FreePint Newsletter 210 - Corporate Wikis and Job Trends
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FreePint
"Helping 79,000 people find, use, manage
and share work-related information"
ISSN 1460-7239 27th July 2006 No.210
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IN THIS ISSUE
-------------
EDITORIAL
By Monique Cuvelier
MY FAVOURITE TIPPLES
By Susan Bradley
FREEPINT BAR
In Association with Factiva
a Dow Jones & Reuters Company
JINFO :: JOBS IN INFORMATION
Relocation Project Manager
Records Manager - Stand Alone - Central London
Information Officer
Information Assistant
TIPS ARTICLE
"Embracing the Wiki Way: Deploying a Corporate Wiki"
By Leigh Dodds
REVIEW
"Ten Steps to Maturity in Knowledge Management: Lessons in Economy"
Written by JK Suresh and Kavi Mahesh
Reviewed by Jela Webb
FEATURE ARTICLE
"Job Trends in the Information Market:
A Q&A with Hazel Hall"
EVENTS, GOLD AND FORTHCOMING ARTICLES
CONTACT INFORMATION
ONLINE VERSION WITH ACTIVATED HYPERLINKS
FULLY FORMATTED VERSION
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*** Free Jinfo job listings for AU and NZ ***
Employers and agencies can now list information-related vacancies in
Australia and New Zealand with Jinfo for free, until 31st August.
A free Jinfo listing is a great way to reach experienced information
practitioners in Australia and New Zealand.
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*** ABOUT FREEPINT ***
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EDITORIAL
By Monique Cuvelier
Remember the bully at your school? The one who stole your pocket
money, tripped you in the corridor and kicked your shins on the
football pitch? You'd probably just as soon forget those painful
memories, but take some solace from this: people like that don't
succeed in the information industry.
When you grapple with a wildly evolving job market and strive to
connect with co-workers who might not understand what you do for a
living, you can't excel unless you know how to play well with others.
Our authors might not have been thinking of who took their milk money
when they contributed to this issue, but each addresses rules from the
playground in their articles.
Hazel Hall warns against goal-hanging. As co-author of a study about
the 'e-information' job market, she found that while many jobs have
emerged to handle new information technology, traditional information
professionals don't have them. Why? Because employers aren't offering
them to traditional information professionals. They don't know these
professionals exist. Our Q&A with Hazel can help you strategise on how
to stop being passive and join the game.
Leigh Dodds talks about playground politics as they apply to social
networks, specifically corporate wikis. He turns his own experience at
setting up a successful wiki at his company into lessons for shaping a
knowledge-sharing environment. As he says, "Creating a wiki
environment is as much of an exercise in community building as it is
in software installation".
And Jela Webb reviews "Ten Steps to Maturity in Knowledge Management:
Lessons in Economy", a book that clearly tells you how to have others
following you as the leader.
So the next time you flash back to the terror at your school, remember
that the person who plays well with others not only collaborates
better with colleagues, but also gets the next gig.
Monique Cuvelier
Editor, FreePint
e: monique.cuvelier@freepint.com
FreePint is a Registered Trademark of Free Pint Limited (R) 1997-2006
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*** Detailed review of Silobreaker in June VIP ***
Silobreaker claims to make sense of unstructured news flows to provide
contextual intelligence. Does the product match the hype? VIP provides
an in-depth review. Plus, comment from Greg Simidian, MD, Perfect
Information.
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MY FAVOURITE TIPPLES
By Susan Bradley
Whether navigating bibliographies or travel information, these sites
all come in handy:
* My first stop for finding detailed bibliographic data is COPAC
. It combines the catalogues of UK national
and university libraries and is also useful for locating copies of
books and journals.
* Amazon.co.uk , the Internet bookseller
giant, is great for obtaining a discount on publishers' prices as
well as checking out bibliographic details.
* Streetmap is a useful resource for
finding the location of a UK street or postcode. The maps expand and
contract to show from street level to Ordinance Survey map-level
detail.
* When I'm looking for the quickest route between two places, I look
to ViaMichelin . It has detailed
driving instructions and fairly accurate journey times. It also
includes maps and links to nearby tourist sites and car parks.
