Knowledge Transfer Systems ========================== Knowledge transfer systems ensure that institutional knowledge survives member turnover, allowing teams to maintain continuity, efficiency, and long-term success. By codifying processes and pairing experienced members with newcomers, teams preserve critical insights and skills across seasons. Systems ------- - Documentation standards Maintain consistent templates, formatting, and naming conventions for design notes, meeting minutes, build instructions, and competition plans. Standardization makes information easier to find, understand, and apply. - Onboarding checklists Provide new members with step-by-step guides covering essential tasks, safety procedures, software setup, and operational routines. Checklists accelerate learning and reduce reliance on verbal instruction. - Mentor-student pairing Assign experienced students or mentors to guide newcomers. Structured pairing allows knowledge to transfer through hands-on experience, Q&A, and shadowing opportunities. - Technical wikis and guides Maintain online knowledge repositories for coding standards, mechanical designs, electrical schematics, and troubleshooting guides. Wikis provide a living, searchable resource accessible across seasons. Critical Knowledge Areas ----------------------- - Robot design and build Document design rationale, CAD models, iteration decisions, and assembly instructions to ensure future teams can replicate, adapt, or improve designs efficiently. - Competition logistics Record event checklists, pit setup procedures, scouting methods, and competition schedules to streamline operations and reduce errors in future seasons. - Sponsor relationships Track contacts, communications, sponsorship agreements, and recognition efforts to maintain professional relationships and continuity in funding support. - Financial processes Maintain budgets, expense tracking, fundraising records, and reporting procedures to ensure transparency and continuity, even as treasurers or financial leads change.