Knowledge Management
Knowledge Management
Knowledge Management
LESSON 1
MANAGING INTANGIBLE RESOURCES AND KNOWLEDGE WORKERS
Knowing ignorance is strength
Ignoring knowledge is sickness
– L.TSU
The Growing Importance of Knowledge and Knowledge Workers Tangible resources like rupees,
land/buildings, motors/machinery and manual/physical labors are no doubt important to run a
farm or a factory but all of these tangible resources can be bought or borrowed. On the other
hand, brand image, reputation, information, talent, and knowledge are some of the intangible
resources required for a modern organization to survive and thrive in the 21st century global markets
and these intangible resources cannot be bought or borrowed. The rise of information and
knowledge based work has been foreseen for many years. Automation in Factories and farms in
developed economies for more than a century ago freed most of the workforce from having to
perform physical labor. Over the last half-century, the advent of computers and the Pervasive
presence of information created a demand for workers who could produce the information in
The first place, extracts meaning from it, and takes action on it.
Organizations with a high proportion of knowledge workers – let’s call them knowledge
intensive Organizations – are the fastest-growing and most successful in the United States,
Singapore Finland, Sweden and other leading economies, and have generated most of these
economies’ growth in the past Couple of decades. The market value of many knowledge-intensive
companies – which includes the Market’s perception of the value of knowledge and knowledge
workers – dwarfs their book values, which includes only tangible assets? Even in so-called
“industrial” companies, knowledge is increasingly used to differentiate physical goods and to fuel
diversification into product-related service. As Prof. Quinn has pointed out, high proportions of
workers in manufacturing firms (roughly 90 percent in
Semiconductors, for example) never touch the manufacturing process, but instead provide
knowledge-Based services such as marketing, distribution, or customer service.
It’s already apparent that the firms with the highest degree and quality of knowledge work tend to
be the fastest-growing and most profitable. Microsoft, for example, is one of the most
profitable Organizations in the history of the planet. Pharmaceutical firms not only produce
sophisticated and life-
Saving drug treatments, they also tend to have high profit margins. Growth industries generally
tend to be those with a high proportion of knowledge workers.
Following categories of work can be placed into the knowledge workers camp:
• Management
• Business and financial operations
• Soft/Hard ware and electronic engineer
• Architecture engineering
• Life, physical, and social scientists
• Legal personnel
• Health care practitioners
• Community and social services
• Education, training, and library staff
• Arts, design, entertainment, sports, media.
• System Manager/Analyst, Project Manager
The classification above yields about 36 million knowledge workers in the United States alone, or
28 Percent of the labor force. While no classification scheme is perfect (for example, professional
athletes Are included in the knowledge worker group. Because the U.S government data lumps
them in with arts, Design, entertainment, and media workers), it’s clear that most people in these
jobs think to earn for their living.
Within organizations, knowledge workers tend to be closely aligned with the organization’s
growth Prospects. Knowledge workers in management roles come up with new strategies.
Knowledge workers
In R&D and engineering create new products. Knowledge workers in marketing package products
and Services in ways those appeals to customers. Without knowledge workers there would
be no new products and services, and no growth.
Knowledge Workers and the World Economy
Prof. Dr.Peter Drucker, who was the first person to describe knowledge workers to any substantial
degree (in his 1959 book Landmarks of Tomorrow), said as far back as
1969 that:
“To make knowledge work productive will be the great management task of 21st century, just
as to make manual work productive was the great management task of the
20th century.
Then in 1997 Drucker went even further out along the knowledge worker limb:
“The productivity of knowledge and knowledge workers will not be the only
competitive factor in the world economy. It is, however, likely to become the decisive factor, at
least for most industries in the developed/developing countries.
Why did Drucker – and why should we – believe that knowledge workers and their productivity
were so important to the world economy? There are a variety of reasons.
First, they are large and growing category of workers. If we can’t figure out how to Make more
than a quarter of the labor force more productive, we’re going to have problems with our
economy overall. Second, they are comparatively expensive type of worker that organizations
employ, so it’s doubly shameful if they’re not as productive as they could be. Third, they are keys
to the growth of many economies. Agricultural and manufacturing work has generally become
commoditized, and is moving to the economies where they can be performed at the lowest
cost. The only forms of agricultural or industrial work that survive in sophisticated
economies are those in which a high degree of knowledge has been injected – for example, in
biotechnology manufacturing, or in “precision farming,” in which the fertilizer and
pesticides administered to a given crop are carefully monitored using GPS devices in tractors. If
agriculture and manufacturing are moving to countries with low labor costs (China is a particularly
good example), the jobs that remain in the so-called knowledge-based economies are
particularly critical to these countries’ economic survival. It’s not clear exactly what workers in the
United States, Western Europe, and Japan are going to do for a living in the future, but it is clear
that if these economies are to prosper, the jobs of many of the workers must be particularly
knowledge –intensive.
Yet despite the importance of knowledge workers to the economic success of countries, companies,
and other groups, they haven’t received sufficient attention. We know little about how
to improve knowledge workers’ performance, which is very unfortunate, because no less an
authority than Peter Ducker has said that improving knowledge worker performance is the most
important economic issue of the age.
What is a Knowledge Worker?
Knowledge workers have high degrees of expertise, education, and/or experience, and the primary
purpose of their jobs involves the innovation/creation, sharing/distribution, or
application of knowledge.
Knowledge workers think for a living. They live by their wits-and heavy lifting on the job is
intellectual, not physical. They solve problems; they understand and meet the needs of
customers they make decisions, and they collaborate and communicate with other people in the
course of doing their own work.
It’s easy to point to examples of knowledge workers: physicians and physicists, scientists and
scientific writers, airplane pilots and airplane designers, managers and marketers, and soft/hard
ware engineers.
We know them when we see them. They don’t necessarily have to work in knowledge-
intensive industries – managers of any company are knowledge workers, applying knowledge to
make decisions in the best interests of their enterprises. Even the most industrial company has
engineers, researchers, Marketers and planners. Knowledge workers work in small start-ups and
large global corporations. Whether someone is a knowledge worker or not is admittedly
sometimes a matter of degree and interpretation. Many people use knowledge in their
jobs and have some degree of education or expertise, but for knowledge workers the role
of knowledge must be central to the job, and they must
be educated or expert. Working with data or information alone isn’t enough – it would be difficult
to be
a knowledge worker, for example, without having a college degree (college dropouts Bill Gates
and
Michael Dell notwithstanding).
It’s clear that organizational success depends on the innovativeness and productivity of these
knowledge
workers within their organizations. However, along with adding value, knowledge workers also
pose
challenges to conventional management wisdom and organizing principles: they are
mobile and
concerned that their experiences should position them well for future opportunities; they are
dispersed
across the organizational structure and the globe, yet the interdependence and complexity of their
work
requires them to collaborate effectively with others in different functions, physical locations, time
zones
and even organizations; they must command a body of knowledge that needs to be constantly
updated;
and their work is inherently emergent – the important problems they solve and opportunities
they
capitalize on are novel and rarely, if ever, standard to the point that the work can be come routine.
In
short, knowledge workers are critical to the success of almost any organization, but they present
unique
challenges as well.
Knowledge Workers as a Class
Just how unique are the challenges knowledge workers present? Some might argue that
knowledge
workers and knowledge work should be managed in the same way that other work is.
Some one may argue that knowledge workers should be treated like any other workers in
business
processes, and that process improvement approaches apply just as well to knowledge workers
as to
anyone else.
If managers gave similar explicit instructions to their knowledge workers (Sharpen your pencil
before
you start that financial plan”), as they use to give to production or process workers, it’s unlikely that
their employees would stay with the company for long. If by some chance they tolerated being
managed
this way, it’s unlikely that they’d give the job their full commitment and intellectual horsepower.
This
substantial difference in autonomy is only one of the key attributes of knowledge workers, but by
itself
it’s enough to justify treating them as a separate class of workers deserving the separate approaches
to
performance improvement and management.
Commitment matters. In the industrial economy, one could do a job with one’s body even when the
brain and heart weren’t committed to the job. But this isn’t the case for knowledge work. It’s
unlikely
that you’ll get great performance out of a knowledge worker if he or she isn’t mentally and
emotionally
committed to the job. The famous 3M company approach of giving researchers 15 percent of their
time
to work independently on something they think is important to the company Obviously
knowledge
workers are generally willing to do some things that others ask (or even tell) them to do, but a
degree of
voluntarism helps a lot.
