Want to spend a year living knowledgeably?

The proof of the proof is checked and is ready to be turned into a book – “A Year of Living Knowledgeably: 12 KM Projects for Law Firms” is off to the printers!

When I wrote “KM Handbook” for the Law Society in 2012, I wanted to create a practical textbook which outlined all the important KM theory and placed it soundly in context for the busy law firm KMer.

Once that was published, I decided to take that practical ethos one step further and create a projects book which took all the effort out of KM work in law firms, giving you all the planning and templates you need.

So the “Year of Living Knowledgeably” was born.

“A Year…” contains:

  • 2 theory chapters outlining the basics of Knowledge and Knowledge Management theory and Measurement of KM projects.
  • 12 low cost projects to
    • support the sharing of explicit and tacit knowledge,
    • encourage conversation and knowledge sharing,
    • improve reflective learning and the effectiveness of training schemes, and
    • make sure everyone in the firm knows about the great work that you do!
  • lots and lots of annexes and appendices with templates, checklists, precedents, top tips, further reading and resources.

Pilot a new project each month in 2016 for a truly knowledgeable year.

More info here & pre-order for a discount.

Do you want an occasional (approx monthly) email with updates about my latest blog post and open training events? Sign up here.

 

Posted in KM, Measurement, Personal Knowledge Management, Process, Professional Support Lawyers, Strategy, Training and learning, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Knowledge Network UK – join the gang

“Conversation is a meeting of minds with different memories and habits.

“When minds meet, they don’t just exchange facts: they transform them, reshape them, draw different implications from them, and engage in new trains of thought.

“Conversation doesn’t just reshuffle the cards: it creates new cards.”

Theodore Zeldin

Conversation with experts in your field is a great way to expand your horizons and spark innovative ideas.

In Bristol we have been incredibly lucky over the past five years to have had Knowledge Network West, a knowledge sharing and networking group for Legal Sector KMers in the West Country. We have had events about change management, social media, PSL skills, mobile technology, using SharePoint, conversation, KM strategies, and loads more.

I am now delighted to announce that we have sufficient interest in Birmingham and Manchester to expand Knowledge Network into those cities for 2016!

*Fireworks!*Fanfares!*Gets a little teary!*

One of the most valuable and important aspects of Knowledge Network is that those interested in KM in the group’s area get to decide what topics are discussed at our lunchtime events, so, if you are interested in shaping the future of Knowledge Network UK, please complete one of these surveys:

Bristol (existing annual members only), Bristol (any interested person)

Birmingham

Manchester

 

Thank you!

And if you know anyone who could be interested, please pass this page on to them so that we can spread the word as widely as possible. If you can’t get to Bristol, Birmingham or Manchester, fill in the Bristol/anyone survey and add your city at the end, or just email me.

Posted in Events, Knowledge Network UK, Knowledge Network West, Training and learning | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Even my 7 year old knows how to “game” the system

My daughter, who is 7, is encouraged by her school to read *a lot*.

She has a yellow reading record book where she records all the occasions that she reads, at school and at home, and each Friday her teacher has a look and awards bronze, silver and gold stars depending on how many times she has read.

I have noticed something interesting.

She is reading *a lot* of books now (great), but she is reading only a page or two of each. She is reading a couple of pages from 3 or 4 books every day.

This initially seemed a bit odd to me. When I was 7, I started to get into chapter books: Enid Blyton of course “Island of Adventure” etc, Stig of the Dump, Roald Dahl etc (happy days).

It took me a while, but I have realised what is going on.

She is gaming her school’s system. She wants that gold star, so she is making sure that she has lots of entries in her reading record, rather than reading for pleasure:

  • 1x long reading session of a chapter book = 1 item on her reading record
  • 3 short bursts = 3 items on her reading record

When I get asked about metrics for KM, I warn people about gaming. I endlessly say things like “You get what you measure” and “People are always more intelligent than systems” and I warn people to think very hard about what end product/behaviours they are trying to encourage with their metrics and design a multi-faceted system to encourage it.

I think from now on I’ll just ask my daughter along for a chat about how she gets her gold stars each week!

I run open training sessions on KM measurement in London (Feb/June/Oct). Learn more here.

Do you want an occasional (approx monthly) email with updates about my latest blog post and open training events? Sign up here.

