Archive for January, 2010
Managing Knowledge: Responding to Hagel III and Brown
… failures of existing knowledge management systems [are due] to a lack of habitability: they fail to support work that people do and tasks that they want or need to accomplish in ways that are familiar and useful.
Writing For Your Audience–The Forgotten Cardinal Rule
Drug and medical device development is a content-rich world in which regulatory expectations and business trends have escalated the importance of effective development reports and regulatory submissions. The audience for these documents—or any piece of writing for that matter—is the intended or potential reader or readers. In this instance, it is the regulatory reader. For [...]
What People Have To Say About Review Practices in Their Organizations
At various points in time we launch surveys to gain a deeper understanding of how people perceive review practices in the pharmaceutical and biomedical industries. I want to share some of these findings with you today.
The surveys focus on different aspects of review practices: tools of review, nature of review guidance, efficacy of review practices [...]