Another factor affecting commitment is a perception of “fair process.” As the strategy academics
have
pointed out, workers – and particularly knowledge workers-care not only about the
fairness of
outcomes, but also about the fairness of the process used to arrive at outcomes:
Fair process turns out to be a powerful management tool for companies struggling to make the
transition from a production-based to a knowledge-based economy, in which value creation
depends increasingly on ideas and innovation. Fair process profoundly influences attitudes and
behaviors critical to high performance. It builds trust and unlocks ideas.
Knowledge workers value their knowledge, and don’t share it easily. Knowledge is all that
knowledge
workers have – it’s the tool of their trade, the means of their production. It’s therefore natural that
they
would have difficulty relinquishing or sharing it in such a way that their own jobs might be
threatened.
In the early days of knowledge management, when companies were beginning to talk about
sharing
knowledge within and across organizations, people used to say, “Sharing knowledge is an
unnatural
act.” “Of course, unnatural acts are committed every day.” Companies just needed to put the
necessary
incentives and assurances in place to ensure that people were willing to share their knowledge.
“As the (internet) world is flat” Almost every knowledge worker in western countries is
wondering
whether his or her job could be the next to move to India or China or Korea or Pakistan. It’s enough
to
give anyone pause about contributing knowledge to some other worker or a knowledge
repository.
Again, this doesn’t mean that we can’t design organizations and processes in such a way that
knowledge
will flow across organizations. We just have to acknowledge workers will view their knowledge
as a
highly valuable asset, and that they will be reluctant to share it without rewards and/or guarantees
of
continued employment. Smart organizations will put smart approaches in place for the knowledge
assets
of their knowledge workers. A knowledge worker in Pakistan can provide services cheaper than one
in
North America so the work will flow to a place where it can be done cheaper (quality being same).
The global economy has decisively entered a new age. It is variously called the “Information Age,”
the
“Third Wave,” or the “Electronic Economy.” Regardless of the terminology, these names and
others
refer to the transition that has taken place in the economies of the industrialized nations,
followed
closely by the developing nations. Although there are a few economies primarily involved in
supporting
traditional manufacturing industries, the future of development and growth is clearly
centered on
automated manufacturing and information-dependent services industries.
While knowledge, embedded in systems, brains, and technology, has always been the key to
economic
development, in recent years its importance has been steadily increasing. The OCED economies
are
more strongly dependent on the production, distribution, and use of knowledge than over
before.
Output and employment are expanding fastest in high-technology industries, such as
computers,
electronics, communications, healthcare and edutainment. During the past decade, the high-
technology
share of OECD manufacturing production and exports has more than doubled, to reach 20-25
percent.
Knowledge (Intangible) Capital
Accelerating the conversion of knowledge into financial gains using Information Age alchemy is
the real
challenge for contemporary organizations.
The key to generating economic growth and value in industrial-based economies was the
accumulation
of fixed, tangible assets, measured as capital investment. The knowledge economy is
one where
intangible assets or knowledge, in its various forms, combine with information technology and
network
infrastructure to drive growth and value creation. Knowledge assets include information and
knowledge
stored in patents, copyrights, corporate data warehouses, employees’ brains, processes (e.g., work
rules),
and information systems. These tools and systems have been used to leverage employee knowledge
in
pursuit of improvements to core processes. Just as the means of production in the Industrial Age
was
industrial capital (plant, equipment, machinery), in today’s economy the means of
production is
knowledge capital.
The information technology industry plays a central role in these activities. The tools
to store,
disseminate, and mange these vital corporate assets are provided by companies in this
industry.
Specifically, the network companies provide the platform for moving knowledge, information, and
raw
data to diverse locations where it is used to complete essential core processes, and to the end-users
who
pay for services and products within which knowledge assets are embedded.
Q: Visit a bank and identify knowledge workers. What is unique about
knowledge workers? How do you distinguish them from regular
employees?
A: Executives at front end in banks are known as Tellers who simply take deposits, enter them in
the customer’s account, and issue a receipt cannot be considered knowledge workers. On the
other
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 5Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
hand, if a teller negotiates a deposit, where partial payments are made to pay the
customer’s
lease/mortgage, place some of the money in a Current Deposit, and where she notices that the total
value of his Current Deposits is at a point where the customer is advised to buy treasury bills or
invest
in funds that pay more dividends would be more of a knowledge worker. A job, where analysis and
use
of heuristics and technology are part of the day-to-day job is close to what is called knowledge
work.
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LESSON 2
DYNAMICS AND INTERCONNECTED NATURE OF 21ST CENTURY GLOBE
In a Nutshell
Welcome to the twenty-first century and the knowledge society. The business landscape is
changing
rapidly. The competitive environment is no longer linear or predictable. Survival and success
depend
entirely on the organization’s ability to adjust to the dynamics of the business environment.
Changes in
information/communication technology (ICT) have generated gaps in access and control
of
information and knowledge. Even when these gaps are bridged, several fundamental challenges
remain.
How do we apply knowledge for value-added and competitive advantage? How do we
convert
information into knowledge? How do we use technology to convert challenges into
opportunities?
Knowledge management is the solution for realigning the firm’s technical capabilities to
create the
knowledge that drives the firm forward.
There is obvious room for change in the way we work and communicate and in relationships
and
processes among people within and across organizations. To be empowered to face these
challenges
means not only accessing technology, but also developing the ability to manage knowledge. The
key
questions an organization must consider are “Does your company knows what you know?” Do you
know what you know?” “How do you make best use of the knowledge you have?” It also
means
thinking “out-of-the-box,” where “the box” is what represents all the tried-and-true procedures
that
have worked in the past. There is less room for “packaged solutions” to solve most of
a firm’s
problems. Knowledge management means thinking outside the boundaries of current
practices,
products, services, and organizations. The new and unpredictable business environment puts a
premium
on innovation and creativity much more so than it has in the past.
We have progressed from the data processing age of the 1960s and 1970s to the information age of
the
1980s and 1990s to the knowledge age of the 2000s. The latest transformation represents the
most
fundamental change since the introduction of the digital computer 4 decades ago. Knowledge
and
intellectual capital (viewed here as accrued knowledge) represent our corporate and national
wealth.
Knowledge workers are found in every organization, and they are the backbone of every
successful
business. Knowledge workers use technology to reason through problems and reach
successful
solutions. Computer–aided software gives them an edge over workers using conventional methods.
For a company to manage knowledge, it must first inventory its people, systems, and
decisions.
Professional knowledge workers within the company must be identified, and their functions must
be
defined. Knowledge technologies must be incorporated to reengineer the entire business process.
Major
decisions should be reviewed, and a knowledge system for making each decision should be
developed.
The company’s information system should also be examined to determine how to
benefit from
emerging knowledge technologies. This self-assessment makes a company more cognizant
of its
strengths and weaknesses. It should also lead to changes that are more in tune with the competitive
nature of the business environment.
Historical Overview
Knowledge has been the staple source of competitive advantage for many companies for hundreds
of
years. For example, the idea of passing knowledge to an apprentice from a master was used
extensively
during medieval times. Passing the “family recipe” that makes a certain product unique
from one
generation to another also attests to the notion of knowledge transfer and knowledge sharing.
Although
such transfer was extremely slow, it opened the door to modern methods of knowledge
management
that can exploit faster media of knowledge exchange, such as the Internet.
The recorded history of knowledge dates back to Plato and Aristotle, but its modern day
understanding
is credited to scholars like Daniel Bell (1973), Michael Polanyi (1958, 1974), Alvin Toffler (1980),
and
the Japanese guru, Ikujiro Nonaka (1995). Other writers like Sveiby (1997) and Stewart (2000)
promoted
the concept knowledge as the core asset for an organization.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 7Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
In the early 1970s, researchers at MIT and Stanford were analyzing ways in which companies
produced,
used, and diffused knowledge. This was the first essential step in the evolution of
knowledge
management, as we know it today.
With the help of the Internet, KM became a feasible concept for many companies. It provided more
opportunities for knowledge sharing and knowledge transfer than there had been in the past. In
terms
of methodology, KM was briefly presented in total quality management (TQM) philosophy.
Professor
Deming even asked every manager to develop his/her theory of knowledge at work and motivated
the
Japanese to work in teams to produce the quality product. Business process reengineering
(BPR),
downsizing, and outsourcing were also attempts to improve the performance of the firm, although
they
had limited success. They resolved the productivity factor, but drained knowledge
from the
organization.
