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Putting KM Principles into Practice: Canadian Forest Fire Situation Report. Dr. Albert J. Simard Caroline A. Cook. “A new information revolution is well under way... It is not a revolution in technology, machinery, techniques, software, or speed. It is a revolution in CONCEPTS.”
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Putting KM Principles into Practice:Canadian Forest Fire Situation Report Dr. Albert J. Simard Caroline A. Cook
“A new information revolution is well under way...It is not a revolution in technology, machinery, techniques, software, or speed. It is a revolution in CONCEPTS.” • Peter Drucker, Management Challenges for the 21st Century (1999)
Principles • Use knowledge to transform data from multiple sources into synthesized information • Focus on ease of understanding • Technology is supporting, not driving • Use existing systems and infrastructure • Tacit knowledge is essential • Lead by example
The Situation • Information collected by 17 jurisdictions • Daily reports highly detailed & technical
The Situation • Information collected by 17 jurisdictions • Daily reports highly detailed & technical • Delays between activity and reports • Information in tabular and text formats only • Information was disjointed, no synopsis • Limited usefulness for non-professionals
The Context • Provinces & others manage forest fires • Canadian Forest Service reports to Minister • CFS is not an operational organization • Inconsistent inputs precluded automation • Report must be in plain language • All documents must bilingual • Report must be timely • No budget
Design Criteria • Use graphics for rapid understanding
Sept. May June July Aug. The design Number of Fires Seasonal Area Burned Interagency Resource Mobilization Area of Smoke by Satellite
Design Criteria • Use graphics for rapid understanding • Maximum one page of text to summarize the national situation • Bilingual report published on the Web within 24 hours of receipt of inputs • Link information from multiple sources to go beyond the facts • Predict fire activity for coming week
Statistics Fire Information System Maps Satellite images Weather forecasts Informationsources The Product Translation Resources The Approach Tables and graphs Weekly summary Prognosis
Then what? • Additions beyond the report is where you find more value added • the report • archived reports • links to provincial agencies • links to other fire sites • link to an expert
Then what? • Additions beyond the report is where you find more value added • the report • archived reports • links to provincial agencies • links to other fire sites • link to an expert • Incorporate feedback and questions received to modify the report to better meet needs • Report 3 years ago is different than the one today
Evaluation • Visits and users • 1998: 12,000 2001: 23,500 (to date) • Highest single access page for CFS-HQ • Media, tourists, students, companies, military • Feedback • 1) Update military base commanders 2) Anticipate helicopter deployment 3) Plan vacation 4) Prepare university project (5) Write newspaper article • Efficiency • THEN: 48-hour turnaround (8-10 hrs work; 5 people; 10+ steps) • NOW : 24-hour turnaround (5-6 hrs work; 3 people; < 10 steps) • Influence • From clients on the report • On information sources from the report • On other information providers from the report
Influence from clients This addition in 2001 has reducedthe number of requests by 50%
Lessons learned • Tools are tools – how you use them determines the success of a knowledge project • People are central in knowledge organizations • Capturing tacit knowledge is a challenge; adapting tools and processes is a solution. • Leading by example does work. • You can influence culture one project at a time.