The blind tour guide [[electronic resource] /] / Patrick Lambe |
Autore | Lambe Patrick <1960-> |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Singapore, : Times Books International, 2002 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (166 p.) |
Disciplina |
380
658 |
Soggetto topico |
Information technology - Economic aspects
Knowledge management Technological innovations - Management Industrial management Success in business Information society Risk management |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN | 981-261-915-1 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Contents; Preface; 1 Becoming a New Economy Manager; 2 How are the Mighty Fallen; 3 Sick Companies; 4 Leadership in the New Economy; 5 The Panopticon; 6 Branching Out: Dilemmas in Education; 7 Sisyphus; 8 The Geeks Have It; 9 The Real Threat to Asian Companies; 10 In Praise of Older Workers; 11 Time and Motion; 12 Gutenberg's Periscope; 13 Buying into Risk; 14 The New Landscape of Risk; 15 Fast Technology, Slow People; 16 Slow People, Slower World; 17 Lower Friction, Higher Risk; 18 Who Pays for Risk in the Connected Economy?; 19 Buying Time: Coffee and the New Economy
20 Spending Time: An Anatomy of Outrage 21 Innovating - Inside the Box; 22 Innovation:Out of the (Juke) Box; 23 In Praise of Laggards; 24 Friction is Dead: Long Live Friction; 25 Tale of Dog and Duck; 26 The Old New Economy; Index |
Altri titoli varianti | Surviving and prospering in the new economy |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910454463403321 |
Lambe Patrick <1960-> | ||
Singapore, : Times Books International, 2002 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The blind tour guide [[electronic resource] /] / Patrick Lambe |
Autore | Lambe Patrick <1960-> |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Singapore, : Times Books International, 2002 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (166 p.) |
Disciplina |
380
658 |
Soggetto topico |
Information technology - Economic aspects
Knowledge management Technological innovations - Management Industrial management Success in business Information society Risk management |
ISBN | 981-261-915-1 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Contents; Preface; 1 Becoming a New Economy Manager; 2 How are the Mighty Fallen; 3 Sick Companies; 4 Leadership in the New Economy; 5 The Panopticon; 6 Branching Out: Dilemmas in Education; 7 Sisyphus; 8 The Geeks Have It; 9 The Real Threat to Asian Companies; 10 In Praise of Older Workers; 11 Time and Motion; 12 Gutenberg's Periscope; 13 Buying into Risk; 14 The New Landscape of Risk; 15 Fast Technology, Slow People; 16 Slow People, Slower World; 17 Lower Friction, Higher Risk; 18 Who Pays for Risk in the Connected Economy?; 19 Buying Time: Coffee and the New Economy
20 Spending Time: An Anatomy of Outrage 21 Innovating - Inside the Box; 22 Innovation:Out of the (Juke) Box; 23 In Praise of Laggards; 24 Friction is Dead: Long Live Friction; 25 Tale of Dog and Duck; 26 The Old New Economy; Index |
Altri titoli varianti | Surviving and prospering in the new economy |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910782423303321 |
Lambe Patrick <1960-> | ||
Singapore, : Times Books International, 2002 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The blind tour guide / / Patrick Lambe |
Autore | Lambe Patrick <1960-> |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Singapore, : Times Books International, 2002 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (166 p.) |
Disciplina |
380
658 |
Soggetto topico |
Information technology - Economic aspects
Knowledge management Technological innovations - Management Industrial management Success in business Information society Risk management |