* Oanda is a currency converter handy for
those trips abroad or for checking the prices of items on web sites
in currencies other than your own.
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Susan Bradley is the Information Officer for Universities UK and has
extensive experience in electronic publishing, knowledge management,
library and information services, and records management.
Submit your top five Favourite Tipples. See the guidelines at
.
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FREEPINT BAR
By Monique Cuvelier
In Association with Factiva
a Dow Jones & Reuters Company
Summer means getting away, and several FreePint Bar members are
thinking about travel, from the health hazards of flying to cars
crowding the streets. Others are talking about how to manage data and
launch a career in the information industry. You can lend your
knowledge or learn a thing or two at the Bar
* Anyone can get sick of air travel, but one Bar member is wondering
which health risks are actually enough to warrant a trip to the GP.
Big repositories of information are the British Travel Health
Association and the Aviation Health Institute. Specific conditions,
such as deep vein thrombosis, are documented in Medline and EMBASE
databases. Read about more reports and citations at
.
* One industry surely tracking air-travel sickness is insurance. But
how efficiently are insurance companies run? How do they address
such issues as fraud? Each sector is different, to be sure, but
FreePinters are offering viewpoints and opinions at
. Add yours.
* Auto insurers could help another Bar member with his question: how
many vehicles are on roads in the UK? The answer, according to the
Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, is above 30 million.
Other organisations are also tracking how many people crowd the
roads - more at .
* When dealing with so many facts and figures, using a reliable
contact management system is paramount
. Thankfully, there are piles of
them available for free. A few members are posting their
recommendations and evaluation tools to sort through the offerings.
* If you were looking to study for post-grad qualifications, how would
you begin? That's the question one career-changer in the Student Bar
is asking . Offer your anecdotes
and advice, or read what others are saying. The free Jinfo
newsletter contains a wealth of information
about changing careers and credentialing processes.
Thousands of users turn to the FreePint Bar, and FreePint overall, for
answers and advice. Tell your colleagues about us by forwarding them
this link .
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Monique Cuvelier serves as editor of the FreePint Newsletter. She has
contributed many articles to dozens of publications in the UK and US,
CFO, CIO Insight, eCommerce Business, and also written about business
and technology for The Western Mail, Wales' national newspaper. She
has launched and run several online and print publications. She can be
reached at .
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The FreePint Bar is where you can get free help with your tricky
research questions
Help with study for information-related courses is available at the
FreePint Student Bar .
Subscribe to the twice-weekly email digests at
.
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*** VIP: Unbiased reviews; insightful analysis ***
Over 1,000 senior information workers read it, with
information budgets from GBP 45k to GBP 1.7m. If you fit this
profile and you don't read VIP, then you're at a disadvantage.
Every month, editor Pam Foster brings VIPs monthly in-depth reviews
of business information products and analysis of the latest news
and trends.
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JINFO :: JOBS IN INFORMATION
The Jinfo service enables you to search and advertise information-
related job vacancies. Free Australia and New Zealand listings until
31 August .
The Jinfo Newsletter is published free every two weeks and contains a
list of the latest vacancies along with job-seeking advice. The latest
article is entitled "Looking after yourself in the Workplace:
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Information Officer
Bristol role, respond to info requests, provide current awareness
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Ideal graduate opportunity with great potential.
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TIPS ARTICLE
"Embracing the Wiki Way: Deploying a Corporate Wiki"
By Leigh Dodds
Wikis, currently one of the biggest buzzwords in online publishing,
helped solve a problem for my company, Ingenta. We needed to share
information between the research and engineering departments, and we
needed a simple tool to manage our rapidly growing set of references
on key research initiatives and topics relevant to Ingenta's core
business area: offering technology services to academic publishers. I
had created a wiki for myself to support my research and development
role back then, and it seemed natural to expand it into an intranet
alternative that allowed Ingenta's users to edit and contribute to
content collectively.
Now, four years later, Ingenta's wiki is extremely popular. It has
grown from one department to the entire company. We have even created
wikis to interact with our clients as an easy means of sharing
information.
