Personal knowledge networking
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Personal knowledge networks are methods for organizations to identify, capture, evaluate, retrieve, and share information. This method has been primarily conceived by researchers to share personal, informal knowledge between organizations. Instead of looking at the organizational context, some researchers investigate the intra-firm aspects at the personal level of organizational knowledge networks, where knowledge management (KM) processes start and end. Various Technology, technologies and Behavior, behaviors support personal knowledge networking, for example wikis, RSS (file format), Really Simple Syndication (RSS) and relationship networks. Researchers propose that knowledge management can occur with little explicit governance. This trend is called "grassroots KM" as opposed to traditional, top-down enterprise KM.


Origin

New models emerged for the continuous operation of knowledge management. Apart from formal arrangements for official alliances, individuals often know each other and interact beyond official duties, which can lead to knowledge flows and learning. * Drawbacks of Traditional Knowledge Management : Traditional Knowledge Management focuses more on technology rather than on social interaction. Organizations should first look to the culture inherent inside, which significantly affects the social interaction among members involved in. * Technical Support from Social Network :Social software provides an answer to its previous question. It is a means of giving people what they want in terms of their traditional knowledge management activities, in a way that also benefits the firm.


Comparison between KM and PKN


Structural aspect

* Content-centric vs User-centric :Content-based process is regarded as a major factor which leads to Knowledge Management's incompatibility in the current situation. In contrast, user-based process focuses on each individual in a learning process. That shifts the knowledge's driving force from a content database of organizations to learner(users) themselves. Furthermore, comparing with data or information, knowledge can only be evaluated or managed by individuals, which implies its identical feature. * Centralized vs Distributed :In PKN model, knowledge learning is undertaken with a high consideration of its natural feature – distributed format. In comparison, the centralized feature has been proved to perform well in guiding an organized and structural learning session. But the well-formatted guidance could hardly satisfy the various and timely requirements of nowadays users. * Top-down vs Bottom-up : Top-down models and hierarchical controlled structures are the enemies of innovation. In general, learners, and knowledge workers love to learn, but they hate not to be given the freedom to decide how they learn and work (Cross,2003). For this fact, a better way in coping with this system is to let them develop and emerge naturally, in a free form way, which could be abstracted to a bottom-up structure. * Enforcement vs Voluntary : Traditional KM mainly undertake a pushing model which passively sets the users by simply providing content and expecting the learning process will happen. This model is not sufficient to improve learners' motivation. Considering the dynamic and flexible nature of the learning process, LM, and KM approaches require a shift in emphasis from a knowledge-push to a knowledge-pull model.Naeve, A. (2005) â
The human semantic web – shifting from knowledge push to knowledge pull
€™, International Journal of Semantic Web and Information Systems (IJSWIS), Vol. 1, No. 3, pp.1–30.
PKN provides a more attractive platform, where users could locate content only with their needs from information repositories.


Application aspect

* Personal knowledge search tools instead of searching on the corporate intranet * Instant messaging and Short message service, Short Message Service (SMS) instead of telephone or e-mail * File sharing, Peer-to-peer file sharing instead of enterprise file servers * A wiki instead of a team collaboration space * "Blogging" instead of the enterprise's Content management system, Web content management


References

{{Social networking Social networks