ARTICLES | KNOWLEDGE MGMT | FORUMS | EVENTS | HELP | PRESS ROOM | @BRINT


About BRINT | News About BRINT | Help & FAQs | Users Guide | Advertise Here |
Welcome to the World's No. 1 Resource for Business Technology Management and Knowledge Management
@Brint.com
SEARCH [HELP]

Knowledge Management Think Tank is now: BRINT Global Knowledge Network.

Re: what's the way to represent tacik knowledge of an enterprise?


[ ] [ Post Followup ] [ Current Discussion ] [ Discussion Index ]

Posted by Robert Benjamin on August 02, 2000 at 08:11:26:

In Reply to: Re: what's the way to represent tacik knowledge of an enterprise? posted by Andy on August 02, 2000 at 06:46:13:

Hi Andy

There seems to be a massive shortage, in general, of methodological information engineering/elicitation techniques. Hence my decision to start training interested parties in the fundamentals of a practical approach and the basic methods required to do so.

The fact is that even armed with the fundamentals, it would depend largely on the ability of the facilitator to ensure the objectives of the work sessions are met. Scale and business area are irrelevant to the success of the techniques.

May I suggest for you to investigate some of the following methods and its relevance to your particular scenario? Most of these methods relate to published information-engineering methodologies, for instance; Object-Oriented Analysis (OOA), Object-Oriented Design (AAD) as promoted by the Systems/Software Engineering Institute (SEI).

The beginner method is: Function Analysis supported by related Data Analysis/Design and Process Analysis/Design. The facilitation method should be described in a Joint Application Development (JAD) sense.

Best regards

Robert



Follow Ups:



Click Here to Post Follow Up in New Forums

    Knowledge Management Think Tank (New)

Subject:

Message:

[ ] [ Post Followup ] [ Current Discussion ] [ Discussion Index ]

Download Our Articles and Interviews
[Guru Interviews] [Real Time Business Processes] [IT Adoption and Utilization] [Managing and Measuring Knowledge Assets] [The Real Competitive Advantage] [Why IT and KM Systems Fail] [Myths About Expertise Management] [How 'Best Practices' Become 'Worst Practices'] [Beyond Information Ecology to Knowledge Ecosystems] [Knowledge Exchanges and Social Networks] [Why Expert Systems Aren't Enough] [KM for E-Business Performance] [Does KM=IT? Not!] [Other Articles and Interviews]



Top of Page

BRINT: 'Your Survival Network for The Brave New World Of Business'tm
Recommended by Business Week, Fortune, Wall Street Journal, Fast Company,
Business 2.0, Computerworld, Information Week, CIO Magazine, KM World,
Los Angeles Times, New York Times, and hundreds of other worldwide publications.

About BRINT | News About BRINT | Help & FAQs | Users Guide | Advertise

Make BRINT your Start Page | | Link to BRINT | Submit Articles

Terms of Use | Privacy | © Copyright 1994-2007, BRINT Institute, New York, USA