Skip to main content

Home/ PKM Workshop/ Group items tagged innovation

Rss Feed Group items tagged

1More

Innovation defined: New, useful, real and critical to long-term success | ZDNet - 0 views

  •  
    "WEAVING INNOVATION INTO THE VERY FABRIC OF YOUR COMPANY Armed with a definition for innovation and the knowledge that it is critical to one's long-term success, organizations must take the next step, which is building a culture of innovation. And this is when the real work begins, because organizations can't just spend their way to successful innovation."
1More

Innovation is about making connections - 0 views

  •  
    Great Why statements and response that delve into innovation, network era and more. Also excellent links to resources "The network era workplace requires collaboration and cooperation because complex problems cannot be solved alone. Tacit knowledge, that which cannot be codified or put into a database, needs to flow. Social learning, developed through many conversations, enables this flow of tacit knowledge. This is not "nonsense chat", as traditional management might view it, but essential for creating stronger bonds in professional social networks. Companies have to foster richer and deeper connections which can only be built over time through meaningful conversations. This is why social learning in the workplace is necessary for business."
1More

Does technology improve employee engagement? | ZDNet - 0 views

  •  
    "In the process of applying technology, we can't forget that workforce engagement, the measure of whether an employee merely does the minimum required of them, versus proactively driving innovation and new value for the organization, is the ultimate objective here. Thus, engagement can only ever be partially accounted for by deploying the latest new collaborative technology, and probably significantly less than many of its proponents would have you believe."
1More

the literacy of the 21st century - 0 views

  •  
    ""The untold story behind today's most innovative brands, however, is what happens behind the scenes. While success stories are plentiful, what most people don't see is the amount of trial, error, and learning that goes into setting up workflows, empowering employees, and figuring out initiatives to prioritize. Regardless of whether you're a part of an established company or two-person startup, the task of bringing new ideas to market is hard." - The Next Web"
1More

How To Engineer Serendipity | TIME - 0 views

  •  
    "It isn't happy accidents-It's a state of mind I'd like to tell the story of a paradox: How do we bring the right people to the right place at the right time to discover something new, when we don't know who or where or when that is, let alone what it is we're looking for? This is the paradox of innovation: If so many discoveries - from penicillin to plastics - are the product of serendipity, why do we insist breakthroughs can somehow be planned? Why not embrace serendipity instead? Because here's an example of what happens when you don't."
3More

Talking about the Network Era | Harold Jarche - 0 views

  • broadcasting model that offers “best content” (in which value is described by n, the number of consumers) to a network of peer-to-peer transactions (where the network’s value is based on “most members” and mathematically described by n2).  But by far the most valuable networks are based on those that facilitate group affiliations, Reed concluded. – David Bollier
  • TIMN has long maintained that, beyond today’s common claims that government or market is the solution, we are entering a new era in which it will be said that the network is the solution (e.g., here and here). Aging contentions that turning to “the government” or “the market” is the way to address particular public-policy issues will eventually give way to innovative ideas that “the network” is the optimal solution.
  •  
    Networks will transform education, business, the economy, and society even further. In the network era, the creative economy will gain dominance over the information and industrial economies. Professional knowledge distribution will move away from institutionalized business schools into networked communities of practice.
1More

Why your networks and collaboration are at the heart of the value you create | Trends i... - 0 views

  •  
    "It's a fallacy to think of networking as a sales tool. Firstly, it's not. Secondly, it might instead be one of the defining sources of value in your business. Business strategist Ross Dawson, author of the (free and highly comprehensible) Future of Work Framework explains how."
1More

What Is Digital Literacy? | Digital Literacy - 1 views

  •  
    "My favourite definition of Digital Literacy that I have found so far is part of a presentation on Digital Literacy in Primary School Sites, an experiment in 3 schools in Ireland (Casey & Bruce, 2010).  They present Digital Literacy as follows:"
1More

Tacit Knowledge Not Included | Harold Jarche - 0 views

  •  
    "Tacit knowledge is stuff that we know, but we can't explain how to do it.  Think of it this way: have someone throw something at you, and try to catch it.  Now, describe exactly how you figured out where to put your hand to catch the flying car keys (or whatever).  You can't.  There are calculations of speed, and trajectories, and muscle movements, and all of that goes on inside your brain and you can't explain any of it.  That's tacit knowledge. - Tim Kastelle"
1More