These attempts were more like round one, where companies managed their knowledge assets in
the
same way they managed physical assets. Physical goods were stored in the warehouse, but
for the
intellectual equivalent, it was in the knowledge repository. When databases and “warehouses” were
full
(too many physical assets), they began thinking about supply chain management (SCM), trying to
match
the supply of goods with demand and reduce inventories to what was actually ordered for
production. It
was more like rewarding the efficiency-driven prediction of the future based on past trends-doing
things
right.
In contrast, in round two of KM, companies began to realize that to fit the supply of knowledge to
the
demand for it in products and service; they needed to toy with how knowledge worker did their
jobs.
To be effective, KM has to be “baked into” the job and be part of the fabric of the work to bring in
knowledge when needed and export it anywhere in the organization when it is acquired
(Davenport
1999). This is where we began to see a shift from “doing things right” to “doing the right thing” –
working smarter, not harder.
Given the progress made in automating procedures in the 1970s and communications and
networking
(mostly through e-mail) in the 1980s the focus of technology in the 1990s was on cognitive
computing
to augment the knowledge work of humans. Of these, the Internet and intranets have had the most
profound impact on spreading the know-how. From a knowledge perspective, the
internet and
accompanying technologies have demonstrated several characteristics in knowledge management:
• The internet is an incredible information source. Internet access is available
worldwide. It
means a company’s knowledge workers can access information and share knowledge anywhere,
anyplace, anytime, without delay.
• With the World Wide Web, every user can share and update information at will. This
is
especially attractive with the decreasing cost of communication.
• The internet uses a universal communication standard protocol. This protocol, TCP/IP, makes
information access and exchange accessible from anywhere there is a computer and an internet
service provider.
• The internet provides quicker interaction and communication with fellow knowledge workers.
This interaction can be one-on-one as a group.
Setting the Context: An Interdependent World
Globalization, intense competition (often from unexpected quarters), demanding customers,
regulatory
changes, the relentless progress of technology -all are factors that recur high on the list of key
challenges
affecting businesses. How do they respond? Many management books, such as Thriving on Chaos
by
Tom Peters (1987), Competing for the Future by Gary Hamel and C. K. Prahalad (1994) and
The
World is Flat by Thomas Friedman ( 2007) offer prescriptions. A common thread in these is the
need
for organizations to be flexible, adaptive and to continually reinvent themselves. The harsh message
is --
if they don't they won't survive.
The single most important factor that is driving most of these changes in the business environment,
and
within organizations, is that of information and communications technology (ICT). It is often said
that
information and communications technologies are business enabler, and should support
business
strategy. Progress in ICT and other technologies is so dramatic that it is fundamentally transforming
our
environment, the way we live, work and the business landscape and society itself.
Organizations
therefore need to understand and actively embrace new technologies as a core dimension of
strategy.
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Perhaps the biggest change during the last decade of information technology (IT) is not
continual
improvement in functionality and performance - incidentally a trend that has been
happening
continuously since the 1960s – but interconnectedness. Today, communications and computer
networks
are pervasive. Organizations, governments, individuals are becoming more closely
interconnected in
ways not hitherto possible or economic.
Networks, however, are relatively highly structured around a supply chain and well-defined
business
need. What is happening today is the growth of more dynamic networks, and a new layer of value
on
top of information- knowledge. We must also not forget the existence of many informal
personal
networks, often hailed as the main way that things move forward in business, scientific and
other
communities. We are creating not national utility grids but global knowledge networks or webs.
These
connect independent disparate knowledge that when combined and aggregated can lead
to new
knowledge and new opportunities.
Every few years there is anew strategic focus that promises hitherto unachievable
improvement in
business performance or a means of competitive advantage. Some initiatives are merely
fads that
disappear, while others become more established as mainstream business activities, perhaps after
some
reshaping. Total quality management (TQM) and business process re-engineering (BPR), for
example,
were two of the most significant management initiatives of recent years.
Now another is on the scene – knowledge management. But is this something fundamental to every
business or is it merely another consultant's fad? The fundamentalists' argument is that knowledge
is an
important contributor to the performance, value and future prosperity of an organization. In order to
maximize the benefits it must be properly managed and exploited. Too frequently, companies do
not
know what they know, thereby reinventing the wheel, or fail to apply best practice
because that
knowledge has not been shared.
The Networked Knowledge Economy
Many terms are used to describe the changing world in which we live and work --the post-industrial
economy, information society, knowledge era, and 'networked knowledge economy' . Whatever
term is
used, this new environment has characteristics quite distinctive from the industrial era of the last
two
centuries.
Old certainties no longer exist
Throughout the 1990s we have witnessed change as never before. The demise of the former Soviet
Union, the fragmentation of Yugoslavia and the rise then fall and then rise of the Asian economies
were
typical upheavals affecting stability and predictability in our environment. Coincident
with closer
integration within the European Union (EU), individual regions like Catalonia and Scotland gain
more
control over their own affairs. China is emerging as a new economic power and is a big factor itself.
Counter-currents, not just in Europe but elsewhere, are simultaneously strengthening the need for
local
autonomy alongside that for closer cross-border co-operation. Where will it all ends? What is the
future
of the nation state?
As individuals, we witness change at first hand. Life in the late twentieth century seems beset
with
complexity and uncertainty, resulting in a growing incidence of stress. The prospect of a secure job
until
pension-able age no longer exists. We live longer, but we face concerns about paying for nursing
care in
our old age as health services are stretched of resources.
For organizations, 'business as usual' is rarely a sustainable option. Even apparently
powerful
multinationals have had to bow to the influence of outside forces, such as Shell's reversal of plans
for
the proposed dumping of the redundant Brent Spar oil platform in the light of concerted action
by
environmentalists. Everywhere you look, the corporate landscape is changing.
The changing corporate landscape
In the new economy value is shifting to service-related and knowledge intensive industrial
Health,
education, finance, information systems, media and telecommunications have been growing
strongly for
over a decade. An analysis shows that during one year, US household spending on 'old economy'
items
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 9Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
– food, cars, appliances and clothing -increased less than 1 percent, while that for a cluster of
new
economy items –telephone, entertainment, cable television, financial services and home
computers –
rose 12.5 per cent during the same period. How is it in Pakistan?
The demise of jobs
Another trend associated with dispersion of business activity and the growth of small businesses is
that
of self-employment. Most employees can no longer rely on organizations to provide them with a
job for
life. A significant trend is the rapid growth of self-employment by professionals, particularly those
who
have had previous large company experience. Many draw on this experience to create
innovative
opportunities, often global in nature. In turn, many large organizations contract with these
individuals
for specialist services.
Employment in the future should be viewed not in terms of full-time jobs, but in terms
of work
activities that are parceled out in the most cost-effective way to those with the necessary knowledge
and
skills. In the networked economy we have the opportunity to create electronic work markets,
both
within and beyond firms.
Globalization
Although brands such as Coca-Cola, Toyota and Philips are globally recognized, many industries
and
many companies are far from global. Even if its marketing is global, a company's manufacturing
may be
centralized. In retail, for every Toys 'R' Us that have expanded successfully overseas,
otherwise
successful retailers like Marks & Spencer have struggled hard in their overseas ambitions, or like
Wal-
Mart have remained largely in their home country.
Nevertheless, globalization is steadily increasing. Many large multinational companies
design and
manufacture at several locations around the world. They choose locations based on access to
skills,
markets and infrastructure. Many consumer and electronic products formerly manufactured in the
USA
and Europe are now manufactured in the Far East. Even there manufacturing has migrated from
higher
wage countries such as Taiwan and Malaysia to lower wage countries, such as China.
Global knowledge
In the industrial economy two reasons for going global were economies scale and the need to
reduce
physical transportation costs by manufacturing close to key markets. Now globalization is as much
a
response to regional specialization and expansion of long-distance relationships and markets.
Through
the Internet firms can reach distant markets at a price different from customers in their
locality.
Furthermore, higher value to weight ratios and networks like that of FedEx mean
that global
distribution is cost-effective.
A global enterprise takes advantage of unique skills and resources, wherever they are located. It
may be
the software expertise of India or artistic weaving skills of villagers in Pakistan, in
Africa or in
Bangladesh. This opportunity to harness knowledge on a scale hitherto unimaginable before the
internet
makes globalization attractive and exciting and is a phenomenon of 21st
century.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 10Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 3
FORCES SHAPING THE FUTURE AND THE MEGA TRENDS OF KNOWLEDGE
ECONOMY
Let us look at the networked knowledge economy through the perspective of major shifts or
mega
trends. This is followed by an overview of responses that are needed to adapt and thrive in the new
economy.
