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Knowledge Management System
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Requirement: I’m in need of a system that
will help in managing information, projects, processes and knowledge in my
organization. I wish to implement a system for employees in my organization to
capture, store and disseminate information.
Useful information usually resides in various documents, email messages, chat
transcripts, projects, processes, and most of the time in people’s heads. Most
of the time this knowledge isn’t stored and therefore difficult to retrieve
when necessary. Information about processes and practices are usually resident
in a particular individual’s head and even more difficult to capture and use.
People tend to work within silos of information that don’t get shared across an
organization easily. People are forced to indulge in repetitive work when they
could actually tap into a knowledge system and work in a more innovative
manner. A knowledge management system should afford an easy-to-use interface
and allow access to information based on the role the user plays. This system
would connect to all kinds of documents like web pages, text documents,
spreadsheets, emails, PDF docs, images and more. Information also exists in
people’s heads and I’d like this system to provide an impetus for people to
document or share knowledge that is resident in their heads.
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Knowledge Management System - Solution proposed |
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We understand that the system that we are going to develop ought to capture all
the different kinds of information existing in your organization and also make
it easy for all your employees to capture, store and disseminate information.
The knowledge stored in this system must be accessible to search parameters and
operate in the same manner that the human brain does. It should collate,
organize, store and retrieve information in an effective manner.
Once created the system will manage itself. From an easy-to-use interface it
should help collaborate workflows and harvest employee knowledge, both of the
tacit and explicit kind. A workflow process library, a document management
system and an event management system are some of the essential parts of a
knowledge management system.
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Knowledge Management System - Benefits |
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When employees possess the requisite knowledge or information and are able to
use it at the right moment, relationships with customers, dealers, suppliers
and distributors generally improve. Such knowledge workers can make better
decisions by increasing the amount of relevant information that they have
access to. A knowledge management system introduces the elements of expertise
and experience through collaboration capabilities and shortens the time it
takes to make better decisions.
Free flow of ideas encourages innovation and improves efficiency.
Sales-effectiveness and customer service can be improved by streamlining
response times. And within the organization, employee retention rates get
better. In general, benefits gained include streamlined operations and overall
cost reduction.
Companies today have to learn faster than anyone else, share the results across
the enterprise and constantly foster the development and sharing of new
knowledge. This should begin at the managerial level. Company leaders need to
take a serious look at how knowledge flows within the organization, how it
meets other knowledge and how it combines with other flows and so on. Is this a
case of pure sharing of information? Today’s IT infrastructure allows us to
share information readily, but are we talking of the surface knowledge or
something more? Isn’t there a deeper structure to knowledge that requires an
adequate portrayal here? We are talking about the difference between
superficial information and deeper knowledge. Explicit knowledge that lies in
our heads and documents is the one kind while the other is tacit knowledge, the
plain know-how that resides in processes and practices that people follow. A
knowledge management system that is able to capture both kinds of knowledge to
the best capacity is what will eventually help an organization.
An efficient knowledge management system will function just like the human brain
does. Map information. What can it do for an organization?
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Beneficial Features
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Knowledge capture and creation – bringing a structure to unstructured
information.
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Capture tacit knowledge from an individual or group.
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Create a rich view of information captured.
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Build and innovate from this knowledge – brainstorm, apply tacit knowledge to
existing problems, develop new techniques, processes and products.
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Help individuals and team members work intuitively – by capturing a great deal
of information at one time, see what individual members are thinking, link and
associate packets of information, create reusable views of information.
Knowledge repositories, e-learning applications, discussion and chat
technologies, search and data mining tools, synchronous interaction tools are
all part of a knowledge management system. Contact us with your specific
requirements and we’ll get back with a suitable proposal.
A successful knowledge management strategy happens only when a culture of
knowledge sharing is inculcated in the organization. No system or technology,
however efficient will help unless every prospective knowledge owner
understands this fact.
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Technologies
In Use
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.NET Languages
Microsoft® ASP.NET (Web Forms) , Visual C++.NET, Visual C#, and Visual Basic
.NET
Client software
Windows XP, Windows CE, and Microsoft Office XP
Development tools
Microsoft Visual Studio® .NET
Servers
Microsoft Windows® 2003, Microsoft SQL Server™, and Microsoft BizTalk® Server
XML
XML Schema, SOX, RELAX, XSD, XHTML, XPATH, SOAP, XML-RPC, WSDL, UDDI, SAX, DOM,
JDOM, Xerces, Xalan, SAXON
Methodologies
UML, Design Patterns, OOAD/OOP, XProgramming
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