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The Why and How of Innovating your Knowledge Management Program

August 18, 2023

Introducing innovation into your knowledge management framework entails integrating novel ideas, cutting-edge technologies, and advanced approaches to elevate the manner in which your organization captures, organizes, shares, and leverages knowledge. This process enhances efficiency and fosters a culture of continuous improvement and adaptability. By embracing innovation, your organization can stay ahead of the curve, effectively harnessing the power of knowledge to drive success and achieve strategic objectives.

Let’s see such low-hanging and long-term innovative practices that can help you build a robust Knowledge management practice and drive adoption of your KM framework.

Creative Workshops, Coffee Connects, and Webinars: Elevate the knowledge exchange experience by hosting in-person and virtual workshops, engaging webinars, and interactive formal and informal connects. These dynamic events catalyze engagement, stimulating vibrant discussions and fostering seamless collaboration among employees, and enabling the flow of tacit knowledge that is otherwise difficult to capture.

Internal Social Media Platform: This one is always a hit as people can quickly relate to the platform and its purpose as an informal forum for employees to post insights, articles, updates, and questions, fostering a sense of community and encouraging ongoing learning.

Knowledge on the go: Develop a mobile app that enables employees to access and contribute to knowledge anywhere, and anytime. Mobile accessibility can increase adoption, especially for remote and field-based workers.

Gamification and R&R Elements: Introduce gamification elements like badges, leaderboards, brainstorming sessions, storytelling forums, harvesting campaigns, and rewards to encourage users to actively participate in knowledge sharing and consumption. This can create a sense of competition and achievement, boosting adoption rates.

Information Nuggets: Break down knowledge into bite-sized, easily digestible modules. Microlearning promotes continuous learning by fitting into busy schedules and catering to short attention spans.

Collaborative Filtering: Employ collaborative filtering techniques to recommend knowledge resources based on what similar users have found valuable. This approach leverages collective intelligence for improved knowledge discovery.

When it comes to driving long-term KM acceptance and adoption in your organization, the key is to ensure that the knowledge is relevant, easily accessible, current and makes the lives of your employees more straightforward and faster.

AI-Powered Recommendation Systems: Implement AI algorithms to analyze user behaviors and preferences, and then provide personalized knowledge recommendations. This can improve user engagement by offering relevant content based on individual needs.

Collaborative Filtering: Employ collaborative filtering techniques to recommend knowledge resources based on what similar users have found valuable. This approach leverages collective intelligence for improved knowledge discovery.

Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR): Use VR and AR technologies to create immersive training experiences, virtual walkthroughs, and interactive tutorials. This visual and experiential approach can enhance the understanding and retention of complex information.

Personal Knowledge Assistants: Introduce AI-powered personal knowledge assistants that can answer questions, provide recommendations, and guide users through the knowledge management system.

Rich Media Content Creation: Encourage the creation of diverse content formats such as videos, podcasts, and infographics. This variety appeals to different learning styles and preferences.

Integrations with Existing Tools: Seamlessly integrate knowledge management functionalities into the tools and platforms your employees already use, such as email clients, project management software, and collaboration tools.

Feedback Loops and Continuous Improvement: Implement mechanisms for users to provide feedback on knowledge resources, which can then be used to refine and improve content over time.

Remember, the key is to align these innovations with your organization’s culture, business goals, and user needs. Regular assessment of your Framework and specific strategies and adapting and evolving your knowledge management approach based on feedback and changing requirements is the key to making your KM program successful.

 

How KM is Transforming Into Innovation Management

June 13, 2023


Today, clients want to "Capture" great ideas, and that is why Project Teams are called to ensure each Idea is tracked and showcased. In enabling Innovation Day as a KMer I have partnered with Six Sigma and other Agile Experts and created Systemic processes around 100's of ideas that were showcased during Innovation Day. The real challenge is if the client likes the idea and asks, "what is the Next Thing that is putting this into Action?"