The Mega Trends
The term mega trend was used by John Naisbitt to describe a fundamental underlying trend shaping
the
future. In his 1982 book Mega trends, he identified ten key shifts that were reshaping the world.
Among
these, were
• Industrial society Information society
• National economy World economy
• Hierarchies Networking
Information and knowledge based industry
Information and knowledge are pervading all sectors of industry as well as creating new industries
based
around them. There are several distinctive characteristics of this new economy.
1. Every industry is becoming more knowledge intensive. Even in agriculture, knowledge adds
value. By combining knowledge about the effect of a fertilizer, soil condition, the state of plant
growth (using information from satellite photographs), and the forecast weather conditions,
farmers can use 40 per cent less fertilizer on their crops, yet achieve the same results. A new
generation of combine harvesters automatically measures the weight and moisture content of
the corn and calculates yields per acre. Every industry has comparable examples.
2 Smart products. Another manifestation of knowledge intensity comes in so called
'smart
products’. These use information or knowledge to provide better functionality or service that
can command premium prices. There is a smart tire that senses the load it has to carry and
adjusts its pressure accordingly. Think of smart phones and smart homes. I-pods provides best
way of carrying your music around. Services can be enhanced through better
customer
knowledge. Marriott Hotels keeps track of individual references so that it can offer superior
service to their customers when they check in.
3 Higher information to weight ratios. The value of electronics in cars now exceeds that of the
value of the metal chassis, which itself, through better knowledge of structures, is significantly
lighter than that of its predecessors. An indication of this trend at the macroeconomic level is
the trend in weight. At the start of the twentieth century the ratio was roughly 1:1. Today the
financial value is twenty times higher, while the physical weight of goods is about the same.
4 Value in intangibles. The market value of most companies is several times higher than the value
of their physical assets as recorded in their balance sheets.
5 Trade in intangibles. The ultimate information to weight ratios is the weightless product or
service. There is a growing range of these intangibles that are traded in their own
right.
Financial markets are almost wholly intangible. Futures options and complex derivatives are
perhaps the ultimate intangible knowledge product, having been created through
human
ingenuity.
New knowledge industries
A consequence of these trends is the creation of industries that are almost wholly information
and
knowledge based. Y. Masuda describes a whole set of quaternary industries, as distinct from
primary
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 11Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
(agricultural), secondary (manufacturing) and tertiary (services) industries (Table below). While we
are
now starting to recognize these as distinct and valuable industries, it must have taken some
foresight to
envisage these in 1980s, when Masuda's book was first published. He also described the
'information
utility', in which he envisaged many of the features that we now see in the Internet and
on-line
communities.
Quaternary industries as defined by Masuda (1980)
Information industries Printing and publishing
News and advertising
Information services – On-line analysis
Information processing – software services
Knowledge industries Legal, accountancy, consultancy, design
Research and development
Education and Training
Arts industries Creators – authors, composers, artists, singers etc.
Performers – orchestras, actors, singers
Infrastructure – theatres, television, broadcasting, museums
Ethics industries Corporate Social Responsibility
Religion, Spiritual and Happiness
Environment
New knowledge-intensive industries are being created all the time. The biotechnology industry is
only
fifteen years old but has more than 2000 companies and is expected to have annual revenues in
excess
of $500 billion by the year 2010. Other industries are emerging around the trading of information
and
knowledge using the Internet.
Networking -hard and soft
There are two defining characteristics that are fundamental in practice:
1. Networked organizations are less about organizational structure? and more about informal
human networking: processes.
2 The technology of computer networking both underpins and enhances human networking.
Virtualization
A key effect of information and communications technologies such as the internet is an increase
of
virtualization in business activities and ways of working. Virtualization overcomes constraints of
time
and distance. The term 'virtual' is now appearing in many guises. Thus one view of a virtual
corporation
is: 'a temporary network of independent companies that co-ordinate activities to meet a
common
objective, such as anew product development or to meet a customer need.' This view relates to
the
dimension of time. However, another view relates to an organization not having a clear physical
locus.
Here a typical definition is: 'an organization distributed geographically and whose work is
coordinated
through electronic communications.'
Virtual ness can also operate at several levels, from individual to inter organizational. These
variations
give rise to many types of virtuality, ranging from workers communicating with colleagues globally
via
phone or email, or the creation of consortia to work on a specific project.
Making a virtue of virtuality
Some of the common types of virtuality are the following.
1. Virtual products and services. The cost of an electronic transaction is typically a tenth of that of
the corresponding traditional transaction. Dell generates over $5 million of business a day the
Internet. Bookseller Amazon.com sells exclusively this way. Electronic markets that match
buyers and sellers are now emerging in everything from Dutch flowers to second-hand cars.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 12Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
2 Virtual working or telework. Several million people in Europe and thousands in Pakistan now
telework for some or part of their working week. They may work from home, from client
premises, or indeed anywhere that has telephone access, which with cellular phones is now
virtually everywhere! With the ubiquitous notebook computer, it has been said that 'my office is
where I hang my modem'.
3 Virtual offices. A related type of virtualization is the virtual office, where the physical office is
replaced by office services. IBM is one of many companies that have adopted 'hot-desking'. At
several of its premises, employees do not have personal workspaces, but are allocated desks
whenever they are in the office.
4 Virtual teams. To give flexibility and to avoid relocation, many companies simply create virtual
teams, where employees work at locations more convenient to them. Other examples are where
several teams working in conventional office settings at different locations co-operate virtually,
such as engineering teams at Toyota, Ford or Boeing in locations across Europe and the USA.
5 Virtual organizations. These can range from a stable supply network that works as a single
organization, to a loose federation of independent firms that come together temporarily for
specific activities.
6 Virtual communities. Instead of a local community a virtual community is one of shared in
terms, whatever the location. They are found on Internet newsgroups and discussion lists, or
on an organization's intranet.
Whatever form virtualization takes, there are some common features that distinguish it from
traditional
forms:
• Information and communications technology allows operations to be dispersed.
• The barriers of time and space are reduced (or even disappear completely).
• Organizational structures are network-like, and more dynamic.
• The interface with customers and markets is different-
• Employees and associates (business partners, suppliers, customers etc.) adopt new patterns of
work.
• The locus of knowledge is diffused. It is not necessarily in a specific place.
Technology – a fundamental driving force
Underpinning each mega trend is the fundamental driving force of technology. Technology
amplifies
human capabilities. In the industrial revolution, the core technology was steam power that gave
humans
a 15 times improvement in price-performance over manual methods. In the knowledge era it is ICT
that
is boosting our ability to process information. However, the pace of improvement in the
information
revolution is much faster.
The rate of improvement in microchips, the fundamental component of computers, has been
fairly
constant over several decades. In 1965 Intel's co-founder, Gordon Moore, projected that
performance
doubles and costs halve roughly ,every eighteen months, an observation now enshrined as Moore's
Law.
Such improvements are almost unparalleled in the world of science and technology. The
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology's (MIT) landmark study, Management in the 1990s indicated that over a
ten-
year period, IT showed a 25 times price-performance improvement, compared to 1.4 times for the
six
other most improve product groups. This rate of improvement equates to an industrial revolution
every
seven years!
The Revolution Continues
Moore's Law seems set to continue, at least through to the year 2010 , although there are likely to
be
changes in the specific technology used. Thus X-ray lithography should replace optical
lithography,
leading to the development of circuits only 0.01 microns (millionths of an inch) wide
by 2010,
compared to around .25 microns today, and processors that are 1000 times more powerful.
Thereafter,
provided new applications become economic and sustain demand, investments in a variety of
new
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 13Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
technologies, such as holographic memory and molecular computers, should maintain the
fundamental
trend.
ICT Trends: Decade on Decade Improvements
1988 1998 2008
Components:
Processor speeds
Transistors per chip
Memory chips
Basic disk capacity
10MHz
275 000
64 Kbits
20 MB
400 MHz
7.5 million
64 Mbits
1 GB
10 000 MHz
250 million
16 Gbit
250 GB
Personal computer
(typical)
PC-386 (8 MHz)
256 KB RAM
60 MB disk
14” CRT
Pentium
32 MB SDRAM
4 GB disk
CD-ROM (32X)
17” CRT
10 GHz
4 GB memory
500 GB disk
£100-£2000
20” flat panel
Desk-top plus palm-
held integrated PC
and communicators
Software and applications Basic Office Suite
(word processing,
spreadsheet).
Profession specific
Adds database,
email. Internet
Integrated voice and
data messaging.
Visual knowledge
navigation
Users Professionals,
clerical staff have
access in office
Most staff including
unskilled.
