3 types of Tacit Knowledge

Favorite In an interesting New Scientist article, Harry Collins (author of “Tacit and Explicit knowledge“) describes three types of Tacit Knowledge.  Image from wikimedia commons We know about the concept of tacit knowledge, which originally was described as knowledge which cannot be expresses (although often nowadays people use the term for knowledge

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Shared by Nick Milton July 30, 2020

Why "Knowledge" needs "Management" and vice versa

Favorite There are many people who really don’t like the term Knowledge Management, and would much rather use some other terminology. But logically, these two words go together.  There is a common view that the term “Knowledge Management” is an oxymoron; that “knowledge cannot be managed” and therefore the term

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Shared by Nick Milton October 17, 2019

What is the nature of Knowledge Management?

Favorite Is KM a Science? Is KM a Philosophy? No – it’s a Management Discipline. And here is why that is a useful viewpoint. I have met many people over the years who treat Knowledge Management as something entirely unique – a philosophy, almost, or a “world-view”. For these people,

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Shared by Nick Milton September 10, 2019

The uniqueness of Knowledge Management

Favorite What makes KM unique? This post from the archives attempts to explain. Image by dayeonge from Pixabay Any management discipline needs to have a defined unique area of scope if it is to add value. It needs to be different enough from other disciplines, and distinct enough, that it

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Shared by Nick Milton July 29, 2019

Know-how – the primary focus for KM?

Favorite There are two primary types of knowledge which we tend to manage – Know-How and Know-What. Of the two, Know-how is more the natural focus for KM. The Knowledge Management arena is a very confused place to be, and different people, different countries and different industries see Knowledge Management,

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Shared by Nick Milton July 25, 2019