It’s Our Combined Thoughts That Bring Us Great Things
This post was written by Jacob McNulty
It’s our combined thoughts that bring us great things.
What a great quote, eh?
This came straight from my wife after a couple years of explaining to her what I do for a living. After all the talk of wikis, social networking, collective intelligence, blogs, knowledge management, Web 2.0, etc. it was her that boiled it down to that statement.
Being so mired in the world of next-generation learning and development I am accustomed to, and comfortable with, the buzzwords of the trade but it’s sometimes difficult to translate the purpose and benefit of all of these funny sounding things to someone that has little insight into this world.
And her statement summed up quite a bit of it. So much so that when she said it I sat up straight and wrote it down on a bar napkin [a relic of pre-Web 2.0 for any Gen Nexters that may be reading].
The more I thought about it this really encompasses the theory driving this revolution in how people learn, collaborate, innovate, communicate, etc. and the buzzwords are really just the ‘how.’ Communities of practice, social network analysis, rapid elearning, knowledge management and many others are just methods to accomplish the purpose of my wife’s synopsis - harnessing the power of people connected.
As with many other examples, it takes an outsider’s lens to shed a light of clarity on a topic that can become quite complex when left to the experts.
Tags: blog, business training, collective intelligence, Communities of Practice, CoP, corporate training, crowdsourcing, development, informal learning, Knowledge Management, knowledge worker, learning, learning strategies, organizational learning, organizational network analysis, podcasting, professional development, rapid elearning, Social Network Analysis, social networking, Web 2.0, Wiki, workforce development
