EIPs-Doorways
to Knowledge Management
Information overload. It's what happens when you have access to
growing amounts of information, but no tools for turning that information into
knowledge. International Data Corporation predicts that the "information
distributed through corporate intranets will undergo phenomenal growth of more
than 37 times by the year 2002". With this exponential growth in
information-stored in emails, ERP applications, data warehouses, text documents,
presentations, and other sources-employees desperately need a way to sift
through the information glut to pinpoint the knowledge they need to make
decisions.
To transform information into
actionable knowledge, corporate decision-makers not only need information
delivered to their desktop, they require the means to translate information into
knowledge, and then capture and share this knowledge across the organization.
They must be able to manage their knowledge for increased organizational
awareness and performance.
What is Knowledge Management,
Really?
Knowledge
management has been so overused that it now sounds like just another buzzword.
But it's a mistake to overlook this powerful concept. Simply put, knowledge
management is the process of transforming static information into knowledge,
using that knowledge to take actions (make decisions), and then sharing that
knowledge across the organization.
Clearly, the
more information you consider as part of a decision, the higher quality decision
you can make. When making a decision, you need to look at corporate data streams
(e.g., structured data in data warehouses) where the facts and figures about
your business are stored. You also need to take into account information stored
in emails, documents, or presentations-these unstructured data sources contain
insights that may influence your decision. And you need to consider the vast
knowledge of the collective corporate memory. What did the last person in your
position do when presented with this situation? And why?
Knowledge management augments our ability to make decisions by
capturing and distributing all of these types of information to us. It brings
additional relevant knowledge and the experiences of our peers to bear on a
particular element of the decision-making process. It helps us transform all of
that information into actionable knowledge. And it enables us to share our
knowledge with the rest of the organization.
Why is Knowledge Management Important?
KPMG surveyed 423 organizations-each with annual revenues of more
than $270 million-and found that nearly 75% of them expected knowledge
management to serve an "extremely significant" or "significant" role in
improving competitive advantage, marketing and customer focus. A majority of the
organizations believe that knowledge management leads to better decision-making,
faster responses to important business issues, and better customer
handling.
Why do these organizations find
knowledge management so critical to their success?
Consider our new Web-based business climate. The pace of business has
accelerated rapidly with the advent of the Web, mandating that organizations
react quickly to external demands. To survive in this volatile market,
businesses must leverage their internal resources intelligently, and keep a
finger on the pulse of external market forces that drive
success.
Successful organizations are those that
promote innovation and agility through knowledge management. Knowledge-aware
organizations compete more effectively because they can "turn on a dime" to
seize opportunities. Because these organizations realize the full potential of
their corporate talents, encourage corporate collaboration, and share
information about their competitors and the market as a whole, they possess the
awareness needed to respond quickly to market forces.
These organizations amass two kinds of knowledge:
- External knowledge - Awareness of the competition, regulations and
market trends. With this knowledge, organizations can predict market changes.
- Internal knowledge - Understanding of the organization's core
competencies, know-how, strengths, and weaknesses. This knowledge comes from
sharing past experiences across the organization.
Not only do knowledge-aware organizations
amass critical knowledge, they apply this knowledge to decisions about strategy
and tactics. Knowledge helps these companies strategize about the business the
company should pursue, as well as formulate tactical plans for the best ways to
execute business objectives. Because these organizations share information
assets quickly and easily across their enterprise infrastructure, they can
effectively manage their knowledge assets to increase organizational
performance.
So how can organizations become knowledge-aware? By linking
information to people and people to processes, and effectively managing
knowledge assets for better decision making. The fundamental requirement of any
knowledge-aware organization is an infrastructure that allows the free exchange
of experience and expertise, enables analysis of this experiential data combined
with the raw data housed in corporate data sources, and promotes information
sharing across the organization. Getting to this point requires fundamental
shifts in corporate direction and leadership, but the potential rewards are
significant.
How do EIPs Enable KM?
Successful knowledge
management requires people that provide the "knowledge", a process that defines
how knowledge is transferred and disseminated, and technology that enables
knowledge to be shared instantly across the organization. Enterprise Information
Portals (EIPs) provide the process and technology necessary for knowledge
management.
Offering a single point of integration and navigation through
the enterprise knowledge base, EIPs automatically manage, capture, categorize,
cross-reference and route information and knowledge across the enterprise. EIPs
can enable knowledge management by providing the process and technology to help
organizations share both explicit knowledge stored in their data sources, and
tacit knowledge held in the brains and experiences of employees.
Using
EIPs, companies can:
- Enable collaboration and innovation
- Capture tacit knowledge from in-house experts
- Facilitate knowledge sharing and information linking
- Increase competitive advantage and time-to-market
Qualities of a KM EIP
Not all EIPs are created equal. When evaluating EIPs, vortals
need a solution that provides:
- Information Access
- Collaboration
- Analysis
- Scalability
- Security
Information Access
The most important aspect of an EIP is how well it helps
decision-makers access relevant information. This information may be scattered
across hundreds of disparate sources, including Web sites, news feeds, word
processing files, e-mail messages, spreadsheets, databases and file systems,
Lotus Notes and MS Office applications. It resides in structured data (such as
in databases or data warehouses) and unstructured content (such as documents,
emails, or video).