I also talk about “gaming” and “measurement options” in my popular “KM: The Works” training session (January/May/September). Find out more here.

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KNW – a survey about the future

I run KNW, a knowledge-sharing and networking group for KMers in Bristol UK. I wonder if you’d take a minute to complete a survey about how to improve the group for the future?

This is the survey for people who are annual pass holders for 2015.
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/LG59CCK

This is the survey for everyone else, who doesn’t hold an annual pass.
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/9Q8KCM3

Many thanks for your help!

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Take social media away from marketing…

I’ve just read this interesting article about how social media is simply not giving a good enough return as a marketing tool. Brands are dull and social is the wrong place for advertising/push messages.

He’s right – social media is a place to be social with each other – have conversations, share ideas, point people towards useful information, learn new things, build relationships with experts in your field.

It’s not that you can’t market your firm through social, it is just that you need to do it in a new way – relationships first. The question is whether your marketing department has too much history/experience with broadcast messages to do both social and traditional marketing.

Also, perhaps they just aren’t the right individuals to be having the conversations? If you are thinking about instructing a lawyer, who do you want to have a conversation with? Not the marketing department, but the lawyer himself/herself.

The trouble with law firms, though, is individuals are often so risk averse they end up saying nothing. I think it is time for law firms to try harder. What do you think?

Anyone who has been on one of my social media courses knows you don’t have to let social take over your life and, with a judicial use of tools and scheduling, you can have a fair social presence in about 5-10 minutes a day and still not look like a robot.

Thoughts? Comments? Ideas for great tools to streamline the process without taking out the personal interaction?

If you want to use social media for your law firm in an effective way, take a look at “Practical Projects…” which contains loads of great ideas and plans.

 

Do you want an occasional (approx monthly) email with updates about my latest blog post and open training events? Sign up here.

I also talk about using social media for knowledge sharing and marketing in my popular “KM: The Works” training session. The next one is on 28th January 2016. Find out more here.

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Change Management training in Bristol

We are delighted to have Graham Mitchell, of t2i, coming along to our next Bristol KNW training lunch on 30th Sept to help us all understand how we can improve our KM and law firm projects and ensure they embed beautifully, avoiding a massive waste of time and money.

Come along and get quality training locally, and avoid the wasted travel time.

Book via Eventbrite here
Or email me (helenerussell@theknowledgebusiness.co.uk) for an invoice.

Or if you want to see the latest workshops, click here.

Posted in Events, Knowledge Network West, Training and learning | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

A podcast …

You can hear my podcast with LawyerFair here, where I discuss:

  • KM for mid-sized law firms,
  • the importance of conversation as part of your KM strategy,
  • AI and the results of my KM survey, and
  • my new textbook, due to be published in the Autumn.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZfMCK6n-pxMdcast*

Update!    “A Year of Living Knowledgeably” is now available to buy.

 

Do you want an occasional (approx monthly) email with updates about my latest blog post and open training events? Sign up here.

And find all my open training events on Eventbrite here.

 

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Bite-sized learning for the summer

With a lot of people starting to leave on holiday now, demands on time can slacken off a tad, so the Summer is a great time to catch up on all the reading, watching and learning that we wish we had time for the rest of the year.

With this in mind, I thought it’d be useful for you (& me) to collect together some resources.

It’s a bit of a random selection based on what I’m reading/thinking about at the moment, so apols if your favourites aren’t there. Add your thoughts for reading/learning in the comments.

Also, why don’t you also experiment with a new social media platform? I’m going to see if I can make more use of Quora and Slideshare, and also investigate a number of media to see which may be of interest to you. Any of you found one of the more unusual platforms work really well for PSLs and KMers?

Videos

Books

Social

Websites/courses

 

Do you want an occasional (approx monthly) email with updates about my latest blog post and open training events? Sign up here.

I also talk about learning and leave you with lots of useful resources in my popular “KM: The Works” training sessions, which run every January, March and September. Find out more here.