Many companies are exploring the use of wiki environments, pressing
them into service behind the firewall as a way to capture knowledge
and improve communications within a business. Creating successful
social software systems isn't an exact science. Case studies and
experience reports provide essential background when considering the
success factors.
Deploying a wiki involves more than just selecting and installing an
appropriate software package. They're quite different beasts to the
typical enterprise groupware or intranet application. They eschew
rigid notions of hierarchy and permissions, letting users quickly
create and shape a knowledge-sharing environment that supports them.
Wikis are social software. Creating a wiki environment is as much of
an exercise in community building as it is in software installation.
With this in mind, the first section of this article outlines how I
introduced the Ingenta wiki. My aim is to present some tips to help
other organisations deploy a corporate wiki, and to give them advice
on creating a wiki culture.
Establishing need: the Ingenta corporate wiki
---------------------------------------------
Having undergone rapid growth through several acquisitions and a major
re-engineering project that resulted in a new platform for our core
products, Ingenta needed a way to quickly capture and share knowledge.
Turnover of contract staff necessitated a good knowledge-capture
environment. The infrastructure to support these needs had not grown
as rapidly as the company itself. Information was often in silos
created by various teams using different tools and technologies.
Grander visions for a corporate groupware solution were still on the
horizon, but the engineering department needed something more
immediate.
The idea of a wiki environment especially for the engineering team was
natural. Already comfortable with web-based environments, they were
also capable of installing and maintaining their own wiki. But while
their ability to quickly learn the wiki functionality certainly
contributed to the rapid success of the experiment, the more critical
issue was that the wiki met immediate needs.
The environment worked well across increasingly distributed teams. The
barrier to entry to contribute to the wiki is very low; documentation
could be added and maintained very easily. Finally, the team already
had a need to pass documentation around for review and sign-off.
Requesting and incorporating changes became much easier as the wiki
captured discussions directly rather than being lost in email.
Reviewers could correct text and check revisions using the wiki change
history.
Expanding the experiment
------------------------
The wiki became a formal part of the engineering process after its
initial success. All deliverables are now authored directly as wiki
pages. Engineers use wiki pages to list current work priorities and
capture the requirements for each project and incorporate release and
testing documentation. The wiki also links to other internal tools and
information sources. For example, release documentation links directly
to our web-based bug-tracking system.
The initial growth of the wiki was almost viral. With little
evangelism, the tool gradually expanded its user base to the rest of
the company. It became natural for other departments, such as product
management, to begin using the wiki. Users required little training to
get started, since writing a wiki is as easy as writing an email. They
also increasingly used the wiki as a daily resource, as the content
was already closely aligned to many existing business processes.
Knitting together other sources of information using the wiki proved
simple. For example, our shared network folders are web accessible, as
are a number disparate tools and documentation. It was easy to create
an intranet page in the wiki and link to these resources, creating a
simple resource directory.
Today the wiki is actively used by every department, with the
exception of finance. Perhaps I can tempt them away from their
spreadsheets with wikiCalc !
A reasonable number of users actively contribute new content and
update existing documentation, while a larger group of users simply
use it as a reference resource.
We're now evaluating whether we've outgrown our current wiki platform
and are looking at possible alternatives.
Choose your wiki
----------------
The obvious first step is to select some wiki software to use. The two
biggest features I consider essential in a wiki are version tracking
and search. Strong search facilities become particularly important
once your wiki reaches a certain size.
In all, there's a huge number of different implementations
to choose from. These
range from simple no-frills versions to complete content-management
systems. We opted for JSPWiki , as it meshed
well with our existing technology platform. Another popular wiki is
MediaWiki , which currently supports the
Wikipedia sites and has an active user community.
There is also an increasing range of enterprise wikis such as
Socialtext , Confluence
and JotSpot
. Each offers a good range of features and
commercial support options. You'll need to take time to evaluate and
experiment with a few different options. Migration between platforms
isn't always easy, as many wikis differ in features and syntax.
Build your community
--------------------
Next you need to start building your wiki community. Start small.
Focus on one or two teams initially. The wiki will need shepherding
through its infancy, so nominate someone as a champion to help train
staff members and guide them on how to get the best from the
environment.