ISBN | 981-261-915-1 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Contents; Preface; 1 Becoming a New Economy Manager; 2 How are the Mighty Fallen; 3 Sick Companies; 4 Leadership in the New Economy; 5 The Panopticon; 6 Branching Out: Dilemmas in Education; 7 Sisyphus; 8 The Geeks Have It; 9 The Real Threat to Asian Companies; 10 In Praise of Older Workers; 11 Time and Motion; 12 Gutenberg's Periscope; 13 Buying into Risk; 14 The New Landscape of Risk; 15 Fast Technology, Slow People; 16 Slow People, Slower World; 17 Lower Friction, Higher Risk; 18 Who Pays for Risk in the Connected Economy?; 19 Buying Time: Coffee and the New Economy
20 Spending Time: An Anatomy of Outrage 21 Innovating - Inside the Box; 22 Innovation:Out of the (Juke) Box; 23 In Praise of Laggards; 24 Friction is Dead: Long Live Friction; 25 Tale of Dog and Duck; 26 The Old New Economy; Index |
Altri titoli varianti | Surviving and prospering in the new economy |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910827418503321 |
Lambe Patrick <1960-> | ||
Singapore, : Times Books International, 2002 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Organising knowledge : taxonomies, knowledge and organisational effectiveness / / Patrick Lambe |
Autore | Lambe Patrick <1960-> |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Oxford, England : , : Chandos Publishing, , 2007 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (298 p.) |
Disciplina | 658.4038 |
Collana | Chandos knowledge management series |
Soggetto topico | Knowledge management |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-78063-200-2
1-84334-228-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Organising Knowledge:Taxonomies, Knowledgeand OrganisationalEffectiveness; Copyright; Contents; List of abbreviations; List of figures and tables; Preface; Introduction; About the author; 1Defining our terms; Can we organise knowledge?; What are taxonomies?; Taxonomy as artificial memory; Taxonomy work; 2Taxonomies can take many forms; Lists; Tree structures; Hierarchies; Polyhierarchies; Matrices; Facets; System maps; Practical implications of different taxonomy forms; 3Taxonomies and infrastructure for organisational effectiveness; Organisational ineffectiveness; The problem of Babel
Taxonomies as boundary objectsInformation and knowledge infrastructure; 4Taxonomies and activities for organisational effectiveness; Risk; Costs; Customers and markets; Innovation; 5Taxonomies and knowledge management; Taxonomies and findability; Taxonomies and content management; Taxonomies and knowledge management; Logos/Information; Sophos/Expertise and learning; Pathos/Collaboration; Ethos/Culture; 6What do we want our taxonomies to do?; What taxonomies do; Making sense of taxonomy work; When taxonomies go bad; 7Preparing for a taxonomy project; Step 1: Meet project sponsor Step 2: Engage stakeholdersStep 3: Refine project purpose; Step 4: Design the approach; Step 5: Build the communication plan; Step 6: Start the governance process; 8Designing your taxonomy; The cognitive constraints on taxonomy design; Step 7: Collect vocabularies and organising principles; Step 8: Facet analysis; Step 9: Test and observe; 9Implementing your taxonomy; Step 10: Plan the instantiation of your taxonomy; Step 11: Integrate your taxonomy into the infrastructure; Step 12: Secure the governance process; 10The future of taxonomy work; Ontologies and machine intelligence Folksonomies and rich serendipityEnhancing usefulness in folksonomies; Taxonomies vs folksonomies?; Towards an array of knowledge infrastructure tools; The benefits of diversity in knowledge and information infrastructure; Spimes and the future of taxonomies; Bibliography; Index |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910453838403321 |
Lambe Patrick <1960-> | ||
Oxford, England : , : Chandos Publishing, , 2007 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Organising knowledge : taxonomies, knowledge and organisational effectiveness / / Patrick Lambe |