 

Posted in KM, Personal Knowledge Management, Professional Support Lawyers, Training and learning | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

A (social media) blast from the past

I wrote two articles for Solicitors Journal about twitter for lawyers 6 years ago (you can read Part 2 here (£) – sadly I can’t find Part 1 any more!). I remember there was only one comment underneath, which, in summary, said twitter was all just about celebrities and what coffee people were having and wasn’t worth spending time on. And then 3 years later a senior lawyer told me “I like your ideas … but not the twitter … no, absolutely not… it’s a non-starter…”.

Our next KNW event is about online marketing, which has made me reflect on the changes that have happened since those SJ articles and that conversation.

I personally notice the following changes:

  • it’s no longer such a “village” atmosphere
  • you can no longer follow the old etiquette of following back anyone who follows you – way too many spammers
  • waaay more lawyers and law firms are on twitter – I couldn’t manage without loads of lists
  • few would say to me “… but not the twitter” now (even if they secretly thought it)

and what hasn’t

  • employed lawyers are still quite tentative in their tweets (academics/counsel less so)
  • a little more conversation and less broadcasting (please?)

Have you been on twitter for a while? What do you think has changed?

 

Do you want an occasional (approx monthly) email with updates about my latest blog post and open training events? Sign up here.

I also talk about social media for knowledge sharing and marketing in my popular “KM: The Works” training session. The next one is on 28th January 2016. Find out more here.

I also have projects to harness the value in social media in my latest textbook “Practical Projects …”

Posted in Client-facing KM, Events, Knowledge Network West, Professional Support Lawyers, social media, Training and learning, twitter | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Knowledge maps – a practical project for PSLs

 

Knowledge mapping = a visual architecture of knowledge which enables and faciliates knowledge users to more easily and quickly access relevant knowledge and knowledge owners (Gomez et al 2000).

 

It sounds great to me – a visual, intuitive way to signpost people to important knowledge and/or relevant experts within your firm/department. And you get to identify “who knows what” and where your gaps are and future problems lie, at the same time.

Why then aren’t there more knowledge maps around in UK law firms?

 

I’ve come to the conclusion it is partly because people want a perfect map. They worry about the amount of work there would be in mapping out *all* the knowledge in their organisation. They plan to investigate fancy software, but get put off before they start. Or they don’t want to publish it until it is perfect, but the “knowledge” keeps changing and it is never finished. Or they simply don’t see enough value in it compared to the amount of work, to get it to the top of their “to do list”.

So, why not divide your knowledge map project into little sub-projects or mini-maps? Have a map for a single department (if it is fairly sizeable)? Or even, if your department is large, a map for an area of knowledge?

If the map was going to take less than a week, would you find time to squeeze it in?

Different knowledge maps have been used for different purposes. These are just the three main ones:

  • procedural maps or process-based maps visualise knowledge and knowledge resources in process-based projects, and are useful for planning and implementing effective KM
  • conceptual maps are used for content management of knowledge and used as a method of organising and classifying knowledge
  • competency maps document the skills, techniques, positions and job experience of individuals and can be used by HR for development and placement, as well as to enable knowledge users to find the right knowledge owners and experts at the right time

 

I think the competency map is a great place to start for PSLs.

Map out the main areas of knowledge needed by your fee earners to do their work in one department or team, then map against those areas the right subject matter expert for each one.  No doubt there’ll be politics in deciding who is an expert, but you are used to that particular minefield, I’m sure!

If it connects to your intranet/database or your White Pages/employees database … that’s great … but it doesn’t have to. A mindmap-style drawing on a whiteboard would do the job (and you could easily/quickly change it). If you are using a map for one department across a couple of offices, it wouldn’t be difficult or onerous to copy it out or photograph it.

 

What do you think? If you’ve experience of bite-sized mapping in your department, it’d be great to hear about your experiences in the comments.

If you like the idea of this bite-sized project, you may like my new book of KM Projects.

Some reading

p.s. I know there is a split infinitive in the first paragraph, but I tried it with and without and it was harder to understand without. Clarity is all. 🙂

 

I also talk about knowledge maps in my popular “KM: The Works” training sessions, which run three times a year in London (January, May and September). Find out more here.

I also run lunchtime in-house training sessions on each of the projects from “Practical Projects”.

Do you suffer from info overload? Do you want a monthly summary email with updates about my latest blog post and open training events? Sign up here.

 

Posted in KM, Process, Professional Support Lawyers, Strategy, Training and learning | Tagged , , , , , , , | 8 Comments