From a central access point, an EIP should allow easy
navigational access and retrieval of information-no matter where information
resides or what format it takes. Information must be logically organized
according to the way users think about their business so they can quickly find
information that is relevant to their jobs. Users should be able to interact
with information as if they are manipulating objects, defining a pattern or
network of organizational and personal knowledge as they create new objects,
organize and cluster objects into patterns, and find objects and follow patterns
in order to build and use knowledge. And EIPs must secure information so users
only access information for which they have privileges.
For instant
access via searching, EIPs must ensure that searches result in precise and
relevant content. EIPs that use an object model for content can allow users to
define specific keywords for individual objects, thereby increasing the
precision of keyword searches. Users should only see information objects for
which they have permission-granular, down-to-the object levels of security
enable this control.
And EIPs must keep decision-makers attuned to the
ever-fluctuating market with automatic and instant distribution of
time-sensitive information. Using push technologies, live feeds, and automated
updates, EIPs must constantly supervise the content of the portal to make sure
decision-makers have up-to-the-minute information at all
times.
Collaboration
Sharing expertise across an organization
raises the bar on performance by enabling all employees to benefit from the
"best practices" of top performers. EIPs must facilitate this knowledge transfer
by enabling collaboration among a company's employees. Collaboration is a
natural process for capturing tacit knowledge-the information inside employees'
heads that helps them do their jobs better and faster.
By providing a
framework for organizing and retrieving knowledge gained through the
collaborative process, the EIP helps companies manage knowledge. EIPs supply a
forum for sharing documents and project tasks, locating outside experts, and
tracking project status across the organization. Offering this kind of
collaboration platform helps companies leverage existing expertise within the
organization, take advantage of best practices and eliminate redundant effort,
save months of unnecessary and costly research, and accelerate time to
market.
Some ways an EIP can further facilitate collaboration are
synchronous communication (e.g., chat), asynchronous communication (e.g., e-mail
and discussion forums), or simple telephone contact information. Helping users
to find the experts behind the "best practices" saves users from spending time
processing and synthesizing volumes of data and strategies. Instead, users may
be able to resolve questions or issues with a simple 10-minute conversation or
chat with the expert.
Analysis
Facts and figures alone mean
nothing-it's how decision-makers analyze this data to answer specific "what if"
questions that helps them make decisions. EIPs deliver the information to users'
desktops, and must also supply the means to analyze this information so users
can make effective decisions. Integrating with business intelligence analysis,
EIPs enable users to compare data analysis with other unstructured information,
providing both a quantitative and qualitative context for making
decisions.
Scalability
Finding and managing knowledge requires
the ability to access, retrieve, and analyze that information. EIPs need to
service users' requests no matter what time of day, or how many users are
currently accessing the system. As organizations grow and distribute, EIPs must
scale to meet the needs of the entire organization. EIPs that are architected as
distributed systems with distributed processing meet these scalability
requirements. When one server is down, another server takes its place to service
user requests. Using load balancing algorithms, EIPs can ensure high
availability and failover for small workgroups to thousands of users across
company intranets, extranets and the
Internet.
Security
Managing knowledge also means securing
corporate information to prevent unauthorized access. Securing a company's data
includes protecting it from external and internal breaches. To safeguard
corporate data from external breaches, EIPs should use standards-based security
to validate users and passwords, and encrypt communication between the client
and server. To ensure that corporate users only see the information to which
they are entitled, EIPs require a roles-based system that sets privileges for
each object, user, and group within the
system.
Summary
Offering a single point of integration and
navigation, EIPs automatically manage, capture, categorize, cross-reference and
route information across the enterprise-enabling companies to manage knowledge
for better organizational performance. Brio.Portal-the most comprehensive
EIP-manages structured and unstructured information, integrates knowledge
management and business intelligence technology, and accesses and delivers data
from the mainframe to the Web to wireless PDAs.
Brio.Portal provides:
- Personalized access. Brio.Portal
implements a mass-personalization approach to make otherwise overwhelming
information access relevant to each user.
- Relevant searches. Brio.Portal
integrates Autonomy's pattern-matching technology to identify and rank the
main concepts within any text, resulting in more focused and relevant results.
- Automatic updates. Brio.Portal's
intelligent agents search, retrieve, and notify users of updates so they do
not have to constantly navigate the portal to find new information. And
Brio.Portal's channels provide "at-a-glance" discovery of content. Channels
can cross categories, locations, and include external or internal information.
SmartObjects? embed live content and data feeds such as stock tickers and
performance gauges directly on the Brio.Portal personal page. And SmartCuts?,
a specialized URL interface, drive the display, retrieval and execution of
content with a simple yet powerful way to integrate content into existing Web
sites or browser-based applications.
- Collaboration. Channels can be
published and shared with others through the portal to enable collaboration
across departments and workgroups--and with B2B partners outside the
organization.
- Analysis. Brio.Portal Portal.Pages? are
analytic dashboards that combine exception alerts, charts, gauges, news
flashes, and business events to help users proactively manage and optimize
business results.
- Scalability. With its scalable,
flexible B2X architecture, Brio.Portal leverages a customizable, secure and
extensible framework to enable B2E, B2C, and B2B initiatives with a single
installation.
Security.
Brio.Portal provides unmatched security that enables organizations to provide
broad access to business information and systems without compromising data
sources in any way. With Brio.Portal, administrators can define rules that
govern object-level access, and simplify user account management with several
different user authentication schemes including LDAP.
如果您希望与本文章的作者或其所在机构,进一步交流,请联系:畅享网 姜小姐
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