquire knowledge through experience or through learning;
- We store that knowledge in our short term memory;
- If we feel is has long term value, we transfer it to our long-term memory, where it can also be combined with other knowledge as part of our experience base;
- We retrieve the knowledge when we need it, through the act of recall (often by association).
The long term memory for the organisation is the documented knowledge, as well as the knowledge encoded into practices, procedures and operations. This knowledge needs to be consciously acquired through capture and documentation, using processes such as interviewing, Learning histories or Retrospects. It needs to be validated, and over time it can be synthesised with new knowledge which will often modify or even overwrite the old knowledge. The store for the organisational knowledge is the knowledge bases, owned by the practice owners. This knowledge can even, in some cases, remain while a whole generation of workers come and go.
Retrieval of the documented knowledge is not easy, just as recalling knowledge from our deep memory is sometimes not easy. We tend to recall facts through association, and maybe we need to do the same with our knowledge bases. A heavily-hyperlinked wiki, for example, may help us make connections more easily than a linear filing structure.
Organisations learn like people learn, through short term and long term organisational memory; through Connection and Collection.
Contact us for further details on how to help this happen.
Tags: Archive, knowledge storage
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