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Knowledge Management
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Knowledge management is the study of how organizations capture, store, share, and apply knowledge to achieve their goals. It sits at the intersection of business strategy, organizational behavior, and information systems, making it a common subject in management, MBA, and technology programs. What makes it academically interesting is the distinction between different types of knowledge — particularly tacit knowledge, which resides in people's experience and judgment, and the challenge organizations face in making that knowledge accessible and useful. Students are often asked to examine how processes and structures within companies either support or hinder the flow of knowledge across teams and departments.

The papers archived on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on specific industries, such as the automotive sector, to analyze how knowledge management functions in large-scale manufacturing and innovation contexts. Others examine it at the organizational level, exploring frameworks, models, and processes — including process-based models — that guide how companies systematically manage what they know. Case-study approaches are common, with papers looking at particular companies like Accenture to evaluate real-world implementation. Additional papers address the relationship between information management and broader organizational strategy, as well as the social dimensions of capturing tacit knowledge within business environments.

A strong essay on knowledge management needs a clearly bounded thesis — avoid simply summarizing definitions and instead argue a position about how a specific process, framework, or organizational condition affects knowledge outcomes. Evidence drawn from company examples, industry data, or established management models carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating knowledge management as purely a technology problem; effective essays recognize that employees, culture, and organizational processes are just as central as data systems.

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Paper Undergraduate
ERP Systems Bibliography Bendoly, E.,
Bendoly, E., Rosenzweig, E., & Stratman, J.. (2009). The efficient use of enterprise information for strategic advantage: A data envelopment analysis. Journal of Operations Management, 27(4), 310.
Paper Undergraduate
U.S. Participation in a Multi-National
The objective of this work is to examine U.S. participation in a multi-national conflict management force in terms of the valid reasons that exist to support such participation. Conflict takes many forms in terms of…
Paper Undergraduate
Michael Foley's perspective on the future of distance education
Foley's viewpoint on the future of distance education seems to be right on point. He foresees a time when distance education will be much more than simply offering courses that are easily accessible to a much wider…
Paper Masters
Staff Morale Is Low. Employees
¶ … staff morale is low. Employees are tardy, little motivated, and aggressive. To elaborate on the latter, all departments (lab, pharmacy, medical records, insurance, provides, nurses) are more competitive than…
Paper Doctorate
Justifing the Positions on Strategic
Knowledge management is generically promoted as the art and science of gathering information and transforming the knowledge into organizational advantages, such as core competencies or competitive advantages.
Essay Doctorate
Tidd Bessant (2009) Process Model Knowledge Management
Knowledge management: WL Gore & Associates
Paper Undergraduate
Healthcare Information Systems
Information systems databases and architectural systems have been used in the healthcare systems of many countries. A number of reasons are associated with an increased usage of these systems in the healthcare. The aim of this paper is to critically analyze the concepts given by Vicky Liu, Jason Smith, Zi Hao Ng, William Caelli, Lauren May, Min Hui Lee, Jin Hong Foo and Weihao Li in the article published in 2010. The article has mentioned that cross indexing systems are one of the most important activities in the healthcare systems. indexing systems make use of certain unique identifiers that are provided to the consumers of healthcare and healthcare providers based on which the indexing systems can be used to access medical records. The author has no doubt mentioned the importance of indexing systems but to start with, one of main fact that has not been mentioned is that indexing systems have been used in the healthcare systems since many years and since the beginning, perfection has been added in these systems realizing the fact that patient record privacy is more important. When the beginning of the article is read in detail, it can be seen that the importance of patient privacy has not been stressed and only preliminary attention has been given to yet an important issue.
Paper Undergraduate
Interaction design techniques for website navigation and user wayfinding
An Analysis of Site Navigation Techniques (ebuyer.com)
Essay Doctorate
CEO as Leader of Ford Motor Company
The leadership of any large, diverse multinational corporation needs to concentrate on a unifying vision coupled with transformational leadership skills to keep the company moving forward over the long-term (Wang, Oh,…
Paper Undergraduate
Integrated marketing campaign of McDonald's in UK organisations
¶ … technology has evolved a great deal, thus resulting in an increase in media freedom and globalization. Moreover, human life in the post information technology has become much faster pace than ever before.