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KnowledgeFund Experiences

KnowledgeFund is not only a theory. It should also become visible through practical experiences across the organisation.

Table of Contents

From concept to experience

A useful KnowledgeFund should eventually show up in forms people can actually use.

That may include diagnostic, modelling, discovery, assistance, and contribution experiences.

Example experience areas

Some of the experience areas already hinted at in the deck material include:

  • Knowledge Fog for surfacing ambiguity, fragmentation, or uncertainty
  • Knowledge Architect for shaping the structure and relationships of organisational knowledge
  • Knowledge Finder for discovering relevant knowledge and context
  • Knowledge Assistant for helping people navigate and act within the structure
  • Knowledge Rewards for making real contribution and reuse more visible
  • Knowledge Socials for supporting organisational participation and exchange

Why experiences matter

These experiences matter because most organisations do not adopt abstract theories. They adopt surfaces, workflows, and useful outcomes.

The challenge is to ensure the experiences are not disconnected features. They should all emerge from the same underlying ontology and KnowledgeFund structure.

What comes next

The next step is to turn these named experiences into clearer product definitions with users, triggers, actions, outputs, and value.