Home
Topics
Evaluation
Lessons Outreach
Learning Lessons in ADB
Learning Lessons in ADB: Strategic Framework, 2007-2009
Options for Lesson LearningADB's annual lending volume is typically about $6 billion, with technical assistance (TA) totaling about $180 million a year. Therefore, the return on investment in lesson learning for operational and developmental impact is likely to be high, and maximizing it is a legitimate concern.14 There is anecdotal evidence that lessons sometimes feed into business processes—most recently it seems principally by means of country assistance program evaluations—but feedback mechanisms can be developed further. In 2006, OED examined what options for lesson learning might exist short of forming a knowledge management unit.15 The alternatives considered but not recommended were
____________________
14 Often, organizations do not know how to calculate the value returned from knowledge management and how to link that to performance measures. For ADB, in-house returns would stem for instance from reduced administrative and operational expenses; effi ciency gains; increased productivity; better collabora-tion within the organization; higher quality, usability, scalability, and integration of knowledge products and services; and innovation. In DMCs, these returns would include achieving better development results though higher pro-poor, sustainable economic growth, more inclusive social development, and better governance.
|
| © 2008 Asian Development Bank Privacy | Terms of Use |
|