tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21777929.post7988881108760933629..comments2023-05-15T04:31:41.738-07:00Comments on Above the Noise: Knowledge Networking and the Implicit WebPerry Mizotahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01530794964915040975noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21777929.post-86579540130955526342007-10-13T19:38:00.000-07:002007-10-13T19:38:00.000-07:00Perry,I read your thread on Knowledge Networking w...Perry,<BR/><BR/>I read your thread on Knowledge Networking with interest. I find if very surreal that after about twenty-five years you share an interest about which I am so passionate that it was the substance of my doctoral research and dissertation. <BR/><BR/>I submit that the knowledge you have addressed in your blog posts has been limited to that knowledge which is captured in writing (whether in email, documents, etc.). Regrettably, most knowledge owners are not sufficiently disciplined to write nor do they have the time. The research indicates that most knowledge is transmitted orally and while the maturing generations are using keystrokes as a proxy for social networking and interchange, I suspect that most knowledge is still locked in the gray matter between the ears of most knowledge owners.<BR/><BR/>You might want to look at a few interesting references:<BR/><BR/>Corporate Amnesia by Arnold Kransdorff<BR/><BR/>Corporate DNA, also by Arnold Kransdorff<BR/><BR/>Increasing knowledge worker receptivity to organizational memory concepts and initiatives through participation in the Organizational Memory Awareness Game, by Joshua Sharfman (yes, a shameless plug).<BR/><BR/>All the best,<BR/><BR/>JoshJoshhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04498750180928621552noreply@blogger.com