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Communication and Knowledge

Everything you need to build, organize, and manage the knowledge and communication systems that keep your organization informed, aligned, and productive.

Why Communication and Knowledge Systems Matter

Every organization generates knowledge faster than it can organize it. Meeting notes, process documentation, project decisions, customer insights, and institutional expertise accumulate across email threads, chat channels, shared drives, and people’s heads. Without deliberate systems for capturing, organizing, and distributing this knowledge, teams waste time searching for information that already exists, make decisions without context that was available but unfindable, and lose institutional memory every time someone leaves.

The concepts in this section cover the systems and practices that make organizational knowledge accessible: knowledge bases that centralize information, knowledge management disciplines that keep it current, internal communication strategies that move the right information to the right people, and wiki platforms that make documentation collaborative and searchable.

Browse Communication and Knowledge

Crisis Communication Plan: How to Prepare Before You Need One A crisis communication plan is a pre built playbook that defines who speaks, what they say, to which audience, through which channels when something goes seriously wrong. The goal is removing decision making from the moment of panic by documenting response protocols in advance.
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Documentation Workflow: How to Build a System That Stays Current A documentation workflow is the process governing when docs get created, who reviews them, how they are published, and when they expire. The five stages are trigger, draft, review, publish, and maintain. Automating review reminders and status changes prevents the two most common failures: stalled reviews and outdated content.
Internal Communication Internal communication is the practice of sharing information within an organization through defined channels and strategies to keep employees informed, aligned, and able to act on what they know.
Internal Wiki An internal wiki is a collaboratively edited platform where any employee can create, update, and organize documentation about company processes, projects, and institutional knowledge, distributing the documentation burden across the entire organization.
Knowledge Base A knowledge base is a centralized, searchable repository of organized information that enables employees or customers to find answers to common questions through self service, reducing time spent searching and the volume of support inquiries.
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Knowledge Management Knowledge management is the organizational discipline of creating, capturing, organizing, sharing, and maintaining institutional knowledge so the right information reaches the right people at the right time, turning scattered expertise into an accessible organizational asset.
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Team Communication: How to Build Norms That Actually Work Team communication is how small groups coordinate daily work. Effective team communication uses the minimum messaging needed for alignment, defaults to asynchronous channels, and documents decisions in persistent locations rather than chat threads.

Common Questions About Communication and Knowledge

What is the difference between a knowledge base and a wiki?

A knowledge base is a structured, curated collection of information organized by topic and maintained by designated owners. A wiki is a collaboratively edited platform where anyone can create and update pages. Knowledge bases prioritize accuracy and curation; wikis prioritize speed and broad contribution. Many organizations use both: a wiki for working documentation and a knowledge base for finalized, customer facing content.

Why is knowledge management important for operations teams?

Operations teams depend on documented processes, SOPs, and institutional knowledge to maintain consistency. Without knowledge management, processes live in people's heads rather than in accessible systems. When those people are unavailable, the process breaks. Structured knowledge management makes operational knowledge permanent, transferable, and improvable.

How do you improve internal communication in a growing organization?

Start by defining communication channels for different message types: urgent operational updates, strategic announcements, project status, and social connection. Then reduce channel sprawl by consolidating tools where possible. Most communication problems in growing organizations come from too many channels with unclear purposes rather than too few channels.

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