![](https://appel.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/How-to-get-Knowledge-Known-guide-670x380.png)
A presentation guide on how to get your knowledge known through the use of various knowledge sharing methods and platforms.
A presentation guide on how to get your knowledge known through the use of various knowledge sharing methods and platforms.
Meetings can be designed and executed as an effective knowledge capture and sharing tool.
This page provides resources to help NASA leaders and teams take steps to build a culture that connects employees to knowledge when they join a team and that retains the critical knowledge held by experienced personnel in advance of retirement or other transitions.
The Small Satellite Reliability Initiative (SSRI) Knowledge Base shares resources, best practices, and lessons learned that improve mission confidence for small satellites. To that end, this comprehensive online tool contains organized, vetted, and high-quality sources of information on key elements of a successful small satellite mission.
A short introduction to the basic principals of Knowledge Management (KM) at NASA Glenn Research Center (GRC) in Cleveland, OH. For more information, please contact the GRC Chief Knowledge Officer (CKO).
APPEL Knowledge Services offers a varied series of one-hour webinars to meet the needs of NASA’s technical workforce on a range of topics. Webinars typically draw hundreds of attendees, who learn from expert facilitators with decades of experience in professional coaching and leadership development. The format also allows attendees the unique opportunity to interface, share, and learn from each other.
Sharing Knowledge and Leadership Insights to Support Project Success
APPEL Knowledge Services created these virtual backgrounds to help elevate your digital presence during virtual meetings and as a salute to the sweeping changes you’ve made to advance mission success during a time of unprecedented challenge. Whether you choose to appear on your call from the surface of the Moon, in Low Earth Orbit, near an historic night launch at Kennedy Space Center, or beside one of NASA’s first Robonauts, you are sure to impress.
The MSFC Library curates collections of materials from various manned and unmanned space flight programs, including the Space Transportation System (STS). Archives include the “Rocketry Room” with unique documents for early STS propulsion system development.