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Model of Taxonomy Development Tom Reamy Chief Knowledge Architect KAPS Group Knowledge Architecture Professional Services http://www.kapsgroup.com
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2 Agenda Introduction Infrastructure Model of Taxonomy Development – Taxonomy in 4 Contexts Content, People, Processes, Technology Infrastructure and Theory – Beyond Search and Taxonomy Projects Infrastructure Solutions – the Elements Applying the Model – Practical Dimension – Starting and Resources – Infrastructure Look at Taxonomy Boot Camp Conclusion
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3 KAPS Group Knowledge Architecture Professional Services (KAPS) Consulting, strategy recommendations Knowledge architecture audits Partners – Convera, Inxight, and others Taxonomies: Enterprise, Marketing, Insurance, etc. – Taxonomy customization Intellectual infrastructure for organizations – Knowledge organization, technology, people and processes – Search, content management, portals, collaboration, knowledge management, e-learning, etc.
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4 Infrastructure Model of Taxonomy Development Taxonomy in Basic 4 Contexts Ideas – Content Structure – Language and Mind of your organization – Applications - exchange meaning, not data People – Company Structure – Communities, Users, Central Team Activities – Business processes and procedures – Central team - establish standards, facilitate Technology / Things – CMS, Search, portals, taxonomy tools – Applications – BI, CI, Text Mining
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5 Taxonomy in Context Structuring Content All kinds of content and Content Structures – Structured and unstructured, Internet and desktop Metadata standards – Dublin core+ – Keywords - poor performance – Need controlled vocabulary, taxonomies, semantic network Other Metadata – Document Type Form, policy, how-to, etc. – Audience Role, function, expertise, information behaviors – Best bets metadata Facets – entities and ideas – Wine.com
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6 Taxonomy in Context: Structuring People Individual People – Tacit knowledge, information behaviors – Advanced personalization – category priority Sales – forms ---- New Account Form Accountant ---- New Accounts ---- Forms Communities – Variety of types – map of formal and informal – Variety of subject matter – vaccines, research, scuba – Variety of communication channels and information behaviors – Community-specific vocabularies, need for inter-community communication (Cortical organization model)
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7 Taxonomy in Context: Structuring Processes and Technology Technology: infrastructure and applications – Enterprise platforms: from creation to retrieval to application – Taxonomy as the computer network Applications – integrated meaning, not just data Creation – content management, innovation, communities of practice (CoPs) – When, who, how, and how much structure to add – Workflow with meaning, distributed subject matter experts (SMEs) and centralized teams Retrieval – standalone and embedded in applications and business processes – Portals, collaboration, text mining, business intelligence, CRM
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8 Taxonomy in Context: The Integrating Infrastructure Starting point: knowledge architecture audit, K-Map – Social network analysis, information behaviors People – knowledge architecture team – Infrastructure activities – taxonomies, analytics, best bets – Facilitation – knowledge transfer, partner with SMEs “Taxonomies” of content, people, and activities – Dynamic Dimension – complexity not chaos – Analytics based on concepts, information behaviors Taxonomy as part of a foundation, not a project – In an Infrastructure Context
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9 Infrastructure Model of Taxonomy Development Infrastructure vs. Project Approaches Economist June 9, 2005: – Overdue and over budget, over and over again. – Companies are increasingly keen on projects. – Why? When so many of them fail. Failure to integrate all relevant contexts Under-developed understanding of contexts Ideas – least developed infrastructure Closure is an illusion.
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10 Infrastructure Model of Taxonomy Development : Project Approach or Infrastructure Approach Situation: Problem with access to information – Project Approach Publish everything on the intranet Buy a search engine Do some keyword and usability tests Buy a portal (or two) Buy content management software Try knowledge organization – taxonomy? – Infrastructure Approach “The path up and down is one and the same.” (Heraclitus)
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11 Infrastructure Model of Taxonomy Development The Infrastructure Solution: Why Immanuel Kant – Concepts without percepts are empty. – Percepts without concepts are blind. Knowledge Management – KM/KA without applications is empty Strategy only, management fad Elegant taxonomies - unused – Applications without KA are blind IT based KM Fragmented applications
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12 Infrastructure Model of Taxonomy Development The Infrastructure Solution: Why Taxonomies are not for the timid – Software and SME’s is not the answer Example of keywords Taxonomies not stand alone – Metadata, controlled vocabularies, synonyms, etc. – Variety of taxonomies, plus categorization, classification, etc. Important to know the differences, when to use which Integrated Enterprise requires both an infrastructure team and distributed expertise. Advanced Cognitive Differences – Panda, monkey, banana
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13 Infrastructure Model of Taxonomy Development The Infrastructure Solution: Why In a Word – Word Infrastructure as Operating System – Word vs. Word Perfect – Instead of sharing clipboard, share information and knowledge. Importance of Integration ROI – asking the wrong question – What is ROI for having an HR department? A Political Fable – Finding the right set of answers
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14 Infrastructure Solutions: The start and foundation Knowledge Architecture Audit Knowledge Map - Understand what you have, what you are, what you want – The foundation of the foundation Contextual interviews, content analysis, surveys, focus groups, ethnographic studies Category modeling – “Intertwingledness” -learning new categories influenced by other, related categories Natural level categories mapped to communities, activities Novice prefer higher levels Balance of informative and distinctiveness Living, breathing, evolving foundation is the goal
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15 Infrastructure Solutions: Resources People and Processes: Roles and Functions Knowledge Architect and learning object designers Knowledge engineers and cognitive anthropologists Knowledge facilitators and trainers and librarians Part Time – Librarians and information architects – Corporate communication editors and writers Partners – IT, web developers, applications programmers – Business analysts and project managers
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16 Infrastructure Solutions: Resources People and Processes: Central Team Central Team supported by software and offering services – Creating, acquiring, evaluating taxonomies, metadata standards, vocabularies – Input into technology decisions and design – content management, portals, search – Socializing the benefits of metadata, creating a content culture – Evaluating metadata quality, facilitating author metadata – Analyzing the results of using metadata, how communities are using – Research metadata theory, user centric metadata – Design content value structure – more nuanced than good / poor content.
