While preserving and sharing knowledge can’t guarantee success in the market place, companies owe it to themselves to recognize the importance of capturing what their employees know before it’s too late.
It’s difficult to quantify productivity or financial costs related to inefficient knowledge sharing – but new research from The Panopto Workplace Knowledge and Productivity Report does just that.
What if researchers could claim their own contribution to a piece of work, or provide peer assessment of another’s work? Blockchain may be the solution.
Joris van Rossum, Director of Special Projects at Digital Science, shares his views on the ways blockchain could be a game changer in the ecosystem of scholarly publishing.