Cover image for Knowledge management the death of wisdom : why our companies have lost it, and how they can get it back
Knowledge management the death of wisdom : why our companies have lost it, and how they can get it back
Title:
Knowledge management the death of wisdom : why our companies have lost it, and how they can get it back
Author:
Kransdorff, Arnold.
ISBN:
9781606495438
Personal Author:
Edition:
3rd ed.
Publication Information:
[New York, N.Y.] (222 East 46th Street, New York, NY 10017) : Business Expert Press, 2012.
Physical Description:
1 electronic text (xvii, 137 p.) : digital file.
Series:
Strategic management collection,

2012 digital library.

Strategic management collection.
General Note:
Part of: 2012 digital library.
Contents:
Author's credentials -- Preface -- 1. The race where every sprinter drops the baton -- 2. Getting from A to B without going via Z -- 3. Here today, gone tomorrow -- 4. Opportunity knocks for business education -- 5. "I forgot to remember!" -- 6. The smart march to wisdom -- 7. How the baton was passed -- 8. Way to go -- Appendix. Checkbooks and boxing gloves: origins of the author's interest -- Notes -- References -- Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
Conceived less than 20 years ago, Knowledge Management (KM) is the business discipline about which managers perhaps know the least. Having spent pots of money investing in it, the benefits are still marginal. This is because practitioners are still feeling their way. Now that the boom days are temporarily over, it is timely that KM can be more fully exploited, for it conceals an application that is indispensable for the foreseeable struggle ahead--and after, including an overlooked way out of the credit crash dilemma facing those dogmatic decision makers juggling the option between austerity and growth. It's not rocket science. It's a way of doing both, in this case by refocusing on the old-fashioned notion of productivity implied by this book's Chapter 2 heading: Getting from A to B without going via Z. Not the productivity that comes from cutbacks and austerity but the type that frontruns improved competitiveness, sales, and growth.
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