Capture

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Definition

Capture is The knowledge process that brings data, information, or knowledge into the organizational knowledge base. A process of capturing the knowledge available within an organization and making it available. Source: Comparative Analysis of Methods and Tools for Nuclear Knowledge Preservation Capture is Template:Capture 2 Source: Planning and Execution of Knowledge Management Assist Missions for Nuclear Organizations

Summary

Knowledge capture may be either internal or external knowledge in any form (for example, tacit know-how or explicit technical information). Capture processes should consider the life cycle and may need to address factors such as media, format, speed, costs, volume and intellectual property issues. Capture may also need to include alternatives for source capture and guidelines for hard copy publication (to enable subsequent imaging), preservation of historical documents, as well as standards and quality control procedures.

Description

Knowledge capturing refers to collecting all information available in the organization, and making it retrievable in a knowledge base. While capturing explicit knowledge is quite straightforward, the capturing of tacit knowledge usually is more involved, and may require specific provisions by the organization.

Capturing explicit knowledge

Customarily, documented knowledge is stored in a document management system. Such systems are able to handle of a wide range of media and formats, and usually offer a rich set of features for managing all document related processes. The capturing of tacit knowledge results ultimately in documents which are stored in the document management system, and thus made available to everybody having access rights to the documents.

Capturing tacit knowledge

Integrating knowledge capture in everyday work

A very efficient way of capturing tacit knowledge consist in integrate knowledge capturing into work processes. Indeed, much tacit knowledge is captured by documentation as an inherent part of many work activities. However, more effort may be requested in order to capture the knowledge generated in work processes in a systematic way. Appropriate methods are well established by now, and include capturing personal experience (debriefing), collections of process of project experiences (lessons learned), and distillation of good experiences (best practices). If the work process is well defined and appropriate procedures are specified in the workflow, the capturing process will not be seen as causing additional work load, but will be acknowledge as an inherent part of the work process

Debriefing
Lessons learned
Best practice

Capturing specific knowledge

In cases where risks of losing critical knowledge have been identified, such as key people retiring or leaving, or reliance on a single expert, targeted measures and tailored tools may be required to support a facilitated process of knowledge capture.

In the case of capturing specific knowledge, the extent of the knowledge to be externalized, the knowledge holders and the circle of recipients are usually well known. Therefore, the capturing process may be specified more precisely, often in form of a project. This will start from choosing appropriate methods and tools, and may include appointing a facilitator, scheduling a series of face-to-face sessions, and determining and inviting attendants of the sessions (one or more experts, facilitator, recipients). As a result, the knowledge should be available in the document management system in a form best suited to the needs of knowledge recipients.

Techniques and tools for tacit knowledge capturing

Example: Sellafield practices

In Sellafield, the capture of expert knowledge is organised by the ROCK (retention of critical knowledge) process, which consists of a risk assessment, followed by the implementation of an action plan, in which a ROCK facilitator works with the expert and knowledge recipients to both capture and transfer relevant expertise. The capture results are stored in a Sharepoint expertise library. The capture tools are described in a Sharepoint ROCK resource centre.

References

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Related articles

Capture tools

Transfer

Sharing

Knowledge process

Best practice

Lessons learned

Explicit knowledge

Tacit knowledge