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Information Management and New Media

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Title: Information Management and New Media


1
Information Management and New Media
  • Rafael Capurro
  • www.capurro.de
  • Steinbeis-Seminar MBA
  • 2007

2
WELCOME!

3
Overview
  • Introduction
  • Information Resources
  • IRM and Knowledge Management
  • External Information Resources
  • The Process of External IRM
  • Use External IR for Decision Makers

4
Introduction Scope of the seminar
  • This seminar deals mainly with the field of
    external information resources and management.

5
Literature
  • Combs Combs, Richard E. Why Manage Knowledge?
    In http//www.combsinc.com/index.html
  • Nickols Nickols, F. W. (2000).  The knowledge
    in knowledge management.  In Cortada, J.W.
    Woods, J.A. (Eds) The knowledge management
    yearbook 2000-2001 (pp. 12-21). Boston, MA
    Butterworth-Heinemann
  • In http//home.att.net/nickols/Knowledge_in_KM.h
    tm
  • Walt Van der Walt, Marthinus A Classification
    Scheme for the Organization of Electronic
    Documents in Small, Medium and Micro Enterprises
    (SMMEs). Knowl. Org. 31 (2004) 1, 26-38.
  • Microsoft Office Share Point
  • http//www.redmondintegrators.com/upload/SharePoin
    tEvaluate_386.pdf
  • See also the website of the seminar
    http//www.capurro.de/steinbeis_infomanag.htm

6
Introduction The Goal of Information Management
  • Providing
  • reliable and relevant knowledge
  • at the right time
  • in the right place
  • for the right person
  • in the right medium

7
Introduction Organizational Memory
  • Internal external information (and knowledge)
    resources Organizational Memory

8
Introduction The Goal of IRM
  • Watch your IR!
  • Watch your IRM!

9
Introduction The IRM Process
  • Identify
  • Collect
  • Organize (Classify)
  • Share
  • Adapt
  • Use
  • Create
  • Identify

10
Introduction The IRM Process
  • Evaluation Criteria
  • Price commercial/free
  • Quality professional/vulgar
  • Share secret/public
  • Access difficult/easy
  • Origin extern/intern
  • Media digital/non-digital
  • Awareness full/non
  • Meta-criteria Profit, Corporate Social
    Responsibility (CSR), Environment

11
Introduction The IRM process
  • IRM is very important in the highly competitive
    environment.
  • IRM can become your competitive advantage that
    will help you to win in the competition run.

12
Introduction Benchmarking of IRM
  • 1. Compare your IRM with your competitor.
  • 2. Find out what to focus on.
  • 3. Take action to improve.

13
Introduction Tools for IRM
  • SAP
  • ORACLE
  • IBM Lotus
  • CSB International
  • Livelink
  • Verity
  • Microsoft Office Share Point Server

14
Introduction IRM Requirements
  • Source Windows SharePoint Services
  • http//www.redmondintegrators.com/upload/SharePoin
    tEvaluate_386.pdf
  • I want to share contact lists, event calendars,
    and annoucements with my team, my customers, and
    my partners
  • I want to easily share a document with my team
    members for review
  • I want a web site where I can manage my meetings

15
Introduction IRM Requirements
  • I want my employees to create their own Web sites
    without any help from the IT department
  • I want support for managing unused Web sites
  • I wand documents attached to incoming e-mail
    messages to be added to a document library
    automatically

16
Introduction IRM Requirements
  • I want version control for specific documents
  • I want to be notified automatically whenever
    documents are changed
  • I want to search and find only the documents that
    are on my team site
  • I want to target content to users based on job
    roles or interests

17
Introduction IRM Requirements
  • I want permanent portals for my organization and
    divisions
  • I want to integrate enterprise applications with
    a portal
  • I want users to have personal sites where they
    can manage and share information with other users

18
Introduction IRE Requirements
  • I want to easily create, manage, and organize
    SharePoint sites
  • I want to browse for information by topic
  • I want to have multiple portals that use the same
    index.

