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Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
Technology acquisition, consultancy know-how, research data and
services, marketing information, intellectual property ... the list
of sources and types of knowledge that organizations need to
acquire, share and manage is growing exponentially. The acquisition
and management of knowledge as an end in itself is relatively new,
but has grown in importance on most managers agendas over the past
fifteen years and is something that many managers are still
fundamentally ill-equipped to control effectively. Yet it is their
ability to plan, source, evaluate, acquire and manage knowledge on
which the success of their organizations increasingly depends Peter
Sammons provides managers with a readable, highly practical guide
to buying and managing knowledge. The author looks at the knowledge
economy, to set the scene on the manager's growing responsibility
to buy-in knowledge for their organization. He explores
intellectual property rights: how they are created, transferred and
protected. He sets out some alternative strategies to buying
knowledge. There's advice on how to work with universities,
contract research organizations and consultancy firms. And the most
neglected area of all - knowledge transfer from supplier to buyer -
is given exhaustive treatment. In a discipline (knowledge work)
that is fraught with jargon, technology and arcane practice, Buying
Knowledge enables every manager to acquire the knowledge their
organization needs; in a form and at a cost that is most
appropriate for them without exposing their organization to
litigation or intellectual property disputes.
Technology acquisition, consultancy know-how, research data and
services, marketing information, intellectual property ... the list
of sources and types of knowledge that organizations need to
acquire, share and manage is growing exponentially. The acquisition
and management of knowledge as an end in itself is relatively new,
but has grown in importance on most managers agendas over the past
fifteen years and is something that many managers are still
fundamentally ill-equipped to control effectively. Yet it is their
ability to plan, source, evaluate, acquire and manage knowledge on
which the success of their organizations increasingly depends Peter
Sammons provides managers with a readable, highly practical guide
to buying and managing knowledge. The author looks at the knowledge
economy, to set the scene on the manager's growing responsibility
to buy-in knowledge for their organization. He explores
intellectual property rights: how they are created, transferred and
protected. He sets out some alternative strategies to buying
knowledge. There's advice on how to work with universities,
contract research organizations and consultancy firms. And the most
neglected area of all - knowledge transfer from supplier to buyer -
is given exhaustive treatment. In a discipline (knowledge work)
that is fraught with jargon, technology and arcane practice, Buying
Knowledge enables every manager to acquire the knowledge their
organization needs; in a form and at a cost that is most
appropriate for them without exposing their organization to
litigation or intellectual property disputes.
Contract management is a key management skill, yet it is
underplayed in most organizations, which usually default to project
management skills as a proxy for contract management skills. Whilst
project management skills are equally essential, they are not the
same thing. Contract Management looks at the wider contract
management picture from an industrial-commercial perspective, and
helps set-out typical structures and processes that assist the
contract management task. The author uses diagramatic
representations to depict complex ideas. Contract Management
includes "learning points" in each chapter, looking at handling
problems, procedural changes and enhancing commercial performance.
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