A  major  new study  by  a respected Canadian polling firm says 91%  of the country's  business  leaders  "agree  knowledge management  practices  have succeeded in creating value in improving organizational effectiveness." And 65% of Canadian companies practicing  knowledge management believe  it  has given their organization a competitive advantage.
  That  type  of  positive attitude -- and particularly the report of  it  by Ipsos-Reid, formerly the Angus Reid Organization -- should go a long way to boosting   acceptance   by   corporate   staffers   who   are   considering ThoughtShare's products for use  in their organizations, says  ThoughtShare president Fred Fabro. 
  ThoughtShare  this month  launched  bZone,  its  first  revenue-generating, web-based,  server  software.  bZone helps organize and  present  essential corporate knowledge captured in the files created by the thousands of users of   ThoughShare's    flagship    application,   PlanBee.    bZone   is   a knowledge-management   package   specifically   designed   for   small  and medium-sized  organizations, or  departments  within  large  organizations. Pricing starts at $7,999 plus $149 per user.
  "The average return-on-investment figure of 41% from  the Ipsos-Reid  study is particularly interesting," notes Fabro. "It means that the value created by  bZone and PlanBee returns their cost to the organization in about three months. The  rest of  the  value  just keeps showing up on the bottom line, year after year after year. Especially during recessionary times, companies need  to work smarter  to milk  the  internal  knowledge  assets  of  their employees so they can make effective decisions."
  bZone involves four main  components: a library, a search engine, a  report generator and a viewer.  It provides mid-sized organizations or departments of  large  organizations a wide range  of  straightforward  approaches  for helping  them  manage  knowledge  and  share   expertise.  This  web-based, knowledge-management method provides a simple way for capturing and sharing the experience and expertise of others. It also allows users easy access to this knowledge anytime, from any standard web browser.
  The Ipsos  Reid study explains that the  executives  surveyed say knowledge management   creates   corporate   value   "by   improving   organizational effectiveness,  delivering customer  value, and improving" the   innovation and delivery of their products.
  Other findings of the new study:
  *  88%  agree  knowledge management practices have  succeeded in delivering customer value
  *   89%  say  the positive impact of  knowledge  management  practices also extends to employee satisfaction
  *  89% agree their organization has  a culture that encourages and provides opportunities for communicating ideas, knowledge and experience internally
  Even  better  for ThoughtShare, says  Fabro is the  fact  that  a third  of organizations without knowledge management practices in place have plans to  implement one in the next 12 months.
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