Professionals have
several (office,
home, mobile)
Everybody.
Computers are
consumer appliances
(often for specific
applications)
Typical functions Calculations;
procedures;
transactions
Information
retrieval;
communications;
décision support
Knowledge
development;
learning; symbiotic
decision-making
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 14Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 4
MANAGERIAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR INTERNET CUSTOMERS AND K- BASED
MARKETING
In the industrial era, companies operated on assumptions rooted in tangible-assets-based
explanations
that basically tracked the physical transformations of atoms into finished goods in order to
create
wealth. Atoms represent the raw material used to create valued outputs. In this framework the
Sultan of
Brunei became one of the wealthiest individuals in the world by extracting petroleum atoms, or oil,
that
is eventually transformed into gasoline.
Companies competing under the old model tend to have highly standardized operational procedures
for
relatively simple products. Design and operational complexity, as well as customizability, is
generally
squeezed out of the production process. Examples of companies like these can be found
in the
commodity industries.
In the modern era based on knowledge, this approach can be suicidal because reverse-
knowledge
engineering enables competitors to produce the same processes/products easily. Personal
computer
manufacturing is a familiar example because components are based on defined common standards
and
companies readily produce commodity components. On the other hand, the PC software industry is
a
very different environment where Microsoft, Oracle, and SAP capture and reuse unique knowledge
in
the form of lines of code and in the methods to produce that code. As evidence of the shift in power
from the Industrial to the Information Age, Bill Gates, CEO of Microsoft, is wealthier than the
Sultan
of Brunei.
Microsoft, for example, ultimately creates value by compiling bits into programs. The primary
engine of
wealth is not the compact disc or manual. Wealth is created by selling new and reused compute
code.
Both old and new paradigms provide assumptions that allow managers to manage corporate
assets.
Critically, the assumptions governing the management of knowledge assets differ radically from
those
governing the management of industrial-era tangible assets. Managers from both perspectives
would see
a group of employees and machinery, but the inputs, processes, and outputs are viewed in
radically
different ways.
Information Age manager see a set of knowledge assets distributed among people,
machines, and
processes coordinated to produce desired outputs. Basic decisions are based on assumptions about
the
knowledge required to operate a given process and how it can be embedded in information
technology
to make it easily reusable. These managers also recognize that some knowledge assets are better left
in
the brains of employees. Their intellectual capital creates the leverage and flexibility to rapidly
deploy
new knowledge and create an ever-changing array of products and services. In this way, the
critical
problem for management is how to best introduce, utilize, and deploy knowledge
throughout the
company’s core processes.
In contrast, Industrial Age managers see a company’s core processes as piece parts of a
machine
operating in predetermined ways to yield a more or less consistent set of tangible outputs. Ensuring
that
the parts are interchangeable is a common goal. Embedding knowledge within machines and
employing
tightly defined job descriptions are common approaches. Supervision aims to ensure that
employees
behave within the well-defined limits, and managers believe that obtaining enough measures of
the
process will optimize the process. This seeing the “trees through the forest” approach is based on
the
reductions it assumptions of the industrial-era paradigm. Focusing on tangible outputs rather than
on
the knowledge assets deployed to produce the outputs is common practice.
Although both managers focus on the same tangible assets, the Information Age manager’s
paradigm
leads to explicit management of intangible assets. The Industrial assets he literally does not “see.”
The
Information Age paradigm allows managers to “see” patterns, and the patterns that provide the most
leverage in today’s economy are based on knowledge.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 15Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Knowledge Management in Practice
Organizations around the world are adopting knowledge management practices at an accelerating
pace.
They have combined cultural and procedural changes with enabling technology to realize bottom-
line
improvements. A number of comprehensive surveys have indicated that organizations are engaged
in
wide-ranging efforts to implement and improve knowledge management practices.
Perceived Benefits from Knowledge Management
Improved decision making 89%
Improved responsiveness to customers 84%
Improved efficiency of people and operations 82%
Improved innovation 73%
Improved products/services 73%
Following are some of the organizations where managers took the challenge and implemented
KM
programs.
The World Bank
The World Bank is an organization owned by many of the governments of the world. It lends
money to
support economic development and provides advice. In 1996, the president made an
announcement
that forced the rum to make changes in how knowledge was managed. He announced
that the
organization was going to manage and share its knowledge with clients around the
worldviathe1nternetandother methods. The goal of the initiative is to make World Bank
knowledge
available in a database to provide assistance for all personnel.
The conceptual model they are using treats knowledge management as a process of creating,
organizing,
and applying data. The organization as a whole has these seven goals.
1. Assembling a large knowledge base in a knowledge management system.
2. Creating a help desk that can help users find the things they need.
3. Establishing an expert’s directory.
4. Developing data and statistics on changes in each country.
5. Articulating engagement information and links within the organization.
6. Providing dialog space for questions, answers, and conversations.
7. Facilitating access to users out side the organization.
At this point the World Bank is still trying to make this whole process a success and convince
skeptics
that an organization known for its static ways can change into an organization of the times.
Skandia
In the early 1980s, managers at Skandia found that traditional management and accounting theories
did
not accurately reflect value found within their company. Since Skandia is a knowledge-intensive
service
company, its inventory was only a fraction of its assets. Reports strove to define new
methods of
valuation and described ways to attach importance to a company's intangible assets.
Leif Edvisson, the director of the Swedish Coalition of Service Industries, was named director of
the
intellectual capital management function for the AFS business unit of Skandia in 1991. This was
part of
the effort to capture and define the value of intellectual capital as a complement to the balance sheet
CEO Bjorn Wolrath and top executive Jan Carendi viewed intellectual capital (IC) reporting as a
tool to
aid internal decisions and descriptions of the company's knowledge assets to the shareholders.
Rapid growth occurred in the AFS division under Edvisson from 1991 to 1995, and he strove to
create
a system that could make the growth truly appreciated. During these years alliances grow from
50,000 to
65,000, and the employee count increased from 1,100 to 2,000 during the same period. In May
1995, the
IC team released the first public IC annual report as a supplement to the financial report, and over
500
corporations have contacted Edvisson for assistance in developing their own IC reports.
Skandia's
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 16Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
effort was not the first attempt to manage knowledge, but it was the most concentrated, and by
doing
so publicly they set the trend for other companies to .follow suit.
Knowledge Management Practices
Company Country Knowledge Management
Objectives
Knowledge Management Practices
and Initiatives
3M USA Build knowledge-sharing
culture
Managers are required to link
continuous learning to revenues.
Analog
Devices
USA Build knowledge-sharing
culture
CEO Ray Stat initiated breakdown of
functional barriers and competitive
atmosphere ad created a collaborative
knowledge-sharing culture from the top.
Company encourages “community of
inquirers” rather than “community of
advocates.”
Boeing 77 USA Build knowledge-sharing
culture
First “paperless” development of
aircraft. Included customers in design
teams. More than 200 teams with wide
range of skills both designed and
constructed subparts, rather than usual
organization design team and
construction team. Suppliers worldwide
used same digital databases as Boeing.
Buckman
Labs
USA 1. Build knowledge-sharing
culture
2. Create careers based on
knowledge management
A biotech firm that has reorganized
itself to optimize knowledge sharing.
Created knowledge Transfer
Department to coordinate efforts.
Employees’ best at knowledge sharing
gain both financial rewards and
management positions.
Chaparral
Steel
USA Build knowledge-sharing
culture
Mini steel mill that has introduced
broad range of initiatives such as: flat
hierarchy, broad education, blue-collar
workers responsible for customer
contacts and rewarded for personal
initiatives. Chaparral uses 1.5 hrs labor
per ton; industry standard of 1.5-3.0 hrs.
per ton
Ford Motor USA Build knowledge-sharing
culture
Company that has transformed itself by
outsourcing and creating virtual
networks of vendors using IT.
Oticon Denmark Build knowledge-sharing
culture
Has created a “spaghetti organization.”
A chaotic tangle of interrelationships
and interactions. Knowledge workers
have no fixed job descriptions but work
entirely on project basis.
Hewlett-
Packard
USA 1. Build knowledge-
sharing culture.
2. Create micro-
environments for
tacit knowledge
transfer.
Implemented an overall culture of
collaboration, which encourages
knowledge sharing and risk taking on all
levels. H-P even supports people who
try out things that don’t work.
Affaers-
vaerlden
Sweden Create micro-environments
for tacit knowledge transfer.
Business journal uses “piggy-backing”
and “team-writing” to speed up learning
among new journalists. Interviews and
larger articles are routinely assigned as
team work, rather than one-man shows.
