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Understanding knowledge relationships

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blood-sucking consultantTen months ago I wrote a blog-post called "Do Even More With Less" . I talked about a government department that had to find savings of a billion dollars a year every year for 10 years. To put it another way that is $2,732,240 a day for 3,522 days! At the time I said it was an impossible task and quite unrealistic.  I also said:

I think we are heading down the path of a disillusioned public service. The service will try to be efficient at the expense of being effective, and achieve neither goal. We will see more outsourcing, right-sizing, reshaping and so on, all at the expense of people and ultimately customers. A consultants and contractors paradise is on the horizon as they pick up the slack! From a knowledge management perspective we will see the transfer of knowledge from the public service to private enterprise, and the taxpayer will pay a premium to access it.

Well my prediction has come true, and it's proving to be awfully expensive and disheartening. The first step was to employ two prestigious management consultant companies from this list to provide advice on how to proceed - a step I'm reliably told cost several million dollars, but only added two or three days to the organisations $2,732,240 a day pain!

February 2009 Network Analysis Seminar

network diagram of teamsI’m running a Network Analysis seminar at the University of Canberra on the 6th of February 2009. The seminar is aimed at new researchers, but is useful for anyone wanting to know more about network analysis. The seminar occurs in the morning and is organised into three sessions.

Session one:

  • provides a brief history of network analysis;
  • positions network analysis in the research traditions;
  • explains why network analysis is useful, and why it is gaining traction now; and
  • provides some examples across disciplines where network analysis is being used.

Over the past four or so years I have collected a substantial library of books, papers and articles on knowledge management and network analysis.  I maintain this collection in Endnote X2 for Windows , which is one piece of software I cannot live without.   The collection has grown to well over 600 artefacts. 

Knowing how popular my bibliography pages used to be I thought I would share the database.  The link will take you to a compressed Endnote X2 database , which includes most of the source documents (where they are not books) in Adobe PDF format.  Beware though - the compressed database is still about 175 megabytes!

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