The Definition
Knowledge retention is an organisation's capacity to keep critical expertise accessible even when the people who hold it leave. It is a property of the organisation's systems and practices, not of the individual employees.
What Knowledge Retention Requires
Continuous capture. Knowledge that is only captured at the point of departure is captured too late. Continuous capture from meetings, decisions, and work that is already happening means that when someone eventually leaves, the most valuable knowledge has already been preserved.
Structured storage. Captured knowledge must be organised and accessible, not buried in repositories that nobody searches. Structured knowledge cards with attribution, context, and connections to related knowledge are more useful than a searchable archive of raw documents.
Active systems. Manual documentation models fail because they depend on people doing extra work. Active systems that extract knowledge from normal work do not compete with people's primary responsibilities.
The Connection to Corporate Memory
A well-maintained corporate memory — one that captures decisions, expertise, and institutional context from ongoing work — gives an organisation strong knowledge retention by default. The knowledge does not leave when people leave because it was never solely held by those people. askSOPia is built on this principle: continuous extraction means knowledge retention happens as a byproduct of normal operations.
Frequently Asked Questions
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