Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2000 13:34:05 -0700
Mr. Rod Welch
rowelch@attglobal.net
The Welch Company
440 Davis Court #1602
San Francisco, CA 94111 2496
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Subject:
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Fall 2000 -- Invitation
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Dear Rod,
Because you indicated a special interest in knowledge management, community
and collaboration or have attended past KM Cluster events, you are receiving
this special invitation.
This message is the eRegistration Invitation for the SF & Silicon Valley
Fall 2000 KM Cluster event on Friday, September 29, 2000 in downtown San
Francisco, from 8-4pm.
The Fall 2000 Theme is: "Building Communities that Build Knowledge &
Business Value."
The Event web is:
http://www.eknowledgecenter.com/sfc/
To eRegister:
http://www.net-intelligence.net/SecureOrderForm.htm
Confirmed Speakers:
Etienne Wenger, Ph.D.,
Independent Thinker, Researcher, Consultant,
Author and Speaker. "Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and
Identity." (Keynote Speaker)
Nick Bontis, Ph.D.,
CKO, Knexa.com & Director, Institute for Intellectual
Capital Research, DeGroote School of Business, McMaster University. "Human
Capital - Results of Recent Research from Andersen Consulting."
James Taylor,
Director, RealCommunities Inc., "Shared Knowledge and a Common
Purpose: 12 Principles for building Web Communities".
David Coleman,
Managing Director, Collaborative Strategies, "Evolving
Enterprise Collaboration on the Internet (Part II)."
David Steier, Ph.D.,
Managing Director, Scient - The eBusiness Systems
Innovator(tm). "Anatomy of an Enterprise HyperPortal."
Recommended Reading:
"Net Gain: Expanding Markets Through Virtual Communities," by John Hagel,
Arthur G. Armstrong Hardcover - 239 pages -- Harvard Business School Press.
Building relationships & communities has been a buzz phrase in business
circles for years. Now John Hagel and Arthur Armstrong declare that's not
enough. They make a strong case that business success in the very near
future will depend on using the Internet to build not just relationships,
but communities. The payoff, they maintain, will be phenomenal customer
loyalty and high profits. Here's a cyberspace book that could make your
business future.
KM Cluster eRegistration:
To eRegister and guarantee your space for the September 29, 2000 event,
please visit:
http://www.net-intelligence.net/SecureOrderForm.htm
(Slots are filling up quickly, please eRegister today.)
The event fee includes coffee, refreshments, luncheon, materials,
equipment/room rental, eRegistration, web site and incidental expenses. The
KM Cluster is not-for-profit.
About the KM Cluster:
The KM Cluster is a user organization. It represents the greater San
Francisco Bay Area and Silicon Valley. The KM Cluster started in 1998.
Events are held quarterly. It is vendor-agnostic. It draws support only from
participants. The purpose is to enable and sponsor a Bay Area cluster of
Knowledge Management (KM) practitioners, executives and thought leaders. The
goal is improve the competitiveness and innovation capabilities of local
members, firms, institutions and collaborators.
Fall 2000 Logistics:
The Fall 2000 KM Cluster event will be held on Friday, September 29th at The
San Francisco State University - Downtown Campus, 425 Market Street @
Fremont, San Francisco, California.
Pre-registration is required. Check in and coffee begins at 8:00am.
SF KM Cluster Meeting
SFSU - Downtown Campus
425 Market Street @ Fremont
Room 309, 3rd Floor
Friday, 29 September 2000
8:00 am - 4:00 pm
Map, Directions & Parking:
http://www.sfaug.org/meetings/SFSUdirections.html
Most Sincerely,
SF/SV KM Cluster
John Maloney
http://www.eknowledgecenter.com/sfc/
kmcluster@collaboratory.com
415 820 2351