Originally posted 26-Oct-23

Stan Garfield
5 min readOct 27, 2023

Nirmala Palaniappan (Nimmy) is passionate about knowledge, learning, design, and innovation and interested in product management, design thinking, business research, collaboration, culture, change management, consulting, process improvement, branding, and business strategy. She was awarded a US patent for the KM framework, methodology, and toolkit she conceived. Nimmy is currently Vice President of Knowledge Transformation Services at Genpact in Chennai, India.

Nimmy has expertise in creating and implementing intranets, community tools, expert locators, mobile apps, content management systems, internal portals, and Enterprise 2.0 tools. She also has skill in formulating KM strategies, creating a knowledge sharing culture, enhancing processes, designing and project managing technological implementations, and defining and monitoring benefits/measures.

Her specialties include knowledge management strategy, culture and change management, business process improvement, branding and advertising, KM technology concepts and enhancements, and business analysis. She wrote and presented several KM papers at national and international conferences on KM implementation, Enterprise 2.0, collaboration, toolkits, and blogging.

Experience

  • Genpact — Vice President of Knowledge Transformation Services, 2021-present
  • TAFE — Tractors and Farm Equipment Limited — Head of Knowledge Management, 2014–2020
  • Oracle — Director, Social Enterprise/KM (Asia Pacific Technology Units), 2007–2014, Bangalore
  • Wipro Technologies — Lead KM Consultant. 2005–2007, Knowledge Manager, 2002–2005
  • CG Smith Software Pvt Ltd — Knowledge Manager, 2000–2002

Education

  • Bangalore University — BE (Instrumentation Technology)
  • Anna University — MBA (Systems and Finance), 1999

Profiles

Award and Patent

Content

Videos

Articles

  1. Is Knowledge Sharing an Art or a Science?
  2. The KM Elephant Story
  3. The KM Elephant Story, Part 2
  4. Impact of Videos on KM Engagement and Effectiveness
  5. Elementary, My Dear Watson
  6. Knowledge on Tap
  7. What are the skills KMers need to have in future?
  8. What’s in it for me when I share knowledge?
  9. KM and its impact on Sales/Revenue
  10. Chatbots and how they add value to KM programs
  11. Tacit Knowledge Capture (Conversion of Tacit to Explicit Knowledge)
  12. Lack of Cross-Functional Collaboration as a Barrier to KM

How can KM contribute to business goals?

Content Management — The Three Phases

Building a Progressive Culture

Being Prepared — KM in the time of COVID-19

There are a bunch of things that organizations that are serious about surviving such calamities must pay attention to, in order to not be threatened by a major disruption in the way their employees connect, collaborate and conclude on the daily tasks. They must make sure that the KM function is given the necessary resources, freedom and support to put the following things in place. This will help them respond better when the situation demands that organizations use digital interfaces to bring people together.

  1. Make constant reflection a prerequisite for all roles that are knowledge-based
  2. Mandate documentation of ideas, decisions, processes, deliberations and so on, on digital platforms that can be referred to by anyone to whom it is relevant, at any point of time (Don’t underestimate the power of writing things down. It improves clarity and sense of responsibility for the person writing it down. It improves the collective memory of the organization. It helps the organization learn from the past. It brings in more uniformity in the way employees understand things. It softens the blow of attrition and absence of employees. It helps in retrospective analysis and collective knowledge-building, among other things). Video capture would be a good or better alternative in some cases.
  3. Ensure that digital collaboration platforms are used by every business unit, cross-functional team and project team, including senior management committees etc.
  4. Give importance to content management systems and make it a part of the process to store, retrieve and utilize content related to operations, marketing, strategy and all other functions
  5. Build community management platforms that allow for internal communities of interest or practice to create and manage a body of knowledge on business topics of their choice
  6. Make it easy for every employee to identify and connect with colleagues who work in related or associated areas. Encourage the constant seeking of knowledge from colleagues
  7. Invest in content creation teams that focus on helping knowledge creators document, present and share their insights and learnings on a regular basis
  8. Make sure there is at least one knowledge champion who is tech-savvy, in each team, so they can constantly educate and inspire the team and get them to acknowledge the role that digital platforms play in enabling collaboration at all times
  9. Make sure those who share knowledge and those who reuse knowledge are constantly under the spotlight and are appreciated, recognized and celebrated via these very digital platforms
  10. Adopt and use video collaboration platforms with white-boarding features when the need for conventional documentation is low or when the situation is too chaotic for typical documentation

Presentations

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Stan Garfield
Stan Garfield

Written by Stan Garfield

Knowledge Management Author and Speaker, Founder of SIKM Leaders Community, Community Evangelist, Knowledge Manager https://sites.google.com/site/stangarfield/

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