Remove Document Remove Knowledge Remove Structure Remove Taxonomy
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Why You Need a Content Strategy

Forum One

Your content strategy is a living document, a map that you and your colleagues can use to decide where your content goes on your site and how you will use it to deliberately create intentional ongoing engagement with your organization. What your content strategy is—and is not. Uniform content creation.

Content 47
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From the Collective Desk of NTEN Discuss

NTEN

used the group for last week, asking about his project to evaluate and implement an organization-wide document management system. What I saw, introducing it to two law firms, was that the resistance faded quickly once the system was in place, and users had such better tools to find and work with their documents. Humans are trouble.

professionals

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Dummie's Guide To Delicious and Knowledge Beginning With Misc.

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Or waste time hunting through all those thousands of resources that you bookmarked and were locked in hierachical structure. "Delicious is easy to use, but it lacks any kind of serious documentation. Rather than knowledge ending where the miscellaneous begins, now it's beginning with the miscellaneous. (In So, here???s

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Which Social Networking Analysis Term Best Describes Virgin America?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

My definition is that your knowledge lives in the clouds. At that moment, I realized the limitation of knowledge in the clouds.). I tweeted this and Vladis Krebs had a great answer : The network is the "structure" upon which the community dances and self-organizes. View more Microsoft Word documents from David Armano.

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Shoulder-to-Shoulder Instructional Media: My Tagging Screencast at NTEN!

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

In many smaller organizations, where there are not enough resources for a high-end knowledge management system, people end up using their browser favorites or forward links to one another via email. s why: (1) The folder structure of your favorites list is not always flexible enough to allow for easy cross referencing. (2) Findability.