19
Introduction and solution(s)
  • Microsoft SharePoint Services and Microsoft
    Orffice SharePoint Portal Server. Features
  • News and Topics
  • My Site
  • Information targeted to specific audiences
  • Indexing and searching accross file shares, Web
    servers, secure Web servres
  • Alerts that notify you when changes are made to
    relevant information
  • Single sign-on for enterprise application
    integration

20
Introduction and solutions
  • The Gilbane Group Survey on enterprise blog,
    wiki, and RSS use (2005)
  • http//gilbane.com/surveys.html
  • RSSRich Site Summary / Really Simple
    Syndication. See more at http//en.wikipedia.org/
    wiki/RSS

21
Introduction and solutions

22
Introduction and solutions

23
Introduction and solutions

24
Introduction and solutions

25
Introduction and solutions

26
Internal IR
  • Internal information resources
  • Are produced by company employees.
  • They emanate from
  • functional areas
  • cross-functional processes

27
Internal IR
  • Functional areas
  • Production such as documentation on the
    purchasing of materials and equipment
    (information sheets from suppliers, orders, bills
    etc.), records of quality control, delivery,
    notes, guarantee cards delivery from customers,
    servicing records and customer records.

28
Internal IR
  • Sales and marketing market research reports,
    product brochures and information sheets, orders
    from customers and records of sales transactions.

29
Internal IR
  • Engineering (Research and Development) project
    planning documentation, laboratory notes, project
    reports.
  • Accounting and finance budgets, regular
    financial reports on income and expenditure,
    documentation relating to taxes, records of
    investments and assets, etc.

30
Internal IR
  • Human resources management job descriptions,
    advertisements for vacancies, documents relating
    to employee benefits, employment contracts,
    training manuals, employee records (records of
    payment, leav and disciplinary hearings).

31
Internal IR
  • Cross-functional processes
  • Product development reports
  • Business plans
  • Competitive intelligence reports.

32
External IR
  • External information resources
  • Many information items gathered for the purposes
    of competitive intelligence support the
    cross-functional business processes, especially
    strategic planning and decision-making.

33
External IR
  • In the creation of a business plan, which can
    include processes such as the setting of
    strategic goals, determining niche market
    segments and deciding about mergers with, or
    acquisitions of, competitors, the top management
    of a company has to rely heavily on external
    information resources. Walt 2004, 30

34
External IR
  • Gathering external IR focuses on
  • Political, environmental, societal, and
    technological trends (P.E.S.T.)
  • Customers
  • Suppliers
  • Competitors (competing products and services)

35
External IRM
  • Methodological aspects
  • How to identify, collect, organize, share, adapt,
    use, and create information from external sources
    that are useful for the company.

36
IRM and Knowledge Management
  • Knowledge taxonomy
  • Explicit, Implicit, Tacit
  • Declarative (know that) and Procedural (know how)

37
Explicit Knowledge
  • Explicit knowledge () is knowledge that has
    been articulated and, more often than not,
    captured in the form of text, tables, diagrams,
    product specifications and so on.

38
Explicit Knowledge
  • In a well-known and frequently cited 1991 Harvard
    Business Review article titled "The Knowledge
    Creating Company," Ikujiro Nonaka refers to
    explicit knowledge as "formal and systematic" and
    offers product specifications, scientific
    formulas and computer programs as examples.
    Nickols
  • See also
  • Nonaka, I. / Takeuchi, H The Knowledge Creating
    Company, Oxford 1995.
  • Von Krogh, G. / Ichijo, K. / Nonaka, I. Enabling
    Knowledge Creation. Oxford 2000

39
Implicit Knowledge
  • Knowledge that can be articulated but hasnt is
    implicit knowledge. Its existence is implied by
    or inferred from observable behavior or
    performance. Nickols

40
Implicit Knowledge
  • In analyzing the task in which underwriters at
    an insurance company processed applications, for
    instance, it quickly became clear that the range
    of outcomes for the underwriters work took three
    basic forms (1) they could approve the policy
    application, (2) they could deny it or (3) they
    could counter offer.

41
Implicit Knowledge
  • Yet, not one of the underwriters articulated
    these as boundaries on their work at the outset
    of the analysis. Once these outcomes were
    identified, it was a comparatively simple matter
    to identify the criteria used to determine the
    response to a given application. In so doing,
    implicit knowledge became explicit
    knowledge.Nickols

42
Tacit Knowledge
  • Tacit knowledge is knowledge that cannot be
    articulated. As Michael Polanyi (1997), the
    chemist-turned-philosopher who coined the term
    put it, "We know more than we can tell." Polanyi
    used the example of being able to recognize a
    persons face but being only vaguely able to
    describe how that is done. This is an instance of
    pattern recognition. ()

43
Tacit Knowledge
  • Reading the reaction on a customers face or
    entering text at a high rate of speed using a
    word processor offer other instances of
    situations in which we are able to perform well
    but unable to articulate exactly what we know or
    how we put it into practice. In such cases, the
    knowing is in the doing, a point to which we will
    return shortly. Nickols

