Skip navigation
Title: 

Annotate! A Web-based Knowledge Management Support System for Document Collections

Authors: Ginsburg, Mark
Kambil, Ajit
Issue Date: 5-Jun-1998
Publisher: Stern School of Business, New York University
Series/Report no.: IS-98-19
Abstract: Knowledge management is an increasingly important source of competitive advantage for organizations. Knowledge is often a renewable. re-usable and accumulating asset of value to firms that increases in value with employee experience and organizational life. Knowledge embedded in the organization's business processes or the employee's skills are assets are generally hard to discern, accumulate and replicate by competitors. It provides the firm with unique capabilities or "resources" to deliver customers with a product or service. In contrast as we undertake electronic commerce, customer interfaces and business strategies generally become more visible to competitors. Thus the organizations capacity to effectively accumulate and leverage knowledge assets better than its competitors becomes a key source of competitive differentiation. As firms become more knowledge intensive, more effort is being expended on knowledge management (KM). While much progress has been made on designing IS to support decision making, the art and design of KM systems to preserve, index, formalize and leverage knowledge in organizations is still new (see O’Leary (O’Leary, 1998) for a review of best practices). Knowledge is fundamentally more complex than information or data, and systems supporting knowledge management have a broader range of design issues. This paper reviews approaches to knowledge management support systems (KMSS) and proposes the need to design systems that carefully map their features to target organizations and user groups. We illustrate Annotate! as a specific KMSS designed to support the knowledge management of document collections in federated organizations which lack common vocabularies and central authority.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2451/14305
Appears in Collections:IOMS: Information Systems Working Papers

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
IS-98-19.pdf19.64 MBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in FDA are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.