KM is dead? Here’s data that shows the opposite.
We often hear people say that Knowledge Management is dead, but in fact it has never been so much alive, with an accelerating take-up of the topic.
That’s partly why we conducted our KM survey last month – to collect data. one of the sets of data we collected was related to the length of time organisations have been doing KM, and properly analysed this could show us whether the take-up of KM was accelerating or slowing.
We asked people “How many years has this organisation been doing Knowledge Management? Please select the closest number from the list below, giving them the following options:
- 0 years
- .5
- 1
- 2
- 4
- 8
- 16
- 32 years
(disclaimer) these results are representative only of the population of organisations which took the survey, and not necessarily of the entire KM population.
At first sight it looks as if the “hump” of KM was 8 years ago, with more organisations choosing the category “8 years” than any other.
However we need to realise that this is not a linear scale, and that organisations who chose “8 years” as the closest number had actually been doing KM for between 6 and 12 years – a 6 year period, with organisations starting KM at a rate of about 17 a year over that period. Contrast that with the 21 organisations that have started KM in the last 6 months, and we see that this plot is misleading, and that we need to have some way to plot KM start-up in a linear way.
That’s what we did in the plot below.
This plot takes the same figures, and converts them into the “KM start-year”. So the organisations that had started KM between 6 and 12 years ago, at a rate of about 17 a year over that period, are shown with start dates from 2006 to 2011.
Now the picture is very different. Now we can see that the rate of take-up of KM is accelerating considerably. A very similar pattern was seen in our 2014 survey, though with different absolute values as it was a different set of participants.
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