Projects have knowledge inputs and knowledge outputs – that’s why they need a KM plan
Knowledge is both an input to, and an output from, project activity. The projects therefore need a plan to manage that knowledge.
Much of that knowledge enters the project in the heads of the project team, but there can be other knowledge inputs as well, particularly if the project team are facing factors which are unknown to them. Maybe they need to hold a peer assist with another project, maybe they need to look in the knowledge base for useful guidance, or maybe they have to ask the relevant communities of practice for help or advice. All of these are mechanisms for knowledge input.
You therefore need to discuss with the project team not only what knowledge the project needs, but what knowledge the project will create. You may want to rank these knowledge outputs in order of importance for the rest of the organisation, although the project team may not be the best placed people to comment on this.
The KM plan
The project will already have various plans to manage it’s resources – a manpower plan, a financial plan etc. The conversation about knowledge inputs and outputs, and any actions that should be assigned to gather the inputs and plan to create the outputs, should be recorded in a project Knowledge Management plan which will act as the governance document for KM in the project. This KM plan can be part of the project plan, or a standalone document. It should be reviewed by the project management team on a regular basis, just the same as the financial plan, the manpower plan, the risk plan etc.
Projects require knowledge, and create knowledge. This makes them a core component of the knowledge workstream within the organisation. Hence the need for a project KM plan.
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