The best training exercise is to simply encourage users to wade in and
start writing pages. We initially promoted a 'sandbox', or personal
homepage, as a safe environment to play with wiki editing. More
recently we've been encouraging new joiners to create their initial
wiki page as part of their induction. This gives them familiarity with
the tool from day one.
You'll find that many users don't always feel comfortable with editing
existing content. Using a sandbox lets them build confidence before
embarking on contributing to the main content.
One technique to introduce users to aspects of the wiki syntax and
subtly encourage the view that the wiki is a shared environment is to
edit someone's homepage yourself. For example, I might tweak the page
to make their email address a hyperlink, or just improve the display
of their personal information. Letting them know that anyone can
freely edit and tidy the information in a wiki is the most important
point for users to grasp. It's also the one that takes the longest to
learn.
Stay relevant
-------------
Attempt to find or suggest ways for your initial community to usefully
apply the wiki. Ensuring that the wiki meets a need and has relevant
content will encourage sustained usage. Here are a few of the
different ways that I've observed the wiki being used at Ingenta:
* As a user directory. Most of our staff have a personal homepage
including their contact details and current assignments
* As a personal notebook to capture to-do lists or useful personal
notes
* For recording minutes of meetings. Rather than write up and
circulate meeting notes by email, we often now make notes directly
into the wiki
* Managing information on clients, both current and prospective
* Brainstorming new product features
* Publishing documentation for both internal users and external
clients
* Capturing technical documentation on our products and services
* Creating glossaries of terms. Every company and industry has jargon;
we often define terms as separate pages in the wiki, enabling links
to be added to documentation for clarification.
Avoid attachments
-----------------
Some die-hard users insist they can't possibly live without a word
processor and say that a means to attach Word documents or
spreadsheets to wiki pages is an essential requirement. Attachments
are a useful feature for attaching diagrams or additional
documentation to a page, but you should discourage overuse of
attachments. If the useful content is in an attachment, then it's not
in the wiki and not easily editable. That's not the wiki way.
Lay down pathways
-----------------
Initially, we divided our wiki into people and projects. Pages were
also introduced for teams and departments. These pages provided a
basic organizing principle that became the primary means of navigating
through the wiki. A similar structure would work in any corporate
wiki.
However, these initial pathways provide more than just navigation. A
wiki grows by people adding new links and pages to existing content.
Your initial structure provides a cue as to where new content could or
should be added. By introducing this structure from the start, you'll
help avoid the wiki deteriorating into a morass of interlinked pages.
As your wiki grows you'll need to continue to organize it to reflect
the needs of users and the growing body of content.
Employ a gardener
-----------------
'Wiki gardening' is a phrase
used to describe tending a wiki to ensure that it stays fresh and
remains navigable. Your wiki will need a gardener. During the early
stages of deployment, you'll manage with just a single 'WikiMaster'.
His or her role will be to lay down some of the initial pathways, tidy
up pages and ensure content stays relevant. As the wiki grows, this
role will become more than a one-person job. At Ingenta a number of my
colleagues quickly embraced the wiki and became good WikiCitizens
.
Typical wiki gardening tasks include:
* Tidying up and re-formatting pages to ensure they're readable
* Helping ensure content is up-to-date
* Checking for orphaned pages that aren't usefully connected into the
main web of pages
* Breaking up long pages into smaller more manageable and useful
chunks
* Identifying useful content to be contributed
* Promoting the wiki within their own department or team
* Renaming pages to better reflect their contents.
Ideally, your wiki gardeners will emerge naturally, but you can
actively recruit them from individual departments. The idea isn't to
delegate maintaining the wiki to a small team of users; it's more
about community building. It's essential for the user community to
take ownership for their own content, and, most importantly, for other
people's content. This is one important difference between a wiki and
traditional groupware.
Naming is everything
--------------------
Naming is important in a wiki. Try to encourage good naming or
navigation will suffer. Page names should reflect their content. Avoid
use of abbreviations, acronyms, etc. Wikis work very well with
CamelCaseNamesLikeThis. All wiki installations will automatically
generate links from CamelCase words to the appropriately named page in
the wiki.
