| The piece-meal approach bring more pain
rather than addressing the pain points of the organization. If you talk to people
involved in driving KM in projects, they will share one of the following stories:
- I have the project task management, time-sheet management and a repository
to upload and download documents.
- We drive Knowledge-Sharing sessions.
Once in a while we call the experienced people and request them to share their
experience with others in K-Forum (1-2 hours session).
- We have discussion
thread where someone can post the issues and other can respond.
- We definitely
have the KM initiative to manage the proposal. We assemble a team of people and
request them to work on various parts of the proposal. We maintain reusable templates
in a common repository. Then, we put together the documents created by the team.
- We
have e-Learning piece where we ensure that the project team members can go through
this course (max 10-15 days per year) before they embark on the project.
- We
have periodic project meetings and brainstorming sessions to discuss the issues
or ideas.
Like these, you will hear many such short stories. I agree
all these are part of KM but it is all over-simplified model for Project KM initiatives.
It creates silos and defeat the real purpose of KM. It will look good initially
but add no value in the long run. This type of piece-meal solution do not require
a big investment and effort to drive it. If these stories and many more are not
achieved with the holistic picture in mind, then the usefulness of the KM project
will be very low. Trying to achieve this in pieces without a concrete plan
and finding ways to glue it together will only lead to disappointments. At the
same time, I am not advising you to do everything in one shot. We only need to
visualize project knowledge and project experience, draft a plan that includes
everything and drive it in multiple phases by leveraging a comprehensive KM solution. |