The Need for a Knowledge Management Repository

Knowledge is everywhere you look.

Every employee has something valuable to contribute to the organization. Whether it be a new business idea, a new process for fixing a broken one, or valuable advice on how to work with a particular client, this knowledge should be captured and analyzed.

Further, if this knowledge can result in a more efficient process or a happier customer, this knowledge needs to be shared with other employees.

What are you doing to capture and share your employees' knowledge?

In a perfect world, when employees are stuck trying to solve a problem, or when managers want to re-skill their teams, they would simply look inward rather than outward, turning to their knowledge management repository rather than Google.

The Association for Talent Development (ATD) sought to explore this concept further. Along with the Institute for Corporate Productivity (i4cp), the ATD released the research report Building a Culture of Learning: The Foundation of a Successful Organization. The report provides insights on the organizational benefits of a thriving learning culture and how talent development professionals can build such a culture.

Here's the good news: ATD and i4cp surveyed 832 talent development professionals and found that employees at high-performance organizations are four times more likely to share knowledge with their colleagues as workers at low-performance organizations.

If you want to learn more about innovative technologies to automate and streamline how to capture knowledge in the form of training material, download our FREE eBook .

The bad news is that although 87 percent of participants report that their organization provided tools or resources to encourage employee knowledge sharing, not all of these organizations are providing employees with guidance on how to best leverage user-generated content to help achieve learning goals.

This is where the L&D manager can have a huge impact: don't simply provide the tools, but also provide the guidance.

In fact, the guidance can be delivered with an automation tool: with Synapse, you can easily create courses from your employee knowledge.

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Knowledge is everywhere you look.

Every employee has something valuable to contribute to the organization. Whether it be a new business idea, a new process for fixing a broken one, or valuable advice on how to work with a particular client, this knowledge should be captured and analyzed.

Further, if this knowledge can result in a more efficient process or a happier customer, this knowledge needs to be shared with other employees.

What are you doing to capture and share your employees' knowledge?

In a perfect world, when employees are stuck trying to solve a problem, or when managers want to re-skill their teams, they would simply look inward rather than outward, turning to their knowledge management repository rather than Google.

The Association for Talent Development (ATD) sought to explore this concept further. Along with the Institute for Corporate Productivity (i4cp), the ATD released the research report Building a Culture of Learning: The Foundation of a Successful Organization. The report provides insights on the organizational benefits of a thriving learning culture and how talent development professionals can build such a culture.

Here's the good news: ATD and i4cp surveyed 832 talent development professionals and found that employees at high-performance organizations are four times more likely to share knowledge with their colleagues as workers at low-performance organizations.

If you want to learn more about innovative technologies to automate and streamline how to capture knowledge in the form of training material, download our FREE eBook .

The bad news is that although 87 percent of participants report that their organization provided tools or resources to encourage employee knowledge sharing, not all of these organizations are providing employees with guidance on how to best leverage user-generated content to help achieve learning goals.

This is where the L&D manager can have a huge impact: don't simply provide the tools, but also provide the guidance.

In fact, the guidance can be delivered with an automation tool: with Synapse, you can easily create courses from your employee knowledge.