Hello Manvitha Poonati, great content
Information is often disseminated in the hope that individuals and entities in an organization will improve their knowledge base and subsequently make better judgments in future situations. For example, a researcher is faced with carrying out one of two types of an experiment but knows that many of the first types have already been shown (with a strong significance factor) to be more expensive than the second (Washington, Willis, and Tauberer, 2012). Provided all other things are equal, success rate, ease of use, state of mind, and so on, the researcher should be more inclined to choose the second type of experiment and save his company or community additional expense and time.
Reference
Washington, A. L., Willis, D., & Tauberer, J. (2012, June). Do-it-yourself transparency: emerging methods of congressional information dissemination. In Proceedings of the 13th annual international conference on digital government research (pp. 260-261).