An Idea Portal is a Centre Stage Tool that enables everyone to Collaborate and Share their Information. The rules are simple:

Step 1: Collect and Track Each Idea.
Step 2: Estimate the Costs and Benefits of Each Idea.
Step 3: Measure the Implementation of Each Idea.
Step 4: Calculate the Added Value of Each Idea.
Step 5: Determine the Innovation Rate Across the Organization

The ideal situation is to ensure the Knowledge Base has a Tracking
tool that everyone uses. It rarely happens as Team Leaders, Project Managers, Project Lead and their teams are busy with many actions during their work week. So, for achieving Step-1 we used a Visual Board and made sure through a Daily Huddle everyone Shared their learnings.

During the Sharing, it was the responsibility of the Scrum Master to evaluate the Novelty of the Lessons Learned and guide the team to engage in a Discussion, aligning some of those Learnings translate into possibilities for Improved processes aligned to Better Ways of Working.  So, the Top Improvement Areas are aligned to the Visual Dashboard and have Process Owners assigned who could take Ownership for the Insight.

As the daily huddle continues, these Process Owners are taught through Coaching with their Team Leads, to align the Idea to one area of Client Delivery Themes that could be automated; improved through lean / six sigma or better new process defined that called for rationale investment. Here is where Creative KM helps...

During the client visits, the Team Leads presented the best Improvements to the Client Sponsor, and it is their responsibility to Select those who can truly be taken for a Nomination to the Portfolio Client Leaders.

On Innovation Day the Best Awarded Ideas are represented with a clear Action Plan and Ownership assigned from both sides for a Proof of Concept and then measured for Business Value. Some of these translate into newly automated processes that save X amount of time, some save cost and other quality.

It is important for these rewarded Ideas to go back into the Knowledge Base and be looked at as Best Practices and those SMEs who aided in the creation - evaluation - presentation / defense and implementation be seen as one Expert Team.

Now we can see how an Idea Portal that starts as a tracking mechanism becomes a Collaborative Portal where both Clients and Service Providers aid in Innovation Management. It involves elevating existing ways of working and investing in celebrating Sharing of Insights into Innovative Ideas. The ultimate goal is to ensure the Expert Network is elevating Individual Learning into Team Experts, who are available to Coach others and Knowledge Build for ensuring the Organizational is winning through some of these becoming Client IPs and patents. 

It is important that such 'in-time Idea' Portals lead to Measuring Continuous Improvements and hence Organizational KPIs around Innovation are important as below.

  • Number of new ideas proposed
  • Proportion of ideas selected for implementation
  • Revenue generated from new ideas
  • Percentage of sales from new products
  • Customer satisfaction with new products
  • Speed to market
  • Lessons learned

Source:  https://ideadrop.co/innovation-management/how-to-measure-innovation/

So, have you implemented your Idea Portal and are measuring the ROI around Business Strategy? 

In-Summary

Innovation Management is not new to Knowledge Management Professionals. It is how we enable our teams and support them through planning the Innovation Day or other forums that truly gets Community to come forward and Ideate.

It is important that we drive Engagement through participation where everyone feels they are being rewarded and a Visual Dashboard is a great start.  It is important that through practices like a Daily Huddle we engage Experts like a Scrum Master and continue to Capture Ideas in an idea Portal. The highest contribution is enabling those sharing these Ideas to apply their minds as Process Owners and defend their Solutioning Mindset; and for this we need Team Leads trained in Six Sigma, Lean etc to align their random theories to Structured Thinking that are seen as Measured ways of Implementing an idea.

Our role today as Knowledge Management Professionals is to be an artist. We are called to all be Consultants and engage in many Creative KM Practices that can create a KM Culture enabling Expert Networks that drive Innovation.  Through numerous KM Events and the Champion Networks we aid in sustaining these Creative workspaces and doing lot more leading to impacting Organizational Standards It is important that CXOs see KM as a game-changer and invest in truly creation of a KM Culture that supports Continuous Improvements aligned to Innovation Management.