Autore | Lambe Patrick <1960-> |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Oxford : , : Chandos Publishing, , 2007 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (xix, 277 pages) : illustrations |
Disciplina | 658.4038 |
Collana |
Chandos knowledge management series
Gale eBooks |
Soggetto topico | Knowledge management |
ISBN |
1-78063-200-2
1-84334-228-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Organising Knowledge:Taxonomies, Knowledgeand OrganisationalEffectiveness; Copyright; Contents; List of abbreviations; List of figures and tables; Preface; Introduction; About the author; 1Defining our terms; Can we organise knowledge?; What are taxonomies?; Taxonomy as artificial memory; Taxonomy work; 2Taxonomies can take many forms; Lists; Tree structures; Hierarchies; Polyhierarchies; Matrices; Facets; System maps; Practical implications of different taxonomy forms; 3Taxonomies and infrastructure for organisational effectiveness; Organisational ineffectiveness; The problem of Babel
Taxonomies as boundary objectsInformation and knowledge infrastructure; 4Taxonomies and activities for organisational effectiveness; Risk; Costs; Customers and markets; Innovation; 5Taxonomies and knowledge management; Taxonomies and findability; Taxonomies and content management; Taxonomies and knowledge management; Logos/Information; Sophos/Expertise and learning; Pathos/Collaboration; Ethos/Culture; 6What do we want our taxonomies to do?; What taxonomies do; Making sense of taxonomy work; When taxonomies go bad; 7Preparing for a taxonomy project; Step 1: Meet project sponsor Step 2: Engage stakeholdersStep 3: Refine project purpose; Step 4: Design the approach; Step 5: Build the communication plan; Step 6: Start the governance process; 8Designing your taxonomy; The cognitive constraints on taxonomy design; Step 7: Collect vocabularies and organising principles; Step 8: Facet analysis; Step 9: Test and observe; 9Implementing your taxonomy; Step 10: Plan the instantiation of your taxonomy; Step 11: Integrate your taxonomy into the infrastructure; Step 12: Secure the governance process; 10The future of taxonomy work; Ontologies and machine intelligence Folksonomies and rich serendipityEnhancing usefulness in folksonomies; Taxonomies vs folksonomies?; Towards an array of knowledge infrastructure tools; The benefits of diversity in knowledge and information infrastructure; Spimes and the future of taxonomies; Bibliography; Index |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910790982303321 |
Lambe Patrick <1960-> | ||
Oxford : , : Chandos Publishing, , 2007 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Organising knowledge : taxonomies, knowledge and organisational effectiveness / / Patrick Lambe |
Autore | Lambe Patrick <1960-> |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Oxford : , : Chandos Publishing, , 2007 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (xix, 277 pages) : illustrations |
Disciplina | 658.4038 |
Collana |
Chandos knowledge management series
Gale eBooks |
Soggetto topico | Knowledge management |
ISBN |
1-78063-200-2
1-84334-228-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Organising Knowledge:Taxonomies, Knowledgeand OrganisationalEffectiveness; Copyright; Contents; List of abbreviations; List of figures and tables; Preface; Introduction; About the author; 1Defining our terms; Can we organise knowledge?; What are taxonomies?; Taxonomy as artificial memory; Taxonomy work; 2Taxonomies can take many forms; Lists; Tree structures; Hierarchies; Polyhierarchies; Matrices; Facets; System maps; Practical implications of different taxonomy forms; 3Taxonomies and infrastructure for organisational effectiveness; Organisational ineffectiveness; The problem of Babel
