The Project is not a pundit. We work within the published organizational-behavior and knowledge-management literature, extend it where it is thin, and release everything we find under open license.
A structured inventory across four canonical categories — conscious, codified, automatic, collective — administered to a representative sample of teams within the participating firm. Modeled on the audit instrument from JKM (2018).
Long-form qualitative interviews conducted within 60 days of separation. Designed to surface the knowledge employees did not realize they held — by walking through specific past situations rather than asking "what did you know."
With the firm's consent, we instrument anonymized aggregate data on internal information retrieval — how long an employee searches before finding, abandoning, or asking a person. The telemetry surfaces not what people know, but what they cannot find that they should.
For each material project failure or near-miss in the study window, we trace whether the contributing knowledge had previously existed somewhere in the organization. The fraction of failures attributable to lost-but-previously-known knowledge is our headline KLR (Knowledge Loss Ratio) metric.
We instrument three 400–800 person firms across a calendar year and document the rate, mechanisms, and consequences of accidental knowledge loss. KLR ranges from 0.31 to 0.58 across the three sites.
We test six exit-interview protocols against a control. The most effective format — an unstructured walk-through of three past situations — recovered 7.2× more codable tacit knowledge than the conventional checklist.
Construction and validation of a 12-item self-report instrument. Correlates r = 0.74 with the 84-item full instrument; recommended for triage rather than diagnosis.
The PMI observation of memory collapse on a generational cycle in century-old institutions appears to compress dramatically in software firms. We find an analogous pattern at ~6 years in companies of 8–14 years' standing.
We build a parametric model that converts knowledge-audit and search-telemetry inputs into a defensible per-employee dollar cost of amnesia. Median cost: $2,360 / employee / year. The interactive calculator on this site is a simplified surface over this model.
In progress. Tracks the trajectory of knowledge retention through 14 acquisitions of firms in the 200–2,000-employee range.
In progress. An evaluation of RAG-and-agent stacks deployed as institutional memory substitutes — what they recover, what they hallucinate, and where they introduce new failure modes the org used to be protected from.
If we can predict, within a year, which knowledge an organization will lose — we can keep it.