Putting KM Principles into Practice: Canadian Forest Fire Situation Report

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KM World Conference Santa Clara, CA Oct. 30 – Nov. 01, 2001 Putting KM Principles into Putting KM Principles into Practice: Practice: Canadian Forest Fire Situation Canadian Forest Fire Situation Report Report Dr. Albert J. Simard Caroline A. Cook

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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.” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Putting KM Principles into Practice: Canadian Forest Fire Situation Report

Page 1: Putting KM Principles into Practice: Canadian Forest Fire Situation Report

KM World Conference

Santa Clara, CAOct. 30 – Nov. 01, 2001

Putting KM Principles into Practice:Putting KM Principles into Practice:Canadian Forest Fire Situation ReportCanadian Forest Fire Situation Report

Dr. Albert J. Simard

Caroline A. Cook

Page 2: Putting KM Principles into Practice: Canadian Forest Fire Situation Report

“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)

Page 3: Putting KM Principles into Practice: Canadian Forest Fire Situation Report

PrinciplesPrinciples

• 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

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The SituationThe Situation

• Information collected by 17 jurisdictions

• Daily reports highly detailed & technical

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Information source:Information source:3 years ago3 years ago

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The SituationThe 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

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The ContextThe 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

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Design CriteriaDesign Criteria

• Use graphics for rapid understanding

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The designThe design

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10-yr 1765 148 814 314 627 434 1267 797 142 397 329 24 70

2001 1175 68 862 124 792 499 1516 980 187 441 439 29 94

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Interagency Resource MobilizationArea of Smoke by Satellite

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Design CriteriaDesign 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

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The ApproachThe ApproachStatistics

Fire Information System MapsSatellite images

Weather forecasts

Tables and graphs

Weekly summary

Prognosis

Informationsources

Resources

The Product

Translation

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Then what?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

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The reportThe report

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Value-addedValue-added

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Other agenciesOther agencies

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Other fire sitesOther fire sites

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Tacit knowledgeTacit knowledgeAn expertAn expert

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Then what?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

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EvaluationEvaluation

• 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

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Influence from clientsInfluence from clients

This addition in 2001 has reducedthe number of requests by 50%

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Influence onInfluence oninformation sourcesinformation sources

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Influence onInfluence oninformation sourcesinformation sources

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Influence onInfluence onother sourcesother sources

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Lessons learnedLessons 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.