This speeds up transfer of the seniors’
tacit skills and networks to the juniors.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 17Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Honda Japan Create micro-environments
for tacit knowledge transfer.
“Redundancy” routinely used; people
are given information that goes beyond
their immediate operational
requirements. This facilitates sharing in
responsibilities and creative solutions
from unexpected sources and acts as a
self-control mechanism.
PLS-Consult Denmark 1. Measure knowledge-
creating processes
and intangible assets.
2. Create micro-
environments for
tacit knowledge
transfer.
Categorizes customers according to
value of knowledge contribution to the
firm. Follows up in management
information system. Appoints
“mentors” with task to facilitate transfer
of tacit skills between members in large
projects. Actively seeks large projects,
so that junior consultants can be added
to the teams for learning.
Agro USA Offer customers additional
knowledge
Data on farmers and soils are combined
with weather forecasts and information
on crops. Analyses are fed back to the
farmer via sales reps to help farmer
select best combinations of crops
Frito-Lay USA Offer customers additional
knowledge.
Sales reps collect daily spot data about
shelf space utilization for all brands.
Data are computed, combined with
market information, and refer to the
sales reps, which use it to give the
retailers information on best shelf
utilization.
Benetton Italy Gain customer knowledge Produces “mass-customized” apparel to
fit latest trends in colors and designs.
Daily sales data from their own
boutiques are integrated with computer-
aided design and computer-integrated
manufacturing.
General
Electric
USA Gain customer knowledge. Since 1982, the company has collected
all customer complaints in a database
that supports telephone operators in
answering customer calls. GE has
programmed 1.5 million potential
problems and their solutions into its
system.
National
Bicycle
Japan Gain customer knowledge Produces “mass-customized” bikes to
fit customers’ exact height, weight, and
color preferences in a day. Is achieved
through computer-aided design and
computer-integrated manufacturing
integrated with customer database.
Netscape USA Gain customer knowledge Very close links via Internet to opinion
leaders among customers, who are
encouraged to report problems to
enable it to create new generations of
software at a very fast pace.
Ritz Carlton Worldwide Gain customer knowledge Staff required to fill out cards with
information from every personal
encounter with a guest. Data plus all
quest requirements are stored and
printed out to all staff when the guest
arrives again, so that each guest receives
personal treatment.
British UK Capture, store, and spread Using knowledge management to draw
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 18Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Petroleum individuals’ tacit knowledge. together talents from all over the
organization. BP emphasizes transfer of
tacit knowledge rather than
accumulation and transmission of raw
data and has installed a communication
network comprising videoconferencing,
multimedia, and e-mail.
Chevron USA Capture, store, and spread
individuals’ tacit knowledge.
Created a “best practice” database that
captures experience of drilling
conditions and innovative solutions to
problems on site in a database for
sharing globally with other sites.
McKinsey
and Bain &
Co.
USA Capture, store, and spread
individuals’ tacit knowledge.
These two management consulting
firms have developed “knowledge
databases” that contain experiences
from every assignment including names
of team members and client reactions.
Each team must appoint a “historian”
to document the work.
Dow
Chemical
USA Create new revenues from
existing knowledge.
Puts all its 25,000+ patents into a
database, which is used by all divisions
to explore how existing patents can gain
more revenues. The experience from
this application is now being transferred
into other intellectual assets.
Outoku-
mppu
USA Create new revenues from
existing knowledge.
Knowledge on how to build smelting
plants is used to construct whole plants
including education of personnel and
managers to customer all over the
world. This business is now more
profitable than its original business base.
Steel case USA Create new revenues from
existing knowledge
Does basic research into innovation and
learning, best learning environments,
and new interfaces (3D and virtual
tools). Steel case sells its knowledge in
this area to other companies.
IBM USA Create careers based on
knowledge management.
Employees are encouraged to switch
between professional and managerial
jobs in order to gain more holistic
knowledge about the company.
Celemi Sweden Measure knowledge-creating
processes and intangible
assets.
Published first audit of its intangible
assets in Annual Report 1995.
Telia Sweden Measure knowledge-creating
processes and intangible
assets
Sweden’s Telecom company publishes
since 1990 an annual Statement of
Human Resources including a profit
and loss account visualizing human
resource costs and a balance sheet
showing investments in human
resources.
It is interesting to note the large number of Swedish companies involved in knowledge
management.
Swedish companies have been pioneers in this field and were the first to monitor and
systemize
intelligence activities in large European companies. Observations at Astra-Draco, Ericsson
Radio,
Gambro, Celsius Tech, Skandia, SAS, Telia, and Volvo identified four common features:
1. Balance between strategy and operational objectives.
2. A systematic supply-on-demand intelligence for corporate management.
3. A focus on information-sharing cultures, including systematic community meetings
linking
businesspeople, academics, and military officers.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 19Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
4. Emphasis on knowledge-sharing acquisition processes.
Intellectual Capital
Tracking a company’s physical assets is
straightforward enough, as long as you’re counting
computers, adding salaries, and estimating heating
bills. But managing intellectual capital is a different
ball game, and one in which few companies
consistently hit home runs.
Intellectual capital involves a company’s employee
expertise, unique organizational systems, and
intellectual property. For example, if a company’s
book value is $10 per share and its stock is selling
for $40 per share, the difference is often attributed
to intellectual capital. “When you subtract book
value from market value, the remaining is all the
intellectual and knowledge and market capital. It
includes all the patents they might have and all
other intangibles,” says Vish Krishna, associated
professor of management at the McCombs School
of Business at the University of the Texas at
Austin.
Once a company identifies its intellectual capital,
the next step is to maintain it. One of the
techniques that Dollar Bank uses to manage
intellectual capital is to keep employees involved
in decision making and planning, says
Abraham Nader, senior vice president and chief
operating officer at the Pittsburgh-based bank.
Ron Griffin, CIO at The Home Depot, Inc., says
that Atlanta-based home improvement retailer has
tried-and-true structures in place for measuring,
maintaining, and growing intellectual capital. The
company uses a nine-box grid system to measure
each employee’s performance and potential, and it
offers developmental courses to bring employees
up to speed on certain issues. The categories
measured include leadership ability, how an
employee fits into the Home Depot culture,
financial acumen, and project management
capabilities
For its part, Home Depot posts a bulletin on its
intranet with quick references on topics such as
how to repair a leaky toilet or build a deck. That
way, knowledge is available for employees to
remain up to speed and to pass such information
along to customers. “It’s not just about selling
product in our business; it’s a lot of the
knowledge, and we train on that extensively,”
Griffin says.
SOURCE: Excerpted from Taylor, Christie. “Intellectual Capital,” Computerworld. March
12,2001,
p.51.
As a result of KM, systems have been developed to gather, organize, refine, and distribute
knowledge
throughout the business. In his study of Smart Business, Botkin (1999) suggests six top attributes of
knowledge products and services:
• Learn. The more you use them, the smarter they get and the smarter you get, too.
• Improve with use. These products and services are enhanced rather than depleted when used,
and they grow up instead of being used up.
• Anticipate. Knowing what you want, they recommend what you might want next.
• Interactive. There is two-way communication between you and them.
• Remember. They record and recall past actions to develop a profile.
• Customize. They offer unique configuration to your individual specifications in real time at no
additional cost.
During the 1960s and 1970s, technology was focused on automating high-volume static processes
such
as claims processing, mortgage loan updating, airline reservation systems, and the like. The
emergence
of e-commerce in the late 1980s and 1990s showed how information technology could implemented
a
new way of doing business effectively. Ever-increasing processing power, high
bandwidth data
transmission, and networking made it possible to re-envision how business gets done. It
has also
changed the business environment and introduced new competitive imperatives. Among them are:
• Reacting instantly to new business opportunities, which led to decentralized decision
making (and competency) at the front lines, where the action is. With that came the
desire to build mutual trust between knowledge workers and management and to cooperate in
handling time-sensitive tasks.
• Building better sensitivity to “brain drain.” It has been said that “expertise gravitates
toward the highest bidder” (Applehans et al. 1999, 17). More and more companies realize the
importance of managing and preserving expertise turnover. For the human resources
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 20Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
department, the key question is “How does the firm replace expertise when it retires, resigns, or
simply leaves?
• Ensuring successful partnering and core competencies with suppliers, vendors,
customers, and other constituents. Today’s technology has enabled companies to
reengineer the ways to do business. Getting partners up to your speed requires more than fast
technology. Knowledge workers and others within the company should ensure that cooperation
and coordination of work are practiced for the good of the firm.
