Author Benjamin Anyacho Wants Sharing Knowledge To Be Effortless
“People don’t care how much you know, but they are more interested in how much you care. And to care is still insufficient. You need to share.”

Courtesy of Benjamin Anyacho
Benjamin Anyacho
“My father died when I was a little kid. My father was a carpenter, and until today you can see the fingerprint of his creativity in the work he did. My father didn’t have control over his death, but he definitely had control over his knowledge. So as a result, it was one of the ethos of my life to share everything I know. I do not want to go to the grave like my dad, with his knowledge, I want to let my knowledge change and impact some people who may eventually change the world.”
“But the challenge is knowledge management is very complex. It is purely academic. And I began to think that knowledge exchange should be as simple as walking into your neighborhood coffee shop. It shouldn’t be complicated.”
“Peter Drucker said there are two people in the organization – the bureaucrats and the lunatics…the challenge is how do you make them work together?”
“Something we need in our culture today – we need understanding and understanding doesn’t happen in a snap of a finger. It happens through constant communication, constant collaboration, constant interaction and engagement internationality. People don’t care how much you know, but they are more interested in how much you care. And to care is still insufficient. You need to share.”
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