Great Knowledge Management can lead to Award Winning Innovation

March 28, 2023

One of the most underrated and under-utilised aspects of Knowledge Management is its ability to lead to innovative solutions for customers and frontline staff. Below is a real example of award winning innovation from early on in my career at WDS (See my KM origin story)

Use Case

Whilst working for WDS, back in the early noughties, we created mobile phone knowledge for Network Operators (MNOs) and mobile phone manufacturers, as well as being an outsourced call centre for technical data queries.

We created, refined, simple and easy-to-use content for the end user. Still, some of the most time-intensive and complicated problems to solve for call centre agents and customers were setting up the Internet, WAP, MMS and Email on their mobile phones. And although we had the proper knowledge to talk users through the journey, it was still a timely process and involved the customers knowing their technical settings.

A couple of intelligent people at WDS identified this problem. So they looked for a more brilliant, innovative way to deliver customer knowledge to solve these issues. They discovered they could send components of knowledge and settings directly to the mobile phones through SMS and automatically set the customer up in a matter of seconds, instead of the 15-minute calls it would take in the call centre. Due to this innovation WDS actually won "Most Innovative use of technology in a small call centre 2001", what a great night that was. (In 2001!!!! I feel old). 

Anyway, after this innovation, WDS productised this technology and made it available directly to MNOs and Manufacturers for self-service channels. First, customers would get a new device. Then, go to the MNO or Manufacturer web site and send the settings they need directly to their phone. All from the same single source of knowledge where the original knowledge articles were housed.

This technology evolved even further over the coming years by embedding the knowledge directly onto SIM cards and Manufacturer devices. So the moment a user inserted a new sim card or entered their email address, the correct settings and configurations were automatically configured without the customer knowing it. Solving a problem before the customer realised they had one.

This technology saved millions of dollars in the cost to service customers for these particular problems. And customers nowadays take for granted that setting up email and the internet on your phone is easy and automatic.

Summary

A well-rounded Knowledge Strategy should have continuous improvement and innovation embedded as part of the process. It should look at customers' problems and how knowledge can help innovatively find a better solution. Don't just think about knowledge as a static piece of content. Think about how a combination of knowledge and technology can provide real customer benefits.

Knowledge Management, when done right, will help lead to innovation.

Breaking Knowledge Silos with Knowledge Management

March 21, 2023

Innovation is a buzzword for organizations striving to be the best in the highly competitive world today. How do we use the collective brains of an organization to innovate?

The easy and the simplest answer is to break the knowledge silos that most organizations struggle with, more so with flexible and WFH culture becoming a part of the corporate world. And the fact of the matter is that Hybrid and WFH culture is here to stay so the organizations that fail to come up with ways to break these silos now should be ready to face even bigger and harder-to-solve challenges in the future in terms of knowledge loss and ability to maintain their competitive edge.

Overcoming knowledge silos requires concerted action to create a culture of collaboration, knowledge sharing, and openness within an organization.

So, what are knowledge silos? 

It is the long prevalent culture where knowledge and information from a team member or a team stay within the team with no protocols in place to take it to the whole organization.

The lack of knowledge management protocols and processes to ensure the distribution of knowledge across teams and countries costs an organization lot in terms of money with the amount of time spent in research and repurposing the knowledge, tools, and processes already available within your organization.

The result is redundant work, loss of time and productivity which would have otherwise been utilized for innovation, taking care of other key priorities, and opportunities for improving customer experience.

Why Knowledge Silos Occur:

The knowledge silos occur mostly because of a missing system to seamlessly integrate and distribute knowledge across the teams and organization.

Another critical reason for knowledge silos is the failure of the leadership to communicate the organization’s vision clearly to the organization. It trickles down to the employees who fail to embrace the knowledge-sharing culture and veer off in different directions blocking the road to innovation that comes when people from different backgrounds and skills bring together their brains.

