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KM activities for 2017 start with a bang
The Annual Knowledge Management Conversation-cum-Knowledge Management Workshop 2017 was held at the Police Headquarters on February 13, with Director of the Police College Lau Chi-wai officiating at the ceremony in the capacity of Force Knowledge Officer.
Speaking to over 200 Knowledge Management (KM) enthusiasts including KM Ambassadors and Peer Advisers, Ms Lau thanked the outgoing Ambassadors for their valuable contribution to promoting KM in the Force. She also presented Certificates of Appointment to the KM Champions for the tenure of 2017 and 2018, and encouraged them to continually drive KM initiatives in the Force.
Then the Champions presented their action plans about their respective domains. The KM Conversation concluded with remarks by Deputy Director 2 of the Police College Tsang Yim-sheung in the capacity of Chief Knowledge Champion. She appealed to all members of the KM family to work closely with other police units to keep the Force's torch of knowledge sharing aflame.
Afterwards, an expert from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University delivered a workshop with a view to equipping the KM Ambassadors and Peer Advisers with the latest knowledge and strategic planning in the area of KM. The reference materials of the event have been uploaded to KM Portal under "Useful Links".
KM Cafe on "Dealings with Commercial Crime"
The Seminar Hall at the Police Headquarters drew a full house on January 23 when frontline officers came to attend the Knowledge Cafe on "Dealings with Commercial Crime".
Chief Inspectors Chan Ching-sum and Lee Mo-yin from the Fraud Section of the Commercial Crime Bureau shared their knowledge about prevalent commercial crimes, useful investigation tools as well as good practices in handling commercial crimes.
Both speakers gave tips to the frontline officers about recording essential information such as suspicious phone numbers and bank accounts for follow-up investigation. Taking cases of concert ticket scam and investment fraud as examples, they said that the keys to detection were the alertness of frontline officers, their in-depth investigation and data analysis.