Content related to Knowledge Capture & Knowledge Transfer

Leveraging Headless CMS for Technical Cross-Functionality

Headless CMS (Content Management System) architecture is a flexible development strategy for applications that is rapidly growing in today’s industry practices. Utilizing a headless CMS architecture allows an application to deliver content authored from a single interface to multiple delivery … Continue reading

Knowledge Capture and Transfer Series – Part 2: Capturing Tacit Knowledge

Organizations often lack a disciplined way to leverage the learnings and experience that their staff have acquired throughout their tenure and past experiences, and they only pay attention to this issue once it becomes too big to ignore. Examples of … Continue reading

Learning 360: Crafting a Comprehensive View of Learning Content Using a Graph

Chris Marino, a Principal Solution Consultant at Enterprise Knowledge (EK), was a featured speaker at this year’s Data Architecture Online event organized by Dataversity. Marino presented his webinar “Learning 360: Crafting a Comprehensive View of Learning Content Using a Graph” … Continue reading

Content Management Strategy for an International Retailer

The Challenge The learning team for an international retailer struggled to find and discover the knowledge resources that supported their work and their online learning solutions. The retailer’s learning team used an abundance of manual templates and processes, along with … Continue reading

Knowledge Capture and Transfer Series – Part 1: Getting Knowledge Capture and Transfer Right

Organizations are constantly generating new knowledge and enhancing existing knowledge in pursuit of their objectives. However, much critical knowledge is never captured. It remains inside people’s heads, isolated and undiscoverable. This leads organizations to suffer from a type of corporate … Continue reading

User-Centric Content Engineering to Improve Customer Experience

The Challenge A global financial firm needed to improve the user experience (UX) for its technical support documentation hub. Prior to EK’s involvement, the client company received user feedback expressing that interacting with the technical support documentation was cumbersome. Only … Continue reading