44
Implict, Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
  • Nickols

45
Declarative and Procedural Knowledge
  • The explicit, implicit, tacit categories of
    knowledge are not the only ones in use. Cognitive
    psychologists sort knowledge into two categories
    declarative and procedural. Some add strategic as
    a third category. Nickols

46
Declarative Knowledge
  • Declarative knowledge has much in common with
    explicit knowledge in that declarative knowledge
    consists of descriptions of facts and things or
    of methods and procedures.Nickols

47
Procedural Knowledge
  • This is an area where important differences of
    opinion exist.
  • One view of procedural knowledge is that it is
    knowledge that manifests itself in the doing of
    something. As such it is reflected in motor or
    manual skills and in cognitive or mental
    skills.Nickols

48
Procedural Knowledge
  • Another view of procedural knowledge is that it
    is knowledge about how to do something. This view
    of procedural knowledge accepts a description of
    the steps of a task or procedure as procedural
    knowledge. The obvious shortcoming of this view
    is that it is no different from declarative
    knowledge except that tasks or methods are being
    described instead of facts or things.Nickols

49
Strategic Knowledge
  • Strategic knowledge is a term used by some to
    refer to what might be termed know-when and
    know-why.Nickols

50
Knowledge Taxonomy
  • Nickols

51
Knowledge Taxonomy
  • Nonaka addresses the important issues of
    knowledge transfer and knowledge creation in his
    1991 article. He cites four such transfers or
    creations

52
Knwoledge Taxonomy
  • Tacit to tacit. Acquiring someone elses tacit
    knowledge through observation, imitation and
    practice. The example Nonaka uses is that of a
    product developer, Ikuro Tanaka, who apprentices
    herself to a hotel chef famous for the quality of
    his bread. She learns how to make bread his way,
    including an unusual kneading technique.Nickols

53
Knowledge Taxonomy
  • Explicit to explicit. Combining discrete pieces
    of explicit knowledge to form new explicit
    knowledge, for example, compiling data and
    preparing a report that analyzes and synthesizes
    these data. The report constitutes new explicit
    knowledge.Nickols

54
Knowledge Taxonomy
  • Tacit to explicit. Nonaka cites here the product
    developers subsequent conversion of her acquired
    tacit knowledge into specifications for a
    bread-making machine. However, as defined by
    Polanyi, who coined the term, tacit knowledge
    cannot be articulated.

55
Knowledge Taxonomy
  • Explicit to tacit. Internalizing explicit
    knowledge. Here, Nonaka indicates that the
    product development team acquired new tacit
    knowledgeNickols

56
Knowledge Taxonomy
  • http//www.12manage.com/methods_nonaka_seci.html
  • The SECI Model (Socialization, Externalization,
    Connecting, Combination) of Nonaka/Takeuchi

57
Knowledge Taxonomy
  • http//www.12manage.com/methods_nonaka_seci.html

58
IRM as
  • management of explicit (declarative) knowledge

59
External Information Resources
  • Internet Resources
  • Providers of Scientific, Technical and Economic
    Information
  • Library Resources

60
External Information Resources
  • 1) Internet Resources
  • Portals/Websites Professional Associations,
    Competitors, Customers
  • Search Engines Catalogues, General Search
    Engines Meta-Search Engines, Trade and Business
    Search Engines, Shopping Search Engines
  • Blogs
  • Mailing Lists
  • Virtual Communities

61
External Information Resources
  • 2) Providers of Scientific, Technical and
    Economic Information
  • German Providers
  • STN International (Scientific and Technical
    Information, Patents)
  • GENIOS (German Business Information)
  • FIZ Technik (Technology)
  • Hoppenstedt (Economic Information)
  • Handelsblatt (Economic Information)

62
External Information Resources
  • International Providers
  • Gale Directory of Data Bases
  • DIALOG (All fields)
  • LexisNexis (Economy, law)
  • Questel-Orbit (All fields)
  • Bureau van Dijk (Companies)

63
External Information Resources
  • Libraries See seminar web site!

64
The Process of IRM Organize!
  • Organize your IRM process
  • Create an (interactive) platform within the
    company (as part of the intranet)
  • Create a list of links (portals, websites, etc.)
  • Use Mailing List and blogs
  • Inform actively about IR within the company
  • Get feed back from your colleagues about the IR
    as well as about the IRM process itself
  • Set goals for special tasks and make case
    analysis of IR and IRM within your company.

