- Author: medium.com
- Full Title: How to Build an Efficient Personal Knowledge Management System
- Category: #Type/Highlight/Article
- URL: https://medium.com/@axtonliu/how-to-build-an-efficient-personal-knowledge-management-system-355332ae5991
- I believe that making an effort to establish a personal knowledge management system can be beneficial to everyone. Nowadays, we all face with too much fragmented information. We have to learn how to control the information by transforming quality content into knowledge and discarding momentary and useless information.
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- Therefore I have to build a system which can help me to translate information into knowledge, and I did.
- Knowledge Management is one of the hottest topics today in both the industry world and information research world. In our daily life, we deal with huge amount of data and information. Data and information are not knowledge until we know how to dig the value out of it. This is the reason we need knowledge management. Unfortunately, there’s no universal definition of knowledge management, just as there’s no agreement as to what constitutes knowledge in the first place.
- After building my KM system, I keep improving and modifying it, which makes me become more efficient and help me completely solve the following issues: Amass information without creation. As I have mentioned before, every day I read a lot of articles or posts from websites, social media, and Google search. When I found an excellent article, I will promptly save it to Evernote, a digital notebook I have used before, for further reference. After many years accumulation, there are thousands of notes in my Evernote notebook. However, I did not read most of them for second times after saving them. No output, no sharing. For example, when I was dealing with a problem, I always referred to multiple resources and even did certain experiments to conclude the final solution. After the task had been done, I did not organize all the information regarding the solution and write down how I found it. Also, I did not share it with someone else. After a time, I will forget all about these: the references, the experiments, and the solution. All my efforts do not achieve their maximum value.
- The above picture is a DIKW (abbreviation of Data, Information, Knowledge, Wisdom) pyramid from David McCandless, which illustrates the hierarchy of data, information, knowledge and wisdom. It is important to note that there is a definite boundary in the middle of the pyramid: Data and information are what we collected, Knowledge and wisdom are what we created.
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- The essential part of a good KMS is output. Reading books, watching videos and attending lectures are all activities for acquiring information. Even though books and lectures belong to wisdom or knowledge in the DIKW model, they are the authors’ wisdom and lecturers’ knowledge. They are not ours. The best way to transform the information into our knowledge is to interpret something new to us based on what we have learned and share them.
- OneNote is the most important application of this system. It is the central storage and the perfect note taking solution. All information which is processed by me is classified and saved in OneNote. EverNote acts as a container for collected information and the final storage for raw materials. Materials which I do not study them and write notes on them are called “raw material,” I only keep them for further reference. EverNote used to be my primary note app for a long time, while it is also a fantastic software, I finally moved to OneNote because of following reasons: Windows version OneNote has better performance than EverNote. If an EverNote notebook contains too many notes, say more than one thousand, the performance would become terrible. I cannot scroll the notebook smoothly even it is running on my i7 CPU with 16G RAM laptop. Every OneNote’s page is an endless paper, which is perfect to complement additional content to a note.
- We face with two types of information: Active information and passive information. Active information is what we intend to acquire, such as googling a keyword. By contrast, passive information is pushed to us by its’ senders, such as twitters, posts and so on. In the collection phase, the primary task is to judge which information should be kept for further reading. And it is also important that do not spend too much time on browsing the passive information.
- Workflow is a powerful automation tool which can “connect apps and actions together to automate things you do on your device.” I use it to extract useful information from Safari by: Converting the whole web page to PDF document and save it to Dropbox for further processing. Excerpting snippets from a web page and appending them to EverNote notes.
- I digitize paper documents via Scanner Pro and save them to Dropbox, and use Duokan to read ePUB books because it can automatically save the book’s highlights or notes to EverNote. After this phase is finished, all the information which need to be processed in next phase is stored in Pocket, Feedly, Dropbox and EverNote.
- For each of the collected material, we need to decide whether we should study it or just keep it for further reference. The decision depends on subjects on which we are currently focusing. For example, if I am currently concentrating on web development, an article named “10 tips to build a fast HTML 5 app” is definitely worth to read carefully. And “Healthy dinner recipes”, I am not interested in cooking, but these recipes seem perfect and maybe someday I will need to prepare a feast, so it would be better to save it in my “Reference” notebook.
- Organization mainly includes classification and complement. Besides highlighting and noting down the important points in an article, it is also necessary to expand on certain contents or words to help us understand more deeply. If a post contains a term “DES”, for instance, which I do not know its meaning, I will google it and note down the explanation.
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- After processing a material, I should save it to an appropriate location and tag it, in other words, classify it into the proper category. In OneNote, I am using three levels for classification: Notebook, Section and Tag. Regarding how to build a personal note system, this is another topic which is worth writing the other article to describe it in detail. Simply put, the principle of my note taking solution is that the notes should be obtained or consulted again easily.
- The most important step is to review the organized materials periodically. Without review, our hard disk would become a landfill instead of a treasure trove of knowledge. I do review weekly. During the review, I always ask myself following questions about an organized note: Is it relevant to my current focus? If yes, then I need to put more effort on it. It can be used to solve which problem? This question helps create a relationship between the knowledge and problems. We can keep in mind that which problems can refer to these notes. Does it belong to which topic or project? Classify the note to existing topic or create a new topic if necessary. For example, before I began to write this post, I created a topic “Knowledge Management System .” So related articles or pictures will be classified to this topic. There are not too many apps needed in this phase. Following are the three top apps I frequently use: MarginNote Pro This is my ideal app for PDF documents studying, annotating and noting. It combines Mindmap and Outline for note organization and provides Flashcard for memorizing notes. It has a free version named “MarginNote” which you could try it. MindJet Maps A free mind map app with standard functions. I only read mind maps on my iPad and rarely edit them, so MindJet fulfills my needs. If you need to edit mind map frequently, I would not recommend it. OneNote A powerful and cross-platform note taking solution. Each page likes an endless paper, which makes it extremely convenient for complementing new contents to an existing note. After the organization phase, all the organized and processed information, and information which is being organized and processed, are saved in MarginNote Pro and OneNote.
- Ulysses for most of my writing tasks. Ulysses is a decent Markdown editor app which can make me concentrate on typing and enjoy writing.