With good naming you can write sentences like the following, and they
will not only be readable, but also magically gain links to the
relevant documentation:
When ConfiguringTheServer don't forget to DeployTheWidget; if you need
a reference read HowToStartTheApplication.
Or, perhaps:
We're maintaining a list of CurrentClients and CurrentCompetitors.
Delivery dates for ForthcomingProducts can be found in the
ReleaseSchedule.
Naming conventions are also a good way to indicate that pages are
related in some way. For example we often use a project's name as a
prefix for pages, e.g. ProjectNameOverview and ProjectNameReleases, or
for user specific pages: LeighDoddsCalendar.
Avoiding a wiki explosion
-------------------------
If your wiki starts to become successful and other departments or
teams embrace it, you may find yourself faced with a request that
users need a wiki for their department only. Just say no!
If you create many small wikis then you inevitably recreate the kind
of content silos that you're undoubtedly trying to replace. Provide
guidance on how users can create pages targeted for their own
department, perhaps adopting a naming convention as outlined above.
Explain that this will be less effective than a single inter-linked
knowledge base. For example the content will not be cross-searchable.
Wherever we've deployed smaller per-department or per-team wikis
they've rapidly grown stale. Either because there wasn't enough
content, or that users were already contributing to another wiki and
naturally continued to add content there. In almost all cases we've
ended up shutting them down.
The only occasion I've found when a separate wiki is not only useful
but essential is when it's shared with people outside the firewall.
We've used a wiki at Ingenta as a way to share documentation with
clients. It wouldn't be appropriate for clients to have access to our
main corporate wiki, so a separate installation works better.
Within an organisation, ensuring people share information requires
extra work - anywhere from 30 minutes to a whole day. But I know I'm
not the only one keeping an interested eye on the RecentChanges page
on our wiki to see what's happening elsewhere in the company.
Hopefully this article has provided some useful pointers that will
help you explore the potential of your own corporate wiki. I've found
it fascinating to see how a wiki environment can facilitate sharing
and contribution amongst teams, as well as providing a low-cost and
simple way of capturing knowledge within an organisation.
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Leigh Dodds is the Engineering Manager for the IngentaConnect web
site, a large aggregation of academic research content. Leigh is
experienced with developing with Java, XML and Semantic Web
technologies, and has also contributed code and documentation to
several open-source projects.
As a freelance author Leigh has also contributed articles and
tutorials to sites including IBM developerWorks and XML.com. Leigh has
presented papers at several technical conferences, and has acted as
technical reviewer for a number of books covering core XML
technologies. He recently contributed to the O'Reilly book, XML Hacks.
His personal web site is at .
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REVIEW
"Ten Steps to Maturity in Knowledge Management: Lessons in Economy"
Written by JK Suresh and Kavi Mahesh
Reviewed by Jela Webb
JK Suresh and Kavi Mahesh have been involved in implementing Knowledge
Management (KM) at Infosys Technologies Ltd., an organisation
recognised publicly for its achievements at the global MAKE (Most
Admired Knowledge Enterprises) awards. Their practical experience
gives them credibility - the book includes a case study of how KM was
implemented in Infosys.
Lessons in the text are based on their own experiences as well as the
work of their global network of associates. They aim to share
information with practitioners seeking to implement a KM solution in
their own organisation. Those wishing to gain an understanding of the
practicalities of KM implementation and how it evolves from a
blueprint stage to full maturity will also find a use for this book.
The main theme is that KM should be regarded as a journey; there are
no quick and easy solutions. A KM programme is a significant change,
which presents its own challenges and opportunities. The authors
promote the idea that each organisation is different and that a
one-size-fits-all solution does not work when it comes to KM.
Different IT systems, company cultures and reward systems for
employees get in the way.
These complexities are explained through lessons in the book's five
parts, which take the reader from initial inception to final delivery
of an initiative. Some chapters include useful additional references
for those who want to research in more depth.
Throughout, the emphasis is on giving guidelines that demonstrate how
to implement the ideas. Here's an example of what you may expect:
Guidelines for garnering support for a KM initiative:
1. Start with a small scope and expand the scope incrementally to
cover the entire organisation.