The absence of seamless integration between departments might end up impacting the company’s credibility. For example, in the absence of a knowledge management system, the sales team might end up approaching a customer for selling a product or a service that is already used by the customer, due to a lack of sufficient documentation in place.

It also might be the case, that a sales proposal for a particular service is already in place as designed by another team, however, has to be recreated from scratch due to a lack of visibility of the available assets.

How to Break the Knowledge Silos:

Overcoming knowledge silos requires concerted action to create a culture of collaboration, knowledge sharing, and openness within an organization.

Integrate knowledge management (KM) in your organizational goals: The key is to have knowledge management, not as an individual entity but embedded into the organization’s culture and individual employees’ day-to-day work.

Embrace the collaboration culture: When you collaborate, you share and learn, this is the basis of sharing knowledge and breaking silos. Research proves that companies that actively collaborate definitely lead the competitive race.  Create opportunities for team members to interact and collaborate regularly.

Recognize and reward collaboration: The next step is to recognize and reward employees who are committed to collaboration and knowledge sharing. This can include bonuses, promotions, and other incentives that encourage collaboration and break down silos.

Promote a culture of learning: foster a culture of continuous learning and development by providing opportunities for employees to learn new skills, attend workshops and participate in training programs. This helps break down silos by allowing employees to understand other areas of the organization and how they contribute to the overall mission.

Promote cross-functional teams: Encourage cross-functional teams where employees from different departments work together on projects. This not only fosters collaboration but also helps employees develop a broader understanding of the company’s goals.

Having a KM lead culture is a sure-shot way to ensure the seamless communication of data, information as well as customer experience. When the whole organization is on the same page when it comes to sharing knowledge, experiences, and insights, the outcome is bound to be an exceptionally innovative and motivated workforce and delivery of high-quality customer experiences.

Knowledge Silos: Breaking Down Barriers

October 15, 2022

Innovation is a buzzword for organizations today that are striving to be the best in the highly competitive world. How do we use the collective brains of people in an organization to innovate?
 
The easy and simplest answer is to break the knowledge silos that most organizations struggle with. With the growing Hybrid and virtual workforce, it is all the more critical for organizations to come up with ways to break these silos or be ready to face even bigger and harder-to-solve challenges in the future in terms of knowledge loss and staying relevant and competitive.
 
So, what are knowledge silos? 

It is the long prevalent culture where knowledge and information from a team member or a team stay within the team with no protocols in place to take it to the whole organization.
 
The lack of KM protocols and processes to ensure the distribution of knowledge across teams and countries costs organization considerably, with time spent in research, repurposing knowledge, tools, and processes already available within your organization.
 
Why knowledge silos occur:
 
The knowledge silos occur mostly because of a missing system to seamlessly integrate and distribute knowledge across the teams and organization.
 
Another key reason for knowledge silos is the failure of the leadership to communicate the organization’s vision clearly to the organization. It trickles down to the employees who fail to embrace the knowledge-sharing culture and veer off in different directions blocking the road to innovation that comes when people from different backgrounds and skills bring together their brains.
 
The absence of seamless integration between departments might end up impacting the company’s credibility.
For example, in the absence of a knowledge management system, the sales team might end up approaching a customer for selling a product or a service that is already used by the customer, due to a lack of sufficient documentation in place.
 
How to break the knowledge silos:
 
Embrace the collaboration culture: When you collaborate, you share and learn, this is the basis of sharing knowledge and breaking silos.
 
Integrate knowledge management (KM) in your organizational goals: The key is to have knowledge management, not as an individual entity but embedded into the organization’s culture and individual employees’ day-to-day work.
 
Having a KM lead culture is a sure-shot way to ensure the seamless communication of data, information as well as customer experience. When the whole organization is on the same page when it comes to sharing knowledge, experiences, and insights, the outcome is bound to be an exceptionally innovative and motivated workforce and delivery of high-quality customer experiences.

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