Knowledge Organizations

Knowledge Organizations: What Every Manager Should Know

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ISBN 9781574441963
Cat# SL1965
 

Features

  • Critical information for transforming any organization into a better informed and efficient "Knowledge Organization"
  • Case studies and vignettes give clear-cut examples of how organizations use knowledge management
  • Insights on how to most effectively use knowledge management in your organization
  • Concise and interesting reading on the "how-tos" of knowledge-based management for the busy executive
  • Summary

    For knowledge management to be successful, the corporate culture needs to be adapted to encourage the creation, sharing, and distribution of knowledge within the organization. Knowledge Organizations: What Every Manager Should Know provides insight into how organizations can best accomplish this goal. Liebowitz and Beckman provide the information companies need for evaluating and planning the steps and processes that will transform their existing organization infrastructure into a "knowledge-based" organization. This easy-to-read guide includes many vignettes, examples, and short cases of organizations involved in knowledge management.

    Table of Contents

    The Knowledge Industry
    Knowledge Organizations
    Intellectual Capital and Knowledge Assets
    Knowledge as a Commodity
    Knowledge Management
    Collecting and Selecting Knowledge
    Organizing and Storing Knowledge
    Creating Knowledge: Learning, Experimentation, Discovery, and Innovation.
    Applying Innovative Information Technology
    Implementing the Knowledge Organization
    Future Knowledge Organizations
    Index.

    Editorial Reviews

    "Success in the marketplace is increasingly linked to an organization's ability to manage and leverage its intellectual capital -- the intangible and often invisible assets such as knowledge and competence of people, intellectual property, and information systems that don't show up directly on the bottom line but are at least as valuable as financial assets. Successful companies of the 21st century will be those who do the best jobs of capturing, storing, and leveraging what their employees know."
    Lewis Platt, CEO, Hewlett Packard
    "Success in the marketplace is increasingly linked to an organization's ability to manage and leverage its intellectual capital -- the intangible and often invisible assets such as knowledge and competence of people, intellectual property, and information systems that don't show up directly on the bottom line but are at least as valuable as financial assets. Successful companies of the 21st century will be those who do the best jobs of capturing, storing, and leveraging what their employees know."
    Lewis Platt, CEO, Hewlett Packard

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