2. Get the support of a local, congenial group for the initial scope.
3. Get support from enabling functions such as quality, education and
research.
4. At the same time, nurture the involvement and support of top
management and use their powers judiciously when needed to buy in a
constituency. A steering committee of top managers for guiding KM
strategy could be constituted.
5. Demonstrate the value of KM using the outcome of each step to
garner further support.
6. Seek voluntary participation in KM; do not mandate. For example a
message from the CEO saying 'you better do KM' could be
counterproductive.
7. Finally, alternate between carrots and sticks cautiously, i.e. show
potential benefits of KM for particular roles and teams, provide
incentives at times and, at other times when necessary, dictate
terms and enforce changes.
The guidelines are helpful, but sometimes I found myself asking, "HOW
do you do that?". Take starting with a small scope, how do you
choose where to concentrate your initial efforts? I advise my clients
to pick an area where they will be certain to get some quick
wins, and/or where they can learn lessons for wider organisational
dissemination. This type of extra guidance would be helpful.
As an experienced practitioner, I consider these guidelines to be full
of common sense. It is clear that the authors have given much thought,
not only to their own experiences, but also what other practitioners
have shared with them in terms of KM successes.
This is a very practical guide. Take from it the lessons that you need
and apply them appropriately to help you on your own KM journey.
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Jela Webb, via her business, Azione Consulting, is a freelance
strategic advisor, consultant and trainer in information and knowledge
management, working with private and public sector clients. An
associate of Ashridge, Learnership and TFPL, she has implemented KM
programmes in FTSE 100 companies and has a particular interest in how
best to manage and motivate knowledge workers.
She is also a Visiting University and Business School Lecturer and
presents at KM conferences. As a writer, Jela has contributed articles
to FreePint and leading KM journals and is currently writing a
comprehensive report examining the use of KM tools and techniques to
support organisations to manage risk more effectively.
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Related FreePint links:
* Find out more about this book online at the FreePint Bookshelf
* Read customer comments and buy this book at Amazon.co.uk
or Amazon.com
* "Ten Steps to Maturity in Knowledge Management: Lessons in Economy"
ISBN 1843341301, published by Chandos Publishing (Oxford) Ltd.
* Search for and purchase any book from Amazon via the FreePint
Bookshelf at
* Read about other Internet Strategy books on the FreePint Bookshelf
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FEATURE ARTICLE
"Job Trends in the Information Market:
A Q&A with Hazel Hall"
Anyone working in the information industry knows jobs are constantly
changing to keep up with the technology. TFPL, Ltd., which provides
recruitment, training and advisory services to the sector, recently
commissioned a report on the 'e-information' job market, which spans
many disciplines not generally associated with traditional information
roles.
Hazel Hall, senior lecturer in the School of Computing at Napier
University, Edinburgh, and associate advisor at TFPL, was a member of
the research team. This month she presented the preliminary findings
at a meeting of the Industrial and Commercial Librarians Group (ICLG)
at the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals
(CILIP). FreePint asked Hall about what went into the study and what
TFPL discovered about new employment opportunities.
FreePint (FP): What prompted this research project? Did TFPL approach
you, or was it something you proposed with the collaborative team?
Hazel Hall (HH): The initial idea for the research came from TFPL,
stimulated by a number of trends in the information market. For
example, as technology became the norm for handling and exploiting
information, many new and interesting roles emerged. These could have
been filled by information professionals, but often people from other
disciplines occupy these posts. It isn't that IP [information
professional] candidates lose the contest for the posts. It is
generally because the profession is not on the employer's radar, or
that IP skills are not seen as relevant.
TFPL is also convinced that there is a significant blurring of
boundaries between disciplines, and this affects the education and
personal development needs of IPs. The IP/IT boundary is already
porous and the synergies are now far more obvious that the conflict.
However, other disciplines, such as human resources, communications,
organisational design, etc., are increasingly becoming significant in
the development of effective information management.
And, finally, the e-world is developing and changing so rapidly that
it is difficult to maintain an in-depth understanding of the scope of
e-information roles. TFPL wanted to create a picture of this world,
and had decided to undertake some research to underpin an
'e-information roles framework'.
