What does PNA have to do with chemistry (part I)

We are often asked what exactly we do as a team at PNA. That is why we thought it would be fun to present a number of analogies in the series 'What does PNA have in common with...?

PNA once introduced the knowledge molecule, in which data, processes, rules and their meaning are linked in a structured way. These molecules form the building blocks of knowledge: knowledge that is present, knowledge that was accidentally lost, or knowledge that still has to be developed. Making that knowledge explicit, using standardised building blocks, makes complexity transparent, prevents misunderstandings and confusion of concepts, and leads to performance improvement. You could say that PNA also invented the equivalent of the chemical periodic table. In the PNA Knowledge Triangle all building blocks of knowledge are covered. These are in turn combined to a greater or lesser extent at each part of the knowledge molecule.

Read also what PNA has with:

lego

sea containers

physics

chemistry (part II)