Getting started with Personal Kanban, Ottawa, 19 June 2015 - 0 views

  •  
    An example to promote my workshops "WHAT YOU WILL LEARN The 2 rules of Personal Kanban - Visualizing work & Limiting work in progress (WIP) - and how they can be implemented. Why Personal Kanban works: the Underlying principles of psychology and Lean thinking. How Personal Kanban can be used as a tool to allow for a continuous improvement in your work."
1More

Introducing Personal Knowledge Management (PKM) to a Corporate Audience by Eric Kammere... - 0 views

  •  
    "As a global leader in the quick-service restaurant industry, Domino's Pizza has a concentration of jobs requiring a broad base of connections to people and information. The people in these jobs probably used traditional learning to help them attain key roles in supply chain, operations, marketing, or information services. However, an overlooked key to their success, and their future growth, is a type of learning in which they may not have even known they were engaged."
1More

Here's A Google Perk Any Company Can Imitate: Employee-To-Employee Learning | Fast Company - 0 views

  •  
    "On days like today, however, he participates in a program called "Googler to Googler," which places employees from across departments into teaching roles that would otherwise be filled by the HR department (or rather, as Google calls it, "People Operations"). Green's class is part of the Google core curriculum, which includes courses on management, orientation, and skills such as public speaking. Other classes taught Googler to Googler--everything from kickboxing to parenting--were initiated and designed by an employee."
1More

Communicating the Value of Social Business « Dachis Group Collaboratory - ins... - 0 views

  •  
    Explore this site for ideas for workshop....leading edge on social busines. "For the rest of us who aren't there yet, major change is still evident: The Web itself has become pervasively social as we've changed both the behavior and expectations of our private lives around so many of the ways that we relate to one another. This includes how much (more) we share information now, actively try to build social capital and our personal brands, as well as how we value others. But make no mistake, we are each still learning much about our newfound ability to directly influence the entire world from our tiny corner of it. The incredible leverage that each of us now possesses in the form of social tools is one of the most potent forces in the modern world."
1More

An organizational knowledge-sharing framework - 0 views

  •  
    "There is a lot of knowledge in an organization, some of it easy to codify (capture), and much (most) of it difficult to do so. Understanding how best to commit resources for knowledge-sharing should be in some kind of a decision-making framework that is easy for anyone to understand. This is a first attempt to do that."
1More

Is It Official Yet ? » Wirearchy - 0 views

  •  
    "The working definition of wirearchy is .. "A dynamic two-way flow of power and authority based on knowledge, trust, credibility and a focus on results, enabled by interconnected people and technology""
1More

Irving Wladawsky-Berger - 0 views

  •  
    "I recently read a very interesting paper, The Growing Importance of Social Skills in the Labor Market, by Harvard professor David Deming.  Deming's paper shows that over the past several decades, labor markets have been increasingly rewarding social skills, that is, interpersonal skills that facilitate interactions and communications with others.  He presents evidence that since 1980, social-skill intensive occupations have enjoyed most of the employment growth across the whole wage spectrum, and that employment and wage growth have been particularly strong in jobs that require both high cognitive and high social skills. "
3More

democracy at work - 0 views

  • As we learn to think for ourselves, we must also connect with others. We are only as smart as our knowledge networks. But we do not need someone to manage our connections. The simple guideline of self-direction, often enabled by network technologies, can create beautifully complex relationships amongst interconnected people.
  • The principles of the network era workplace are simple. It is only through innovative and contextual methods, the self-selection of the most appropriate tools and work conditions, and willing cooperation, that complex problems can be addressed. This requires creative work based on passion, creativity, and initiative. The duty of being transparent and sharing our knowledge rests with all workers. Chance will favour the democratically connected company.
  •  
    "As we learn to think for ourselves, we must also connect with others. We are only as smart as our knowledge networks. But we do not need someone to manage our connections. The simple guideline of self-direction, often enabled by network technologies, can create beautifully complex relationships amongst interconnected people. "
1 - 19 of 19
Showing 20 items per page