Knowledge transfer is the deliberate movement of information, context, and judgment from one person or team to another. Typical occasions include onboarding, handoffs between teams, project transitions, and departures of key personnel.
Knowledge transfer is harder than it looks because most operational knowledge is tacit — held in the head of the person who has it, with no explicit form. A one-week handoff with the departing engineer often transfers a small fraction of what they actually know. The rest is lost.
Strong knowledge transfer practices externalize tacit knowledge continuously, not just at transition points. Decision logs, postmortems, and structured handoffs convert tacit knowledge into explicit form before it needs to be transferred.
Why Knowledge transfer Matters for Distributed Teams
Knowledge transfer at transition points is mostly too late. The work to make transitions survivable happens during normal operation, not at the moment of departure.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is knowledge transfer?
Knowledge transfer is the deliberate movement of information, context, and judgment from one person or team to another. It is harder than it appears because most operational knowledge is tacit and resists explicit transfer at handoff time.
Related Terms
Engineering handoff
An engineering handoff is the transfer of in-progress work from one engineer to another — across shifts, timezones, or t...
Read definitionInstitutional knowledge
Institutional knowledge is the accumulated context, history, judgment, and lore that lives inside an organization. It in...
Read definitionTribal knowledge
Tribal knowledge is the unwritten know-how that circulates among long-tenured team members — how things actually work, w...
Read definitionGet the vocabulary that makes distributed teams work
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See knowledge transfer in action.
StandIn is built around these concepts. Engineers publish declared state before going offline. The next shift starts with full context.