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Developing a KM Strategy or Monitoring and Evaluation
· What is a test question (437 reads) A question should be deleted if it's not relevant for the community, so Lucie feel free to delete this. Learning Lessons in ADBSummary:Information and knowledge are now seen as the principal drivers of value creation, outstripping land, labor, and capital goods. It follows that acquisition, integration, and dissemination of knowledge must be understood as a dynamic process that spans and crosses the boundaries of an organization. The Asian Development Bank has committed to become a learning organization. This publication sets the strategic framework for knowledge management in operations evaluation. It draws elements of knowledge, relationships, context, external environment, interfaces, and architecture in a conceptual structure to generate an operating framework within which decisions on knowledge management initiatives can be taken and implemented. Download:Learning from Capacity Building Practice: Adapting the ‘Most Significant Change’ (MSC) Approach to Evaluate Capacity Building Provision by CABUNGO in MalawiSummary:This paper provides a reflection on a pilot experience of using the ‘Most Significant Change’ (MSC) methodology to evaluate the capacity building services of CABUNGO,a local capacity building support provider in Malawi. INTRAC and CABUNGO worked collaboratively to adapt and implement the MSC approach to capture the complex and often intangible change resulting from capacity building, as well as to enhance CABUNGO’s learning and performance. Download:
Praxis_Cabungo_mostsignificantchange.pdf
Results Chain and Performance Measurement Plan for CIDA's Knowledge Management InitiativeSummary:This document contains our KM plans for June 2002 to June 2005. The outputs focus mainly on year 2002-2003. We are presently building the new framework for year 2003-2004. For more information on this, you can look at the document called "CIDA's KMS: Report on 2002-2003 and Work Plan for 2003-2004". Download:
logic_model_&_PMF_plus_covdoc,_fin-e.doc
CIDA's KMS: Report on 2002-2003 and Work Plan for 2003-2004Summary:This document has been presented to CIDA Executive Committee as the report on 2002-2003 and our new work plan for 2003-2004. Download:
report_to_Execomm,_Sept2003.doc
Key Success Factors for Knowledge ManagementSummary:The purpose of this thesis by Kavindra Mathi is to gain a better understanding of how some factors are critical for the successful application of Knowledge Management. Download:World Bank OED Reach PrecisSummary:2-page summary of the World Bank evaluation "Sharing Knowledge: Innovations and Remaining Challenges". Download:
KSWBprecis.pdf
Sharing Knowledge: Innovations and Remaining ChallengesSummary:In 1996, the World Bank made a commitment to develop a world-class knowledge management system and to improve and expand the sharing of development knowledge with clients and partners. This independent evaluation finds that while the initiative has allowed staff, clients, and partners to have faster and easier access to Bank knowledge, the new knowledge sharing activities have not been tightly linked to the Bank’s core lending and non-lending processes. As a result, their impact on Bank development effectiveness has been limited. Now entering the seventh year of its knowledge initiative, the Bank needs to move deliberately to embed knowledge sharing processes in its core business processes and manage its knowledge services for results. Download:
knowledge_evaluation.pdf
Measuring the benefits of Knowledge Management at FSASummary:This is a paper by Ros Jones of the Financial Services Authority in the UK government which introduces research being undertaken on evaluating KM. Download:
measuringKM.pdf
· How do you monitor the success of the strategy? (1376 reads) You can monitor the success of a KM strategy when by measuring the following conditions:
· Where do you start and what is the process to develop a strategy? (1339 reads) Knowledge Management cannot exist in isolation from the organisation and so must start with the corporate plan - the document or process that describes what the organisation want to achieve for the future. Business drivers or metrics are then identified - these could be high level such as - ensuring we have a future role in a changing world - or specific such as 'reversing our downward trend in revenue per head of staff'. The Knowledge Manager should agree at an early stage what 'Knowledge' is depending on the organisational structure and culture. For some, little more than an information sharing and organisational learning strategy will deliver significant early results. For other, more sophisticated organisations, an attempt at capturing 'tacit knowledge' - the way information is used by an individual - may be an appropriately ambitious strategy. Also where is KM going to impact - is it a field-based initiative that serves actual development knowledge to the recipient countries or is it an organisational initiative to improve the effectiveness of the NGO - the two strands are very different. The next stage is identifying the barriers to success. For instance the lack of a formal metadata or taxonomy structure could severely hinder information sharing. On a more human level, lack of communication between teams and departments may prove critical prior to any KM initiatives. From the barriers to success, key initial actions can be identified (see example below) and work begins. Too many KM initiatives become interesting academic studies. Key initial actions ensure a quick start to the project. But as with any successful business plan, the KM strategy becomes a living document. The first step is a needs analysis. Knowledge needs to be relevant and actionable to each person in the organisation. A bottom-up approach of understanding the information inputs an individual will experience, together with the outputs they will produce, allows the knowledge manager to establish how examples of best practice can be presented and who the practitioners are. Another useful step is early identification of knowledge champions - people who will buy into your vision for change and help you evangelise knowledge throughout the organisation. Whilst it is impossible to fully do justice to the question in a short space, our key recommendations are:
Key Initial Actions Example
· What are the elements of a KM strategy? (1593 reads)
3 major element of KM Strategy:
· Why would you develop a KM strategy? (1390 reads) The reason to develop a strategy for KM can vary among organizations. In some organizations the starting point might be a decision by the top management that knowledge management is important. In other organizations a strategy for KM can also be a vehicle to inform and convince the top management on the importance of knowledge management. A strategy for KM articulates the organization's vision for what will achieve through knowledge management, as well as providing a concrete structure and processes. A strategy for KM will ideally function like a magnet that orients and focuses the energies of the organization and their partners. The strategy also serves to strengthen, legitimize and give weight to the position of KM managers and of KM within the organization. The value of developing a strategy lies as much in the process as the final product. As a result, it is important to that people impacted by the strategy are engaged in the various stages of its development. This establishes a common understanding and facilitates a sense of ownership for the strategy during its implementation. The final product gives a framework for operationalizing KM and is an important precondition for effective monitoring and evaluation. In addition, it is a useful instrument for external communication.
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