Feature
posted 1 Apr 2000 in Volume 3 Issue 7
Intellectual ergonomics: an intranet
diary
Intranet, Portal, Dashboard, Scorecard. What processes connect these
tools to knowledge? Why are Application Service Providers, or ASPs, the next big
thing for KM? Alden Globe shares his personal journal of intranet knowledge
management, and describes practical methods to ensure winning
projects.
It
is likely that concepts we share today, such as ‘power transmission’ or ‘jet
engine’ would not have been comprehensible to citizens of ancient Athens. In the
same vein, ‘wheelwright’, ‘leeching’ and ‘horse-less carriage’ have little
meaning today. One explanation for this simple observation is that each
generation through history shares a ‘transcendental event horizon’, a collective
understanding that explains that those people, at that time, grasp ideas
relevant to their world.
I began to comprehend computers, desktop publishing and multimedia in
1990, as I struggled to write screenplays in Steamboat Springs, a popular ski
resort in Northwest Colorado. I was intrigued with the idea of using technology
to be both writer and producer of an interactive film or game. [JUMP CUT: Two
feature-length action film scripts, Johnny Shredds, and Jack Wizard languishing
in drawer at author’s side. FADE TO: Fingers typing on keyboard.]
With interactive
challenges fresh on my mind in 1994, I began with Steamboat Magazine as an
assistant editor, charged with getting the magazine on to the Internet. I
learned HTML from a book and used an old Mac to ftp hand-coded pages over a 14.4
modem up to a rented server. Cheap, crude, fast, practical... and effective. The
first story I put on our new magazine website was an article I’d written about
telecommuters arriving across Colorado:
“By the winter of 1894, the outlaw
West of Butch Cassidy and Billy the Kid was gone... Ranchers and cowboys worked
the land, farming and raising livestock. The law was a badge and whiskey the
drink of choice... Grazing lands were fenced with barbed wires, each style named
for its maker: Brinkerhoff, Glidden, Ellwood, Scutts.
In the winter of 1994, a century
later, another breed of adventurer has arrived in Steamboat Springs. But these
settlers are homesteading an untamed electronic frontier. They do not work the
land. The law is an encryption chip and caffeine the drink of choice.
Steamboat’s new pioneers work hard and reap a harvest of the imagination,
transmitting data over the new wire that fences the west: Copper, fiber and
coaxial.”
(“The
Wires That Fence the West; Riding the Range on the Infobahn”, Steamboat
Magazine, Winter/Spring1995. Used with permission.)
Building one of the first regional
magazine websites in the world taught me about online community building,
marketing, local politics, e-writing style, graphics, content management,
publishing software and outsourcing. It was exciting when the emails came in
from skiers around the world. They sought advice, lodging, equipment tips, jobs,
bargains, and old friends. I began to grasp the power inherent in connecting
people with information, resources and like-minded individuals.
By 1995 I wanted
to take these concepts further. I joined J.D. Edwards Worldwide Solutions, a
global ERP software company based in Denver, where I was drafted for an intranet
experiment we named the Knowledge GardenTM. Due to rapid growth, J.D. Edwards
was facing the challenge of distributing increasing amounts of information to
its global workforce. The company needed to filter timely, relevant information
to every employee. The task of getting and staying up to speed was difficult.
Hard-copy manuals and newsletters quickly fell out of date, and were expensive
to distribute to all who needed them worldwide.
Rather than build an exhaustive
document repository, we chose to profile people and elicit the small bits of
information they truly need to do a job – their job – and drive revenue. We
interviewed members of the sales force, finding out what they needed to know.
What do they read? What do they bring to client meetings? How do they get
product news? How do they keep pace with the competition? Who do they call when
they need answers to questions? We focused on efficient use of information. It
was an opportunity to come to terms with how an individual maintains ‘strategic
literacy’ in the face of ‘information smog’.
Many critical Knowledge Garden
decisions we made during the 1996-1998 timeframe were based on our understanding
of publishing and journalism best practices: The ‘inverted pyramid’ of newspaper
writing style, staffing around communications processes (product,
sales/marketing, employee); building and staffing an editorial infrastructure,
enterprise taxonomy and personalisation features.