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17 Infrastructure Solutions: Resources People and Processes: Facilitating Knowledge Transfer Need for Facilitators – Amazon hiring humans to refine recommendations – Google – humans answering queries Facilitate projects, KM project teams – Facilitate knowledge capture in meetings, best practices Answering online questions, facilitating online discussions, networking within a community Design and run KM forums, education and innovation fairs Work with content experts to develop training, incorporate intelligence into applications Support innovation, knowledge creation in communities
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18 Infrastructure Solutions: Resources People and Processes: Location of Team KM/KA Dept. – Cross Organizational, Interdisciplinary Balance of dedicated and virtual, partners – Library, Training, IT, HR, Corporate Communication Balance of central and distributed Industry variation – Pharmaceutical – dedicated department, major place in the organization – Insurance – Small central group with partners – Beans – a librarian and part time functions Which design – knowledge architecture audit
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19 Infrastructure Solutions: Resources Technology Taxonomy Management – Text and Visualization Entity and Fact Extraction Text Mining Search for professionals – Different needs, different interfaces Integration Platform technology – Enterprise Content Management
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20 Infrastructure Solutions: Taxonomy Development Initial Development / Customization Combination of top down and bottom up (and Essences) – Top: Design an ontology, facet selection – Bottom: Vocabulary extraction – documents, search logs, interview authors and users – Develop essential examples (Prototypes) Most Intuitive Level – genus (oak, maple, rabbit) Quintessential Chair – all the essential characteristics, no more Map the taxonomy to communities and activities – Category differences – Vocabulary differences
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21 Infrastructure Solutions: Taxonomy Development Evaluate and Refine Formal Evaluation – Quality of corpus – size, homogeneity, representative – Breadth of coverage – main ideas, outlier ideas (see next) – Structure – balance of depth and width Practical Evaluation – Test in real life application – Test node labels with Subject Matter Experts, representative users and documents – Test with representative key concepts – Test for un-representative strange little concepts that only mean something to a few people but the people and ideas are key and are normally impossible to find
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22 Infrastructure Solutions: Taxonomy Development Issues and Ideas Enterprise Taxonomy – No single subject matter taxonomy – Need an ontology of facets or domains Standards and Customization – Balance of corporate communication and departmental specifics – At what level are differences represented? – Customize pre-defined taxonomy – additional structure, add synonyms and acronyms and vocabulary Enterprise Facet Model: – Actors, Events, Functions, Locations, Objects, Information Resources – Combine and map to subject domains
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23 Infrastructure Approach: Taxonomy Boot Camp Making the business case: – Sell as infrastructure, platform, foundation – not a project – Project within contexts, not end in itself Defining the requirements – Not just for the project, but how it will fit with other projects – Criteria for decisions – strategy options, types Developing an Enterprise Taxonomy – Decide how and when and whether to – Mix of global and local Making the build, buy, automate decision – Make a better, deeper decision
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24 Infrastructure Approach: Taxonomy Boot Camp Building A Taxonomy – Keeping broader and multiple contexts in mind Integration and Implementation – Major area for infrastructure approach – Applications, communication, users Testing & Usability – Usability in different applications and user communities – Need a map of user communities, activities
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25 Infrastructure Approach: Taxonomy Boot Camp Governance & Maintenance – Part of people infrastructure – organizational issues – Partnership of central team and business, SME’s Enterprise Taxonomy – Groundwork, Governance, Connections – Infrastructure approach doesn’t mean start big, do it all at once Facets & Folksonomies – To Facet or not to Facet – Complexity Theory and Folksonomies – Central Group, but not management, control
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26 Infrastructure Approach: Taxonomy Boot Camp Strategies & Tools – Strategies Think Big, Start Small, Scale Fast Foundation as a separate project – Tools Integration as important as features Support for all phases of taxonomy development Platform software – CMS, KM, LMS
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27 Conclusion Taxonomy development is not just a project – It has no beginning and no end Taxonomy development is not an end in itself – It enables the accomplishment of many ends Taxonomy development is not just about search or browse – It is about language, cognition, and applied intelligence Strategic Vision (articulated by K Map) is important – Even for your under the radar vocabulary project Paying attention to theory is practical – So is adapting your language to business speak
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28 Conclusion Taxonomies are part of your intellectual infrastructure – Roads, transportation systems not cars or types of cars Taxonomies are part of creating smart organizations – Self aware, capable of learning and evolving If we really are in a knowledge economy We need to pay attention to – Knowledge!
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Questions? Tom Reamy tomr@kapsgroup.com KAPS Group Knowledge Architecture Professional Services http://www.kapsgroup.com
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