Companies and managers that fail to embed a viable KM operation probably suffer from
several
oversights or pitfalls:
• Failing to modify the compensation system to reward people working as a team. The
traditional method of compensating people based on the old-fashioned “information-hoarding”
practice does not work in a knowledge-sharing environment. Merit increases and bonuses
should be based on team contribution and team performance rather than quantity or volume.
• Building a huge database that is supposed to cater to the entire company. Generalized
systems do not usually work well, because information and knowledge are not stratified to
address specialized areas of expertise. Ideally, the human resources department should first
determine who works best with who based on commonality of job type or job experience and
then discover the knowledge that can be shared for each employee to be more successful.
• Viewing KM as a technology or a human resource area. This oversight relates to the
earlier one – where human resources and information technology efforts are poorly
coordinated – and defeats the purpose behind embedding KM into the fabric of the
organization. The two departments should work jointly at introducing KM as part of the
organizational processes.
• Placing too much emphasis on technology. Although intranets, knowledge-based tools,
data warehouses, and other computer-based software are part of the way today’s organization
must adopt, technology is only the enabler of knowledge management. The knowledge it makes
available must be organized and disseminated to human decision makers to be of any use.
• Introducing KM into the organization via a simple project to minimize possible losses.
This is the wrong way to start KM. A company should start with a strategy and a champion,
with a focus on a worthwhile, high profile project that can set the tone for the rest of the
organization. It is a high risk approach, but one that is most likely to pay dividends in the long
run.
• Pursuing KM without being ready. Spurred by the paradigm shift in our economy, many
corporations pursue KM without evaluating whether they are organizationally ready 9stewart et
al. 2000, 45). In other words, corporations that have been operating under classical
management principles cannot be successful in adopting KM without major changes in culture,
management attitudes, and communication skills.
• Having poor leadership. Like any high priority project, KM is best implemented with
determined champions and top management commitment. For example, General Electric (GE)
recognizes an organizational culture open to ideas from all levels of the company.
By
encouraging best-practice sharing, the company can grasp the knowledge within the employees
and innovate the organization’s processes. Jack Welch, former CEO, has established a
knowledge management university and frequently teaches the classes himself. Only 10 percent
of the 96 companies surveyed by the Conference Board sponsored by PricewaterhouseCoopers
identified the CEO as a component of a KM initiative. By integrating the CEO of the company
into the KM system, KM acquires a level of importance and respect that would otherwise be
lacking. GE has incorporated all levels of the business and is well designed to share knowledge.
The company is successfully able to use employee input and knowledge to produce a strategic
advantage (Jones 199,3-18)
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 21Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
KM is slowly gaining acceptance across industries. Several factors triggered interest in KM:
• The pace of change has accelerated dramatically during the past decade. Companies are looking
at innovative says of taking on the competition. Innovation is the one core competency needed
by all organization (Drucker 1969).
• Globalization and geographic dispersion change the organization’s scope. More and more
organizations are trying to lean on years of experience to manage their global commitment in a
timely and profitable fashion.
• Downsizing and reengineering resulted in staff attrition and knowledge drain. This prompted
organizations to assess their knowledge core and make more effective use of it. Reengineering
assumed a one-time fix to a situation. This created a vicious cycle, where solutions became new
problems. It failed to recognized rapid changes in today’s market.
• Networking and data communication made it easier and faster to share knowledge. Knowledge
sharing is becoming the best way to distribute expertise across and around the firm
via
technology. Technology alone is insufficient.
• The increasing dominance of knowledge as a basis for improving efficiency and effectiveness
triggered many companies to find the means for utilizing the knowledge they have gained from
previous experience.
With these factors, it is easy to see how knowledge management works for the survival of the
firm.
Knowledge is the key. It is the core competence of any business. It is a function that can and should
be
embedded into every business process – new products and services, new channels of distribution,
new
marketing strategies, and new industry definitions. Technology is the backbone, and
human
components are necessary to utilize it.
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LESSON 5
FRAMEWORK WITH NEW STRUCTURE, STRATEGIES AND LEVERS OF STRATEGY
Knowledge: The Strategic Imperative
Every few years a new management philosophy captures the attention of strategists and
business
leaders. In the 1990s, such movements have included those of total quality management (TQM)
and,
more recently, business process re-engineering. The last few years have seen knowledge take
centre
stage.
New Strategies, New Structures
Successful strategies will exploit the developments in IC technology. They will take advantage of
the
Internet and electronic commerce to create global markets for new products and services.
Value to customers will be enhanced through information and knowledge. Information products,
such
as database, and knowledge-based services, such as consultancy, will become important
ways of
generating revenues. Technology will be used to tailor services to individual customer
needs and
develop closer customer relationships.
In terms of structure, responsive organizations will be those that are more networked. Virtual teams
and
organizations will allow them to create value through unique combinations of skills that are
flexibly
combined as needed. The future organization is most likely to consist of networks of self-
managed
teams that reconfigure o adapt to opportunity and change. Teams, not functions or departments, will
become the core productive units within organizations.
Strategies based on competitive advantage – conventional wisdom in the 1980s – may have done
many
organizations more harm than good. Sustainable wealth comes through creating and
growing new
markets, not competing in existing ones. Thus competing IT manufacturers increasingly co-operate
on
matters of standards, while care-makers collaborate on safety.
The innovation imperative
One of the main challenges for any organization is survival. The average life expectancy of most
firms is
low, around twenty years. One-third of all businesses in 1970 had disappeared thirteen years
later.
Today the environment is more turbulent and dynamic, so survival becomes even harder. Yet there
are
companies, like Shell (founded 1907), Siemens (1847), Du Pont (1802) and 3M (1902) that survive
and
thrive. How do they do this? They adapt and innovated.
Innovative 3M introduced 500 new products in 1996. A 1997 survey by Arthur D. Little of
700
companies in twenty-three countries showed that 84 per cent of companies believed that
innovation
was more crucial for their business success than it was in a similar survey carried out in 1991. They
seek
innovation for gaining new customers and creating new markets with innovative products, services
and
processes
Of all the responses to the challenges, the most important can be summarized in two words
-fast
innovation. Continuous improvement initiatives give incremental benefits. What is needed in the
new
economy is radical innovation. It is not uncommon to find organizations succeeding
in creating
improvements of not just a few per cent but a factor of ten. Remember when it took days or weeks
to
get prescription spectacles. Now you can get them in one or two hour~. It used to take BP 100 days
with an expensive ship to drill anew deep-sea oil well. Now, by applying learning gained elsewhere
this
can be reduced to five days or less. Research at Rensselaer Polytechnic in New York State found
that a
key characteristic of organizations that make such breakthroughs is a free of ideas, in and out. In
every
case networking played a big role: 'the most successful researchers have wide-ranging
networks of
people’. They have discovered knowledge networking.
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Seven levers of strategy
What can be done to secure a strategic advantage through knowledge? Analysis of many cases
indicates
seven commonly used levers:
1. Customer knowledge – developing deep knowledge through customer relationships, and using
it to enhance customer success through improved products and services.
2 Knowledge in products and services – embedding knowledge in products and surrounding
them with knowledge-intensive services.
3 Knowledge in people – developing human competencies and nurturing an innovative culture
where learning is valued and knowledge is shared.
4 Knowledge in processes – embedding knowledge into business processes, and giving access to
expertise at critical points.
5 Organizational memory – recording existing experience for future use, both in the form of
explicit knowledge repositories and developing pointers to expertise.
6 Knowledge in relationships – improving knowledge flows across boundaries with suppliers,
customers, employees, etc.
7 Knowledge assets – measuring intellectual capital and managing its development and
exploitation.
The core levers are knowledge in people, processes and products. In most situations winning
strategies
are developed by concentrating on just two or three of the seven levers.
Customer knowledge
Virtually every survey ranks customer knowledge as an organization's, most important knowledge.
In
truth, most companies know a lot less about their customers and their markets than they claim.
They
place too much reliance on traditional market research. They carry out customer satisfaction
surveys
that tell them little of customers' real wishes and concerns. Customers can provide vital insights into
the
application of your products and services, but this requires forging close working relationships
that
surface this deep knowledge.
Developing good customer knowledge also needs effective environment scanning and
market
intelligence systems to gather and collate knowledge. Such systems should cover not just customers
and
markets but a whole range of external factors including technology, social, political,
economic and
regulatory developments.