When we learnt that I had been awarded a secondment grant from the
Royal Academy of Engineering, TFPL saw an opportunity to involve me in
the research as an experienced academic researcher. The original
project aims were expanded to accommodate a series of new ones of
particular relevance to higher education, such as to uncover real
evidence that can be used to generate higher interest in IM and KM as
attractive domains of study and employment.
FP: How did you go about gathering the information for the study? How
long did it take?
HH: We collected six sets of data for the study. These included data
collected from:
1. Desk research - advertised job data (internal placements offered
through TFPL in the period September 2004 to March 2006, plus a
range of roles advertised in other sources in March 2006)
2. Internal consultations with TFPL advisors, recruitment staff and
one of the TFPL networking groups
3. A web-based survey targeted at a sample of people to include
'traditional' information specialists and other industry
stakeholders
4. Interviews with a subset of survey respondents
5. A focus group held in Glasgow
6. A feedback seminar held in London to discuss findings that were
beginning to emerge from the data collected in the other five
exercises.
The survey gave us some very useful quantitative data which helped
pinpoint some trends, and input from the interviews and consultative
groups proved invaluable in helping steer the research initially and
later in adding context and insight to the survey data.
We collected the data between the beginning of March and mid-June
2006, so it took three and a half months.
FP: In an evolving field, it's sometimes difficult to know how to even
frame the questions for research because we don't yet have a shared
vocabulary for the field, let alone benchmarks. How did you begin to
create the terms of the study? Did you find that your questions
shifted as you got more involved with the project? Were there areas of
study you had to abandon or rethink along the way?
HH: We spent quite a lot of time working out how to limit the scope of
the study, and the internal consultations were very helpful with this.
We agreed that the TFPL definition of an e-information role as "a role
which is directly related to the development and application of those
processes which facilitate the creation, acquisition, capture,
organisation, security, flow and sharing of electronic information AND
comprise a significant element (50 per cent+) of knowledge or
information management in their responsibility". We needed to be
careful with this definition or we would open ourselves up to
considering a large part of the labour market, including pure IT roles
or business roles that require high information use - such as
software engineers and insurance brokers - as well as any roles which
involve handling information, such as call centre operators and data
entry clerks.
We also felt that our focus should be on role function, rather than
skills, although, inevitably, we were interested in skills to a
certain extent. We would have liked to have looked more closely at the
levels of the roles identified by respondents to our web-based survey,
but feedback from the pilot revealed that this added a level of
complexity that would probably not be tolerated by respondents. As it
was, we felt that we were asking a lot of the people we approached to
fill in the questionnaire and provide examples of e-information roles
and their main function in their organisations.
As with all work of this nature, we would have liked to involve more
people - we had the input of about 120 all together - and it would
have been good to have a stronger representation of some industry
sectors. For example, we felt that education was under-represented in
our study.
FP: Your research summary indicates that e-information represents a
tremendous opportunity, with some barriers to realising that
opportunity. Both traditional and non-traditional information
professionals clearly have a lot to learn from each other along the
way. What do you think traditional information professionals uniquely
bring to e-information roles? What new skills and ways of
thinking/working might they need to develop? How might they create
collaborative opportunities?
HH: It is a unique blend of skills (rather than the skills per se)
that IPs bring to these roles, e.g. IM skills, understanding of
context and the environment, ways of thinking. This is reflected to an
extent in the research results in that IM skills are seen as core, but
heavily linked to business and - to a lesser extent - computing
skills. Part of the TFPL rationale for the project was that while
people from other disciplines end up in IM roles and are effective,
many are not. This is because they lack the IM way of thinking.
(CILIP's body of knowledge document has more to say about what is
unique about the profession).
As far as new skills are concerned, the TFPL research results tell us
that core IM skills, particularly those related to building
information architectures and managing electronic information content,
are most in demand. Thereafter general IT literacy and personal
attributes such as flexibility, confidence and enthusiasm are
important. We spotted an interesting pattern of preferences for skills
sets across the two main sectors of survey respondents: private sector
respondents appeared to indicate that they are more interested in
individuals who are all-rounders than the public and voluntary sector
respondents.
