The success of businesses in the 1990's in an increasingly competitive marketplace depends critically on the quality of knowledge which those organisations apply to their key business processes. For example the supply chain depends on knowl...
http://www.gdrc.org/kmgmt/km-1.html
・ Companies use knowledge management systems as important tools for organizing their information. Historically... ・ A knowledge management system is typically created by a collaboration between the programmers and the... ・ Knowledge managem...
http://www.ehow.com/how_5049921_knowledge-management-sy...
From Wikipedia: Knowledge Management (KM) refers to a range of practices used by organisations to identify, create, represent, and distribute knowledge for reuse, awareness and learning across the organisation. Ever try to sell a KM solut...
http://blogs.officezealot.com/mauro/archive/2007/01/01/...
Knowledge management, like most activities in modern business, requires management of the informational content that comprises the knowledged base. Knowledge management has become a popular topic with the rise of the [digital] means to coll...
http://www.linkedin.com/answers/business-operations/pro...
Many small businesses work in tightly focused areas, often using specific skills not generally available ‘off the street’. For many, the cost of replacing the knowledge that an employee has developed over the years can be big, more so in a ...
https://www.microsoft.com/uk/smallbusiness/technology-i...
It is hard to find who coined this term and when he or she did it. As for why, I would guess knowledge management exits since there are human beings who tried to pass their wisdom onto their students. Just like gravity, it exits and people ...
http://www.linkedin.com/answers/management/change-manag...
・ KM is both old and new. KM is not just a consultants' invention but a practitioner-based, substantive ... ・ Manage learning process to improve efficiency? Why performance varies? How to measure? ・ K-based society Micro level: interna...
http://ntnulife.blogspot.com/2008_03_01_archive.html