Award winning KM

The Parsons Brinckerhoff Australia-Pacific knowledge management program and team have been recognised by the actKM Knowledge Management Excellence Awards held in conjunction with the 2011 actKM Conference in Melbourne.

We won the Gold Award for the program that has been delivered over the last 5 years. A big thank you to the team of Christine Harding, Sarah Crealy, Deborah Houlahan, Bridie Sampson, Erin Hamalainen and Jody Chant as well as David Kent and Mark LePla who started us on this journey several years ago and the staff at PB who have come to realise the value in leveraging and sharing what they know.

Article on actkm.org

Thanks

Cory

Using Knowledge

I’ve recently had a couple of conversations with people returning to our organisation after working on long term infrastructure projects. Despite having spent the last three years here designing and delivering a KM program, these Executives had been away longer and have returned to an organisation that has been through two restructures, had a new intranet, doubled in size and moved into new premises.

After hearing them voice their predicament in a couple of forums, I tracked them down to see how I can support them with their integration back into the business. After listening to their perspective and perceptions their first question was “So what do you do?”.

As we all do, I’ve got a couple of elevator speeches to try and communicate what possibilities KM can create in the context and words of the business and here is the one I used.

We can look at how we need to manage knowledge from the perspective of where does it get used, and then work backwards from there.

A couple of areas where we use knowledge to create value are in solving problems and making decisions. These are closely related and are basically what we do as an infrastructure consulting firm. We help our clients decide what the problem is and what the best solution is.

If we work backwards from making decisions, we look at:

  • the data and information do we need to collect and analyse
  • the expertise and experience do we need to have,
  • the process, governance and authority
  • what happened last time
  • the options we have
  • the impacts and consequences

So in working backwards from there we can see we need to know what we know and who knows it, the processes and systems we need to operate within and the thinking we have to do.

Thanks

Cory

Sharing my KM Brain

I had done some work to pull together a collection of KM resources, tools, methods and concepts.

I had put it in Personal Brain and now The Brain offeres a online space to share personal brains.

So here it is: KM Universe

It’s not complete. It’s still a work in progress. Hopefully it makes sense to others. Feel free to comment.

Thanks

Cory

KM in Brisneyland

What a way to start the day. Breakfast with peers and colleagues with an interest in Knowledge Management on a wonderful sunny morning in downtown Brisbane. It doesn’t get much better (professionally that is).

I am speaking of the breaky catchups of the QKM Forum here in Brisbane known as ‘KM over Coffee’. This is held on the third Thursday of the month at a nice spot in Brisbane Square at the Shingle Inn cafe.

The catchups were originally an alternative to organised activities and presentations and have been going on for the last 18 months. It was much easier on all of us to just set up a time and place and see who could make it. We are now planning on maintaining the catchups for those who can make it and complement these with some other activities (site visits, peer assists, guest speakers etc…).

Mostly we have two or three people available on that morning to catchup but today was a bumper crop (14 of us. Tables had to be rearranged several times to cater for the volume).

During the limited time we had, we were able to do a round of ‘classic’ introductions (name, role, current priorities) and we then broke the group up into 3 teams which were each given the task of discussing and deciding:

 ”If you could ask this group of fellow KMers one question, what would it be?”

The responses were:

  1. How do we get senior leadership to buy-in to KM?
  2. How would you monitise the value of KM in an organisation?
  3. How do you motivate people to adopt KM practices?

We then used the first question to share our experiences and views on the point. The other two we’ll save up for next time.

A big thankyou to all those at the recent actKM Conference who pointed some Brisbane KM orphans our way.

Next catchup will follow a slightly different format and involve festive season drinkies. See you all there.

Thanks

Cory

KM Australia 2010

Had a great time at KM Australia in Sydney last week.

Great to catch up with fellow kmers (old and new) and always fun to take people on a journey.

Hopefully people were able to take something away from the interactive sessions that Michelle Lambert and myself ran.
We got some great feedback from people on the day.

For those who didn’t make it there was a torrent of tweets flowing forth from the Crystal Pallace Ballroom at Luna Park on Sydney Harbour.

Thanks to Kerri Anne Christian for capturing these and storing them on Slideshare.

I have dumped them into Wordle and here is what popped out.

Wordle: #kmaus10

Thanks

Cory

Repositories are for sharing, not storing

A recent thread on actKM.org caught my eye. The problem of getting people to read documents got me thinking about some of the situations we are currently dealing with and I felt the urge to share.

My first response to the question from Jim Brander:

“Jim,

I would say assuming people will read your document is what gets people into trouble. It is also an assumption that just producing a document is enough.

We are looking at a few things related to this at the moment.

Firstly we communicate a clear message through our induction modules/sessions, intranet and workshops that storing a document is only half the job. You have to make sure that the document gets to someone who will generate value from you knowledge. This may require extra effort in either adding metadata or notifying a relevant COP of it’s existence. Repositories are for sharing, not storing.