Our research results do not indicate how collaborative opportunities
may be created. However, other TFPL work suggests that multi-
disciplinary team working is a powerful way of developing skills and
opportunities. In fact any opportunity to work across disciplines
builds opportunities for collaboration.
FP: You say 'new technologies' are driving job opportunities, but can
you talk about what these new technologies are?
HH: We didn't collect data on specific technologies but instead asked
survey respondents to rate the importance of particular drivers, and
collected data from other sources on why technology may be considered
a driver. So, new technology was most frequently rated as 'important'
by the respondents. There are various reasons why it is a strong
driver: because there are new information-intensive professions that
need support in handling electronic data; because new tasks related to
the handling of electronic information have emerged in established
jobs; because work previously regarded as specialist has been brought
in-house, e.g. high-quality document production. One set of
technologies did attract frequent mention in the study. These were
social computing technologies such as blogs and wikis.
FP: Has your research dimensionalised the potential e-information
workforce, in terms of numbers, salary ranges, geographies,
industries? What can an individual do to quantify and qualify
e-information opportunities in his or her region or field?
HH: No the time available meant that we haven't considered these
issues -- but if FreePint would like to fund such as study we would
be happy to do so!
As far as individuals interested in developing careers in
e-information work are concerned the TFPL research results would
indicate that they should: seek out job opportunities across a range
of media; look beyond job titles to identify e-information role
opportunity; recognise that there is competition for jobs from others
with 'non-traditional' information backgrounds. In preparation for job
changes they need to: keep up to date with 'hot topics' of concern to
target employers (for example, we found that public and voluntary
sector respondents to our survey were preoccupied with government
targets, whereas private sector organisation seemed to be more
concerned with new technology); develop desirable skills sets (as
mentioned earlier) and provide clear demonstrations of their
suitability for advertised posts in their job applications.
FP: The 'conclusion' of any study often suggests the next possible
routes for research and analysis. What's the next layer of research
for e-information? What insights from the study suggest next steps for
further understanding the field?
HH: TFPL is currently developing a generic framework of current and
emerging e-information roles, which then can be developed for certain
sectors.
We will also be making further presentations on this work at the ASIST
conference in Texas in November, and possibly at Online 2006. (The
abstract is currently under review.)
Although we have been able to predict the job functions where there is
most likely to be employment growth, we have not been able to do an
analysis by sector, other than to say that there appear to be more
opportunities in the public and voluntary sectors. A development of
this work would be to deliberately target particular sectors with the
goal of identifying which offered the greatest opportunities.
More information on the study can be found at .
TFPL is a Jinfo agency; search TFPL jobs across a range of
e-information and traditional needs, in the Jinfo database:
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Dr Hazel Hall is Senior Lecturer in the School of Computing at Napier
University, Edinburgh where she teaches modules on knowledge
management, business information sources, and information delivery at
undergraduate and postgraduate level. As well as holding a doctorate
and a Master's degree in Information Management, Hazel's background
includes qualifications in French and Italian language and literature
from the Universities of Birmingham, Nantes and Paris Sorbonne. Hazel
spent the second half of academic year 2005/6 working with TFPL
, supported by a grant awarded by the Royal
Academy of Engineering.
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English" and "Local Search, The Search Engines and Yellow Pages"
* FreePint No.164 29th July 2004. "Artificial Intelligence" and "Money
Laundering new regulations - implications for information provision"
* FreePint No.141 24th July 2003. "The Psychology of Corporations and
Corporate Officers" and "Automotive Industry Sources: What Forest?
All I See Are Trees!"
* FreePint No.117, 25th July 2002. "News Agencies on the Web"
* FreePint No.92, 19th July 2001. "Information Architecture and Web
Usability Resources" and "Summoned by Bells"
* FreePint No.67, 20th July 2000. "Puppetry and Animation Sources on
the Web" and "Web resources for handheld computers"
* FreePint No.43, 22nd July 1999. "Full Text Online?" and "Intranet
'Toolkits' for Integrating Online Services - a world of
possibilities"
* FreePint No.19, 23rd July 1998. "Wish You Were Here ... Travel and
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