Taxonomies as boundary objectsInformation and knowledge infrastructure; 4Taxonomies and activities for organisational effectiveness; Risk; Costs; Customers and markets; Innovation; 5Taxonomies and knowledge management; Taxonomies and findability; Taxonomies and content management; Taxonomies and knowledge management; Logos/Information; Sophos/Expertise and learning; Pathos/Collaboration; Ethos/Culture; 6What do we want our taxonomies to do?; What taxonomies do; Making sense of taxonomy work; When taxonomies go bad; 7Preparing for a taxonomy project; Step 1: Meet project sponsor Step 2: Engage stakeholdersStep 3: Refine project purpose; Step 4: Design the approach; Step 5: Build the communication plan; Step 6: Start the governance process; 8Designing your taxonomy; The cognitive constraints on taxonomy design; Step 7: Collect vocabularies and organising principles; Step 8: Facet analysis; Step 9: Test and observe; 9Implementing your taxonomy; Step 10: Plan the instantiation of your taxonomy; Step 11: Integrate your taxonomy into the infrastructure; Step 12: Secure the governance process; 10The future of taxonomy work; Ontologies and machine intelligence Folksonomies and rich serendipityEnhancing usefulness in folksonomies; Taxonomies vs folksonomies?; Towards an array of knowledge infrastructure tools; The benefits of diversity in knowledge and information infrastructure; Spimes and the future of taxonomies; Bibliography; Index |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910818287803321 |
Lambe Patrick <1960-> | ||
Oxford : , : Chandos Publishing, , 2007 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Principles of knowledge auditing : foundations for knowledge management implementation / / Patrick Lambe |
Autore | Lambe Patrick <1960-> |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cambridge, Massachusetts : , : The MIT Press, , [2023] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (532 pages) |
Disciplina | 658.4/038 |
Soggetto topico |
Knowledge management
Organizational learning Organizational change |
ISBN |
0-262-37316-5
0-262-37315-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Introduction -- Getting Knowledge Management Right -- Why Knowledge Management Is Challenging -- Why Knowledge Audits Are Important -- Why Knowledge Audits Are Challenging -- How This Book Aims to Help -- I: Recovering Our Past -- 1. Seeking to Understand Knowledge in Organizations -- Case Study: An Early Communication Audit -- Communications as Information Systems -- Parallels with Knowledge Management -- Summary -- 2. The History of Knowledge Audits -- Precursors of Knowledge Audits -- Why We Need to Understand Knowledge Audit History -- Summary -- II: Speaking Clearly about Audits -- 3. What Is an Audit? A Definitional Approach -- Connotations of Audit -- Tight Models of Audit: Financial and Operational Audits -- Summary -- 4. What Kind of Audit Is a Knowledge Audit? A Naturalistic Approach -- What Do Knowledge Management Practitioners Mean by the Term Audit? -- What Does the Research Literature Tell Us about Models of Audit? -- A Typology Approach or Integrative Metaconstruct Approach? -- The Knowledge Audit Typology in Practice -- Knowledge Audits Should Be Compound Activities -- Which Audit Types Should We Adopt? -- Summary -- 5. What Are We Auditing? -- The Target Phenomena for Knowledge Audits -- 1. Knowledge Stocks -- 2. Knowledge Flows -- 3. Knowledge Needs -- 4. KM Enablers -- 5. KM Processes -- 6. KM Capabilities -- 7. KM Outcomes -- Summary -- III: Drivers and Motivations -- 6. What Stimulated the Emergence of Knowledge-Related Audits? -- The Drivers for the Knowledge Audit Determine Our Audit-Scoping Choices -- The Roots of Knowledge Audit Methodology in Communications Research -- 1. Communications for Control -- 2. Communications for a Productive Climate -- 3. Communications for Influence -- 4. Communications for Effect -- Summary.