The team that built Knowledge Garden
was not made up from traditional technologists. Kathleen Murphy, an editor at
then Web Week (now Internet World) caught the spirit and explained the effort in
December 1997:
“The brains behind the intranet initiative hold advanced degrees in
philosophy, English literature, and law, not C++ or Java. And when others in the
company’s Denver headquarters might be talking about predictions of the next
snowfall, the intranet team is swapping e-mail in which they summarise books on
the economics of information, on creating environments for learning, and on
developing products quickly for the compressed schedules of the Internet era...
The intranet team studied the pathways to information during all phases of
customer interaction, and has now structured access to content on the internal
web not only in a hierarchical fashion by department, but also according to the
just-in-time sales cycle. Team members found, for example, that it’s uncommon
for employees to search for information based on who produced it.“
(“Designing an Intranet
101”, Web Week, Dec 1997, www.internetworld.com/print/1997/12/01/intranet/19971201-designing.html)
Basically, we sought to
understand ‘information cycles’ critical to driving revenue. What people are
involved? Then we focused on organising information around the cycles,
abandoning corporate hierarchy and org charts, and creating a ‘Knowledge
Storyboard’.
The
process is explained in detail in Managing Knowledge, A Practical Web-Based
Approach, from Addison Wesley. It was recently documented also in Knowledge
Management’s October 1999 issue in: “Leveraging the dimensions of K: Knowledge
Engineering for Web Based Knowledge Management” by Mark Hammersley, illustrating
a knowledge storyboard used in a structural analysis process at Rolls
Royce.
I’ve
visited companies in the US where web-enthusiasts and IT specialists have built
large numbers of internal websites. Alternatively, a merger or acquisition
scenario required linking complex information resources together. In many of
these cases, there’s no overarching intranet vision, taxonomy, technical, design
or navigation standards, and no staff dedicated to content management. The
result is not an intranet, but a messy collection of disconnected websites
behind a firewall; it’s expensive online information that benefits few, and
these systems go largely unused. There seem to be three responses to this
situation, after the fact:
Enterprise content
management shortcomings, while usually not well understood, are clearly
detrimental to the competitive strength of companies afflicted with them. It
became apparent in 1999 that good KM practices form an essential foundation for
successful e-business initiatives. The ability to communicate and share
information effectively with customers, partners and employees is critical to
succeed with powerful sales force automation, customer relationship management,
online self-help, e-commerce and other solutions.
My co-authors, Wayne Applehans and
Greg Laugero, and I have found a five-part approach to intranet strategy
development works well as we grapple now with KM in varied information
environments:
1.
Scenario planning
2. Strategic planning
3. E-business readiness
4.
Knowledge audit
5. Information design and branding
In your own intranet efforts, you
might begin attempting simple scenario planning to gain an understanding of the
potential future operating environment and communications challenges for your
organisation (see: The Art of the Long View: Planning for the Future in an
Uncertain World by Peter Schwartz). That effort should lead to strategic
planning and looking at market drivers, business drivers and related issues
(see: Mastering the Digital Marketplace: Practical Strategies for
Competitiveness in the New Economy by Douglas F. Aldrich, reviewed in this issue
of Knowledge Management – see page 30).
Once these first two higher-level
conversations are complete, your team may be better able to examine your
organisation’s informational readiness, cultural readiness and technological
readiness for meeting the challenge presented by the internet, knowledge
management and e-business. Performance of a knowledge audit, an in-depth study
of key information cycles, personal profiling and knowledge network-mapping
geared to successful intranet deployments. (See: Innovation Strategy for the
Knowledge Economy: The Ken Awakening, Business Briefcase Series, by Debra M.
Amidon.) Finally, information design and branding work ensures consistent
navigation, feature language and presentation of information that maximises the
use of appropriate technology and tools. (See: Edward Tufte’s Visual
Explanations: Images and Quantities, Evidence and Narrative)
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