65
The Process of external IRM Step by Step
  • Identify
  • Collect
  • Organize (Classify)
  • Share
  • Adapt
  • Use
  • Create
  • Identify

66
The Process of IRM Identify
  • What kind of external IR are used in your
    company?
  • Portals/Websites Professional Associations,
    Competitors, Customers
  • Search Engines
  • Blogs
  • Wikis
  • Social Bookmarks
  • Mailing Lists, forums
  • Virtual Communities

67
The Process of IRM Collect
  • How are external IR collected in your company?
  • Using Search Engines?
  • Visiting (regularly) Portals/Websites?
  • Using an Agent System?
  • Using SDI for searching in professional data
    bases?
  • Visiting fairs?
  • Connecting with experts?
  • Using blogs, wikis, mailing lists?
  • Using printed sources?

68
The Process of IRM Organize
  • How are the files with external information
    organized in your company?
  • Document Management?
  • Intranet?
  • ...

69
The Process of IRM Organize
  • Under the heading Organizing files using
    folders in the help files of Microsoft Windows
    2000, for example, the user is simply told to
    create folders for categories that match the way
    you want to organize your information. (Walt)

70
The Process of IRM Organize
  • Walts Classification Scheme
  • 0 General documents
  • 1 External environment
  • 2 Management (General)
  • 3 Finance (financial management)
  • 4 Human resources
  • 5 Products Services
  • 6 Marketing Sales
  • 7 Customers
  • 8 Special collections
  • 9 Other subjects

71
The Process of IRM Organize
  • The role of classification in business
    documentation (Walt)
  • Categories are used for organizing folder systems
  • Categories become part of the metadata for
    Information Retrieval purposes
  • Categories are used for structuring the intranet

72
The Process of IRM Share
  • How are external IR shared in your company?
  • Intranet
  • e-Mail
  • Mailing lists
  • Virtual forums
  • Communities of Practice
  • Blogs, wikis, RSS, social bookmarks (Social
    Software)
  • Print media
  • Face-to-face meetings

73
The Process of IRM Adapt
  • How are external IR adapted to the goals (vision,
    mission) of your company?
  • Selecting the information from the sources?
  • Distributing/writing (executive) abstracts?
  • Evaluating?

74
The Process of IRM Use
  • Who and how uses external IR in your company?
  • In all departments?
  • Decision Making (at which level)?
  • RD?
  • Marketing?
  • ...
  • Regularly? In what form/medium?

75
The Process of IRM Create
  • How is new knowledge on the basis of external IR
    created in your company
  • For decision making?
  • For marketing?
  • For RD?
  • For dealing with (new) customers?
  • For dealing with competitors?

76
The Process of IRM Evaluate
  • Evaluate regularly the IRM process
  • Who is responsible for what?
  • Where are the blockades?
  • Where are the blind spots?
  • What are the main areas of concern (priorities)?
  • How much does it cost?
  • What are the revenues?

77
The Process of IRM Checking List
  • Create a check list for evaluating regularly your
    (external) IRM Process
  • What external IR do you use in your company?
  • How do you manage these resources?
  • How much money does your company spend in them?
  • How much money does your company spend for the
    IRM process itself?
  • What is the revenue?
  • How (and how often) does the evaluation of the
    IRM take place in your company?

78
Use External IR for Decision Makers
  • Use all possible information sources in order to
    build a data base that corresponds to the needs
    of your company
  • Consider that the kind of information you select
    will make possible or not to visualize the status
    of your company according to diverse criteria.
    These criteria should be as clear as possible
    before (!) you create the data base

79
Presenting Information for Decision Makers
  • Building a Data Base
  • Products
  • Price
  • Placement
  • Promotion
  • -gt Present Status / Advantages and Disadvantages

80
Visualizing Results
  • Cash Cows
  • Bad Dogs
  • ?
  • Stars

81
Visualising Results

82
Visualising Results
  • Select two criteria, for instance
  • Price vs. Placement
  • Market share vs. Market growth
  • Product quality vs. Price
  • in order to visualize where your company is and
    where do you place your competitors
  • Do this kind of visualisation regularly and
    compare the results from time to time

83
Taking Decisions
  • Decisions are taken on the basis of information
    provided.
  • Due to the necessary simplification of
    information selection as well as of the criteria
    used, decisions are always a risk.
  • Information should be seen in the context of
    unexpected events.

84
Evaluating Decisions
  • After taking a decision, the processes of
    information and of visualisation start again
  • You should consider the possibility of selecting
    information from other resources and/or
    re-organizing your IRM process.

85
Thank you for your attention!
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