The course will focus on the people aspects of Knowledge Management rather than the technology concerned. Knowledge Management needs the creation of a culture in which people are willing to share not only their successes but also, sometimes their failures.
The knowledge inside any organization is probably the greatest asset you have; so the need to protect and develop it. This course will show you how to do so and how to develop the necessary practices. The use of enterprise social networking, blogs, and multimedia for example are transforming knowledge management and contributing to efforts to make work enjoyable and interesting.
At the end of this course the participants will be able to:
Create a culture of sharing
Build systems that recognize efforts to share knowledge
Ensure that departments initiate knowledge sharing and reciprocate to initiatives from elsewhere
Create an atmosphere of mutual trust
Develop the supervisory and management teams towards empowering employees
Motivate employees positively to be team players
Engage the workforce in the day to day activities of the organization
Introduce a performance management system that encourages knowledge management
Managers
Human Recourses
Performance management
Empowering & Engagement
Networking
Management skills
Day 1:
Knowledge Management, Empowerment, and Engagement
Definition of a learning organization, people, teams, organization
Understanding competitive advantage, productivity and profit
Characteristics of engaged employees and disengaged employees
Characteristics of empowered employees and un-empowered employees
Motivation – Intrinsic and extrinsic
Day 2:
Techniques for Engaging Employees
Informal participative decision-making programs
Job enrichment
Self-managed work teams
Informal and formal consultation processes
Enterprise Social Networking, Blogs Multimedia
Day 3:
The Role of the Supervisor and Team Leader in Knowledge Management
Getting the “Quid Pro Quo” – initiative VS reciprocation
The Interpersonal skills involved – listening, communicating, assertiveness and influence
The responsibility for people
Delegation
Recognition for efforts to share knowledge
Day 4:
Empowered Performance Reviews
Making Knowledge Management a part of performance management
Motivating through feedback
The importance of praise and how to make it more effective
Coaching
Providing genuine development, continuous learning
Day 5:
Handling Change, Networking, and Systems
Upwards management
Involving suppliers and contractors, supply chain
People to people business
Return to social networking