Course Content
Session One: Course Overview
You will spend the first part getting to know participants and discussing what will take place during the workshop. Students will also have an opportunity to identify their personal learning objectives.
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Session Two: Definitions
Then, participants will learn the definition of knowledge, as well as the differences between tacit and explicit knowledge. The meaning and history of knowledge management will also be covered.
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Session Three: The Business Case for Knowledge Management
In this session, participants will learn how knowledge management can reduce costs and grow sales. They will also learn how to build a business case for knowledge management. You will also examine the impact that knowledge management can have on business strategy and profit.
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Session Four: The Knowledge Management Mix
Next, participants will learn about three components vital to knowledge management: people, technology, and process. In this session, you will examine the relationship between these three essential knowledge management components.
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Session Five: The Knowledge Management Framework
The knowledge management framework is comprised of four interdependent elements: needs analysis, resource identification, process analysis, and knowledge handling. In this session, participants will learn about the steps to building their knowledge management framework: needs analysis; resource identification; process analysis, identification, and construction; and accumulating, sharing, and storing knowledge. In this session, you will investigate what the four elements of the knowledge management framework are and how they work together.
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Session Six: ITandD’s Conundrum
A pre-assignment is designed to get you thinking about the topic, and to give you some indication of what is coming. In this example, the case study and the carefully crafted questions were intended to have you reflect on the vital role of knowledge within an organization. In this session, you will reflect on the answers you provided in the pre-assignment.
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Session Seven: Knowledge Management Models
Knowing the theory behind the practice can increase your knowledge and inform what you do. Having a foundational awareness helps you to understand the theory’s evolution and history in the business world and better enable you to see how this system will fit into your organization. In this session, you will investigate four different knowledge management models.
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Session Eight: The Knowledge Management Toolkit
Cross-functional Teams, mentoring, organizational culture, and IT solutions are all techniques that you can use employ when implementing a knowledge management program in your organization. In this session, you will explore each of these techniques in depth. As you review the information, think about ways that you could use each technique in your workplace.
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Session Nine: Implementing Knowledge Management Initiatives
You see an organizational need for knowledge management. You understand what a knowledge management system is. You have the tools and information you need. Now it’s time to take action: it’s time to begin building the program. In this session, you will identify and investigate the necessary components for implementing a knowledge management program.
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Recommended Reading List
If you are looking for further information on this topic, we have included a recommended reading list below. Bergeron, Bryan. Essentials of Knowledge Management. John Wiley & Sons, 2003. Dixon, Nancy M. Common Knowledge: How Companies Thrive by Sharing What They Know. Harvard Business School Press, 2000. O'Dell, Carla, and Cindy Huebert. The New Edge in Knowledge: How Knowledge Management Is Changing the Way We Do Business. New John Wiley & Sons, 2011. Pasher, Edna, and Tuvya Ronen. The Complete Guide to Knowledge Management: A Strategic Plan to Leverage Your Company's Intellectual Capital. John Wiley & Sons, 2011. Rumizen, Dr. Melissie Clemmons. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Knowledge Management. Alpha Books, 2002.
Knowledge Management
About Lesson

Pre- and Post-Assessment Answer Keys

Pre-Course Assessment

  1. D: These are all benefits of a knowledge management program.
  2. True: This means that a knowledge management program will affect most, if not all, parts of your organization
  3. False: There are two major categories of knowledge, which will be covered in Session Two of this course.
  4. False: A knowledge management program should be tailored to your organization.
  5. D: All of these are reasons to divest (or discard) knowledge.
  6. False: People are the driving force behind knowledge management programs.
  7. True: This way, you can adjust, improve, and evolve the program.
  8. True: This is one of the biggest tangible benefits of a knowledge management program.
  9. True: Knowledge management started developing as its own field in the late 1970’s.
  10. D: A knowledge management system can help with these three activities.

Post-Course Assessment

  1. D: These are all strategies that can help an organization through a change.
  2. True: For example, you may have people from HR, Manufacturing, and Training and Development all mixed together.
  3. Karl-Erik Svelby: He was one of the fathers of the knowledge management movement.
  4. False: Explicit knowledge can be defined as knowledge that can be easily transferred. Tacit knowledge comes from experience, know-how, personal conclusions, and insights.
  5. Process framework: The step of divesting knowledge is unique to this model.
  6. A: People, technology, and processes are the three elements of the knowledge management mix.
  7. True: We addressed this issue in Session Eight of the course.
  8. Knowledge network: Some examples of knowledge networks include communities of interest, communities of practice, cross-functional teams, mentoring, and discussion boards.
  9. D: These are all techniques for building a knowledge network.
  10. Mentor: A positive mentor experience can connect people in a profound way and goes beyond the boundaries of the office.