Secondly we are dealing with assumptions that because I documented findings from a lessons learned exercise and filed it that others a.) will look for it b.) will find it c.) will read it and d.) will interpret my findings correctly.

We now work with the project on developing a communications plan to figure out who needs what message through which best channel. In some cases this may mean a practice note drafted, issued and communicated or in others it may mean sending a team of three people on a 3 week road trip to run workshops with everyone in the discipline to make change happen.

The third relates the wonderful assumption people have that a.) they will receive an email you send them b.) they will read said email and c.) that the recipient will interpret your meaning correctly.

If you want the information/knowledge to get read then you need to look at a whole change management approach, not just restrict yourself to the good old fashioned way of doing things.

A different interpretation of your point is also around the quality of documentation that people produce. These sorts of documents should always go through a rigorous editing, review and approval process. I would suggest this include some user acceptance testing. Far too often the document is written for the authors peers when the actual audience may not be as knowledgable on the topic.”

Here is a followup post:

“Another way I have tried to get this challenge across to people is talking about ‘the gap’. The gap between sender and receiver.

The sender cannot assume that the receiver will close the gap where the sender has left off (publishing a document).

More and more we are seeing efficiency drives to reduce the amount of work, time it takes or cost in providing something. This has in most cases resulted in the work required to close the gap having to be undertaken by the receiver (self service).

A classic situation I have experienced recently is some processing work that was previously undertaken by our finance area has now been moved onto staff to achieve a cost reduction in the finance area, yet has increased the workload of frontline staff and could impact on capacity and even utilisation/billability.

We need to be aware of the gap and give ourselves the best chance of success by working out the most effective way to close it, from both sides of the chasm.”

If you want to make sure you successfully communicate your message, get your point across or transfer some knowledge then you need to do a lot more than draft a document and upload it.

Thanks

Cory

A Knowledge Manager

I was asked to provide some words from a knowledge manager about what I do.

It is quite late so I just started  making notes instead of drafting full paragraphs.

It seems to have ended up as the following rant. Does this make sense to you?

The Knowledge Manager

I listen to people every day.
I listen to the things they are doing and how they are doing them.
I listen to the questions they ask and the requests they make.
I hear they want a website.
I hear they want a database.
I hear they want more resources in the library.
I listen and I hear.

I ask questions.
I ask what they are trying to achieve.
I find the assumptions they make and I coach them to uncover them for themselves.
I guide and I shepherd.
I nudge and I steer.
I help people to realise the knowledge they have at their disposal.
I assist them to find it and use it.

I encourage people to share without request or recognition.
I ask them to think of who else can benefit from what they know.

This is my job as a Knowledge Manager.
To help people find what they need.
To realise what they have and have not.
To take what we know and use it to solve problems, make decisions, improve and innovate.
This is what I do.

 
Cory

Open Source KM

aka: Practicing what we preach.
When I first got interested in knowledge management (2002) I did a bit of research on the internet looking for methods, frameworks, theories and tools (some call them ‘recipes’).
What I ran into was a lot of “We have what you are looking for and are more than happy to do it for you for $X,XXX an hour/day.”
Now obviously there is the need for people to have a career and be paid for their services. But having come from a computer technology background I understood that knowledge could be openly shared and people could still get paid (a lot).
So after becoming aware of the the Cynefin and Cog Edge work and this being published under creative commons instead of copyright, I held a hope that there are KM people that actually practice what they preach. That is openly share what we know.
Now you may of may not agree with me but the way I see it is Dave and his posse have been developing techniques in the sensemaking space and improving on them.
So why can’t we do this with other aspects of sharing and using knowledge. Yes I’m aware of issues of IP and alike but I don’t see these raised in the forums we participate in both face-to-face and virtually.
So what if this was harnessed? There are a 1,001 ways to do it. What if we took what we try to do (successfully or otherwise) either at work or with our clients everyday, and proved that it can work in our own discipline? 
There are fragments all over the place. In forums, books, blogs, white papers, articles, video, audio and of course in people. What if we did the unthinkable and all contributed to knowledge technology (this is using technology in it’s original form talking about knowledge of a technique)? How can we provide people with a map of what knowledge management could be? A body of knowledge.
I don’t even want to talk about computer technology (yet). 
I don’t want to go near the IM/KM debate because it is not a debate. It is merely different perspectives. Though they may be different, they are still valid.
I am keen to here you thoughts on the validity of such an endeavor.
Cory

KM OZ Conference

My 1st 6 months – KM Program

Here is a copy of the slides I presented at the KM Australia Conference yesterday.

I wanted to do the presentation using the mind mapping software (iMindMap) but had issues with bringing up sub-maps in the Presentation View.

Conference was good. Caught up with some KM buddies and made some new ones along the way.

After talknig with a few Engineering related KM people will be looking to set up a group to collaborate on industry specific challenges. We’ll see how it goes.

If anyone saw the presentation and has any feedback I’d be glad to hear it. Always looking for opportunities to improve.

Thanks

Cory