7. Beginnings and Improvisations: Discovery Review, Inventory, and Participative Goal-Setting Audits -- Emergence of the Communication Audit as an Opinion-Based Approach -- Discovery Review Audits -- Inventory Audits -- Participative Goal-Setting Audits -- Case Study: The Asian Development Bank-Moving from Centralized KM Planning to Participatory Planning -- Case Study: When a Culture of Control Produces Avoidance and Unresolved Conflict -- Case Study: Getting beyond Us and Them -- Case Study: Staying the Course -- Summary -- 8. Authority Envy: Assessment Audits and Standards in Communication and Information Audits -- Communication Audits: "Scientific" Assessment and Benchmarking -- Information Audits: Assessment, Compliance, and Authority Envy -- Knowledge Audits: Assessment and Value Audits Using a Management Accounting Model -- Summary -- 9. The Battle for Standards in Knowledge Management -- Knowledge Audits: Fragmentation of Audit Types -- The Knowledge Management Pushback: KM Assessment, KM Standards, and Antiprescriptivism -- Case Study: A Controversial KM Standards Effort -- The Rise of the Prescriptive Standard in Knowledge Management -- Why Did the ISO 30401 Standard Succeed? -- Is ISO 30401 an Effective Knowledge Audit Instrument? -- Case Study: A Cautionary Tale of Two KM Implementations -- How Might ISO 30401 Be Useful for Knowledge Auditing? -- Case Study: From Framework to Audit Instrument -- Summary -- IV: Speaking Clearly about Knowledge -- 10. Risky Metaphors -- Useful Ambiguity and Treacherous Ambiguity -- The Benefits and Dangers of Working with Metaphors for Knowledge -- Summary -- 11. The Syllepsis Trap: When Choice of Language Becomes Problematic -- Why Are We Vulnerable to Syllepsis in Knowledge Management? -- Cargo Cult Vocabularies: Wishful Thinking in Our Choice of Words -- Syllepsis and the Rhetoric of Knowledge Audits. Summary -- 12. The Language of Value: Assets and Capital -- Knowledge as Asset or Capital: The Background -- Slippage of Meaning: From Literal Asset to Figurative Asset -- Case Study: Enabling Team Knowledge -- Analyzing the Syllepsis -- Summary -- 13. The Language of Value: Resources -- Knowledge as Resource: The Background -- Slippage of Meaning: From Economic Resource to Commodity Resource -- Summing Up: Safe and Unsafe Metaphors-Asset, Capital, or Resource? -- Summary -- 14. Ascribing Value to Knowledge and the Implications for Influence and Control -- Summary -- 15. The Inventory Audit: Auditing Knowledge Stocks -- What We Need from a Typology of Knowledge -- Case Study: When Typologies Fail -- Case Study: Auditing Knowledge with Binary Typologies -- Summary -- 16. Unhelpful Dualisms: The Personal-Collective Dualism -- The Missing Middle: The Problem with the Personal-Collective Dualism -- The Special Characteristics of Team Knowledge -- Case Study: Team Knowledge in Action -- Case Study: The Grafton and the Invercauld-the Power of Team Knowledge -- The Special Characteristics of Organizational Knowledge -- A Middle-Out Method for Auditing Knowledge Stocks -- Case Study: Collectives "See" More than Individuals -- Summary -- 17. Unhelpful Dualisms: The Tacit-Explicit Dualism -- Nonaka's Sleight of Hand: The Tacit-Explicit Dualism -- An Intermediate Knowledge Type: Implicit Knowledge -- Summary -- 18. Typologies of Personal Knowledge -- Know-What, Know-Why, Know-How -- Breaking Down Tacit Knowledge -- Summary -- 19. Typologies of Organizational Knowledge -- Intellectual Capital Typologies -- Strategic Knowledge Typologies -- Getting from Strategic to Operational Knowledge -- The Opacity of Strategic Knowledge -- Feeling Our Way -- Case Study: Kodak, Fujifilm, and the Struggle to Manage Strategic Capabilities. Considerations for Working from Strategic to Operational Knowledge -- Case Study: Strategy as a Lens through Which to Inventory Knowledge -- Summary -- 20. Toward Integration: Typologies of Functional Knowledge -- Toward an Integrated View: Using Matrices to Characterize Knowledge -- Typologies of Functional Knowledge -- The Effects of a Powerful Typology -- Case Study: Going beyond the Obvious-a Knowledge Inventory Audit in a Property Development Company -- Summary -- 21. Conclusion: Possibilities -- Nine Principles to Plan By -- Different Scenarios, Different Audit Models -- Closing Words -- References -- Index. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910741380903321 |
Lambe Patrick <1960-> | ||
Cambridge, Massachusetts : , : The MIT Press, , [2023] | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|