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2061 Articles match "2008","Blogs"
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The Latest from Work Literacy
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We Have Clients.
It is an echo of a blog post I read by Mike Myatt, where he delineates between customers (who buy goods and services from us) and clients (with whose care we are charged) in clear and emphatic fashion.
After attending a terrific Executive Education course, "Leading Professional Services Firms," in late 2008, I was struck at the time by how consistently the professors and attendees used the words "firm" and "clients," rarely used the word "company," and never used the word "customers." No, this post is not to celebrate recent sales wins. As I did a little research on this
Victus pro Scientia Opus -- Food for the Knowledge
- Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Fortune 500 and Social Media: A Longitudinal Study of Blogging and Twitter Usage
The team of Nora Ganim Barnes and Eric Mattson at the Center for Marketing Research at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth have been dong a number of studies on social media and business (see for example : Thinking Like A Blogger: Is Blogging An Attitude That Can Be Taught? ). In 2009, they released one of the first studies of the Fortune 500’s adoption and usage of one of the best-known forms of social media – blogging (see Fortune 500 Blogging Study) . This new study, Fortune 500 and Social Media: A Longitudinal Study of Blogging and Twitter Usage , revisits that prior study and expands to look at the Fortune 500’s usage of Twitter.
The FASTForward Blog
- Friday, March 5, 2010
Social Media in the Inc. 500: 2007 - 2009
For example, with blogs, the 2007
some some research showed that 8% of the Fortune 500 companies were blogging compared
to This difference continued in 2008 with 16% of the
Fortune Fortune 500 blogging vs. The Center for
Marketing Marketing Research at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth conducted a
study
Portals and KM
- Friday, March 5, 2010
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The Best from Work Literacy
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Blogging Mandatory Or Voluntary?
Or perhaps rephrase the question: When should blogging be mandatory and when should it be voluntary?
Some organizations might integrate blogs within formal work practices and business processes so there may be situations when in fact, blogging is required. For instance, perhaps a company decides that competitive intelligence analysts should blog their personal insights about what they are seeing in the market (yes, it could be a wiki as well). Or suppose Utilization Management nurses are provided with a blog application as the preferred method of capturing notes while they interact with various health network providers.
Column Two
- Monday, July 7, 2008
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2008 2009
It's always interesting to look back at the past year - 2008, think about what has changed for me during the year, and think about what that means for the next year - 2009. My blog is really the hub of my thinking and activity, so by going back through posts for the 2008, it gives me a pretty good perspective on what's been happening inside my head during 2008. To do my review, I first for Learning Professionals Ten Predictions for eLearning 2008 Test SCORM Courses with an LMS Request for Proposal (RFP) Samples Training Method Trends Corporate Learning Long Tail and Attention Crisis SCORM Test Web 2.0
elearning Technology
- Wednesday, December 3, 2008
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How do wikis and blogs fit together?
A recent conversation has re-emerged at my work on How do wikis and blogs fit together ?
One way is to think of the stock and flow model, wikis have perpetually re-edited pages, whereas blogs have a stream of date-based entries just like newspaper articles.
Wikipages can be seen as more definitive, whereas blog posts are about currency, opinion, etc…
A perfect example of this thinking is a paper by the CIA called The Wiki and the Blog: Toward a Complex Adaptive Intelligence Community . This is an award winning essay on how information sharing, and
Library clips
- Wednesday, October 8, 2008
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Learn Trends 2008 - Free
George Siemens , Jay Cross and Tony Karrer have organized the second annual free online conference: Corporate Learning: Trends and Innovation 2008 November 17 - 21, 2008 | Online | Free Last year's conference had two thousand people from all over the world take part in the week-long conference. If you want to attend sign up and follow the conference blog: LearnTrends for on-going update This year the conference has an incredible set of speakers and lots of opportunities to discuss the issues. Speakers and topics include: Alvaro Fernandez: Brain Fitness
elearning Technology
- Wednesday, October 22, 2008
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NY-Toronto Law Firm KM Summit 2008 in Boston
Doug Cornelius asked me to participate in the NY-Toronto Law Firm KM Summit 2008, which for some reason was held in Boston this year. Blogging as Knowledge Management
Blogging as knowledge management" isn't a particularly new topic, but it continues to be very interesting as people discover blogging and other social media and the potential impact on personal and group interactions. This is a group of lawyers (primarily) who are very interested in knowledge management in the legal profession. There are a number of my friends from KM circles associated with this
Knowledge Musings
- Friday, October 3, 2008
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Blog>> KM Method Cards
Ok, they’re finally here! One of the reasons why I’ve been keeping my head down over the past few weeks has been our KM Method Cards project.
For the past few years now, we’ve been growing a set of concise summary cards covering KM approaches (eg CoPs, Information Literacy, KM Champions), methods (eg AARs, Pre-Mortems, Anecdote Circles) and tools (eg Wikis, Taxonomies, Competency Frameworks).
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Blog>> Dead KM Walking
In the land of taxonomy there are only two species: the Lumpers who gather related things together and look for their commonalities (these are the categorisers), and the Splitters who look for the distinctions between things and separate them based on those distinctions (these are the classifiers).
After a fascinating, robust and sometimes sharp discussion with Larry Prusak and Dave Snowden a couple of days ago in Kuala Lumpur on the topic “ Is Knowledge Management Dead ?”
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My Two Top 2008 Technologies
Let’s be honest—with the exception of our truly historic presidential election much of the noteworthy news of 2008 was bad to really bad . They’re usually embarrassingly inaccurate, plus at this point prayers for the coming year feel more valuable than predictions. So I thought I’d wrap up this blog for this year with a bit of reflection, and talk about my two favorite technologies of the year (I just got my first iPhone yesterday, but will consider that a 2009 technology). For a year-end post I’d rather not try to recap the year in technology, or in anything else.
Andrew McAfee
- Tuesday, December 30, 2008
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The uncertain future of Blogging
Blogging is near and dear to my heart.
don’t know what the fate of blogging is, but as I think about it I wonder if it can survive without changing. The idea of user-generated content was once almost exclusively owned by blogging. Blogging was the conversation, blogging was the vehicle, blogging was the network.
I admit freely that I am attached to the concept.
The FASTForward Blog
- Monday, December 1, 2008
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RIP: ROI :: Blog :: Headshift
Headshift London | New York | Paris | Sydney | Zurich about projects blog themes Search ROI gives misleading signals about continuous improvement and innovation Categories Add category
www.headshift.com
- Tuesday, November 18, 2008
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