Knowledge in products and services
Almost every product is knowledge intensive, even if we don't realize it. When we buy a
prescription
drug, we are not buying merely a tablet but also the knowledge it encapsulates, that of the
therapeutic
benefits and side effects gleaned from years of extensive clinical trials. We can use genetic
knowledge to
create genetically modified foods, such as disease resistant potatoes or square tomatoes that are
easier to
pack.
Companies hold vast amounts of knowledge that can be exploited as part of their product or service
offering. Such knowledge includes applications knowledge, market knowledge, and how
to solve
problems encountered by users. Much of this is accumulated during the product development
and
testing process, but is then overlooked. Only a fraction is encapsulated into the final product,
leaving
under-utilized a rich source of knowledge that could create additional revenues .
This knowledge can be exploited in several ways. One way is through additional paid services, such
as
consultancy or training services. Another way is to make the product 'smart' or 'intelligent'. There is
an
intelligent oil drill, which 'knows' the shape of the reservoir it is drilling, and so extracts more oil.
Products and services can be customized by combining product and customer knowledge. One
example
is the personalized daily new bulletin that combines information from many disparate sources.
Another
is Campbell Soups' 'Intelligent Quisine', designed for people suffering hypertension or high
cholesterol.
It delivers weekly packages of nutritionally designed, portion-controlled meals based on
personal
information.
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Knowledge in people
'People are our most valuable asset' runs the line in many company annual reports. Companies that
truly
believe it apply this knowledge lever through a competence or learning lens. One underlying model
used
in this approach is that of a repeating action-learning cycle:
• Plan: think, conceptualize, and devise a set of actions.
• Act: do, gain experience of' theory in practice'.
• Observe: record experiences, share knowledge with others.
• Reflect: consider what has been learnt and how it can be used to make improvements.
Learning programs typically mesh competence development activities at several levels -individual,
team
and organization. Individual competence and knowledge is developed through personal
development
plans that meet the needs of individuals as well as the organization. Team knowledge is
enhanced
through learning processes that encourage individuals to share their knowledge in teamwork.
At the
organizational level the focus shifts to overall competence measurement, corporate
universities and
human resource policies that reward learning and knowledge sharing. Motivating knowledge
workers So
that they work energetically and are committed to the success of the organization is another
important
aspect of a people-focused knowledge strategy.
In reality, many organizations fail to effectively use the knowledge in their people.
They allow
insufficient time for learning or reflection. They regard people as hired hands, rather than
borrowed
brains. They dictate to them what to do, giving them little discretion in how they do it. It is little
wonder
that their employees feel undervalued, and will indeed 'walk' at the first opportunity and
take their
knowledge with them.
In contrast, Shell is an organization long acknowledged as an excellent example of
nurturing and
developing its people. It has an initiative within its exploration business to 'harness this talent' and
make
'better use of this intellectual capital' .Its focus is the development of an infrastructure for learning
and
leverage of knowledge. There are open learning centers and databases of learning resources on
the
company's intranet. However, the most significant developments have been the
establishment of
knowledge communities and developing skills for quality person-to-person dialogue and
reflection.
Learning is being built into daily work activities.
One company that combines both product and people levers is that of Teltech Resources.
Teltech -people are the product
Teltech Resources of Minneapolis manages a knowledge network of some 3000 human experts
whose
knowledge is harnessed to tackle difficult problems. This network includes academics, industry
experts
and recent if retirees who have specialist in-depth technical knowledge. Knowledge analysts
provide a
human interface between the client who has a problem, the expert network and over 1600
technical
databases.
Teltech's business is based on a deep understanding of how its clients gather and use knowledge. It
then
develops close relationships with both suppliers and users of that knowledge. It also blends explicit
and
tacit knowledge. Explicit knowledge is structured according to a well-developed thesaurus of
knowledge
domain classifications. This also permits many synonyms, cross-referencing and multiple
placements.
Analysts 'act as guides in defining, clarifying and interpreting database-search results'.
In one case, a medical products developer had tried in vain to make a heart pump leak-proof in a
saline
solution. The answer came from an expert in submarine technology, whose equipment also operates
in
similar environments.
Knowledge in processes
Every business process contains embedded knowledge. Ad hoc activities, previously
performed by
people with specialist knowledge, become codified into routine processes. It is then more
readily
diffused through-out an organization. Even so, much tacit knowledge is frequently needed to
perform
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 25Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
the process effectively and to deal with exceptions. Hence the explicit process knowledge is
typically
accompanied by training, procedure manuals and access to experts.
One way to enrich knowledge in processes is to embed backup resource material. Access to
human
expertise is available on IT systems through a 'click here for help' screen icon. This may either
trigger an
email or even a computer-generated phone call to a human expert. Other organizations use
workflow
software to blend computer held knowledge with human knowledge. The software applies rules
to
determine which transactions are straightforward, and are therefore handled automatically by
computer,
and which require human intervention.
Organizational memory
This strategic lever helps address the issue of 'knowing what you know'. It is also used
to avoid
repeating the mistakes of the past, and to draw lessons from similar situations or cases from
elsewhere.
Organizational memory exists in many places, most notably the brains of its people. But it also
exists in
records, filing cabinets, personal computer disk files and the physical surroundings. External
sources
should not be overlooked. After all, many outsiders follow an organization's actions, or have even
been
part of it at one time.
A common approach to managing organizational memory is to capture in explicit form the
most
important knowledge and enter it into knowledge databases. These databases may be in
document
management systems, in groupware such as Lotus Notes, or as web pages on an intranet. Often such
databases will not contain the knowledge per se, but will provide pointers to it. Examples of
knowledge
databases include:
• Customer histories. These detail interactions with a given customer: products bought, sales visit
reports, etc.
• Best practices. Chevron has best practices databases and a resource map organized according to
the categories of the Baldridge quality award.
• Products and technologies. Details of the organization's various products and history.
Explicit knowledge bases, however, typically contain less than 10 per cent of an organization's
memory.
Therefore other approaches are used to make it easier to access the minds of experts. A
common
example is an on-line directory of expertise, often called Yellow Pages, because they are structured
by
skill and discipline, not by department. Novartis have also added Blue Pages that contain details
of
external experts with whom they collaborate. Knowledge-sharing events provide another way of
sharing
tacit knowledge. Thomas Miller & Co., a mutual insurance company, runs 'knowledge in a
nutshell'
events. Company experts give talks on their areas of expertise and describe their experiences. These
live
sessions are also recorded on video for further distribution and subsequent recall. The key to
enhancing
organizational memory is to make ongoing experience capture an integral part of
everyday work.
Techniques include decision diaries, learning histories and post-project reviews.
Knowledge in relationships
Many companies have an invaluable resource of knowledge developed through individual
relationships
-with customers, suppliers, business partners, professional and trade associations. When a
salesperson
leaves your company, it is not just their product or customer knowledge that is lost. It may be much
of
the customer relationship. This relationship involves shared knowledge and understanding -not just
of
needs and factual information, but of deeper knowledge such as behaviors, motivations,
personal
characteristics, ambitions and feelings. Such depth of knowledge is not easily replaced overnight.
Organizations can deepen their relationship knowledge by increasing their interaction with the
outside
world. This may take the form of regular meetings for knowledge exchange and sharing of
databases.
Toshiba collects comparative data on suppliers ranking 200 quantitative and qualitative factors. It
has an
active supplier’s network where knowledge is shared and suppliers are integrated into future
strategies.
Extranets provide another way to develop wider linkages. By increasing the number of contacts
with
key stakeholders, at all levels and functions, you become less vulnerable to the loss of a single
contact.
Relationship knowledge can also be deepened by taking a whole range of inter-company
interactions to
deeper levels of intimacy, and by strengthening knowledge exchange. Relationship marketing, the
new
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 26Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
vogue in consumer marketing, goes far beyond issuing customers loyalty cards. Customer
relationship
knowledge comes through exploring mutual interests, seeking new insights through extensive
dialogue,
and jointly creating new business opportunities. Activities that might previously have been
considered
confidential to the company are extended to involve stakeholders. These include product
planning,
marketing campaigns and human resource competency development. Social events also
strengthen
relationship knowledge. Corporate hospitality does have its benefits!
Knowledge as an asset
The final lever is that of knowledge as an asset. This builds on the notion, mentioned
earlier, of
measuring and managing intellectual capital. While many organizations have accountants and
auditors
track in detail every piece of physical plant and machinery, few devote even a fraction of this
attention
to intellectual capital. Yet this is much more valuable, since it includes knowledge and people.
The starting point of .any asset-based approach is that of understanding its different components.
Intellectual assets are frequently categorized into the following groups.
1. Human capital – in the minds of individuals; knowledge, competencies, experience, know-how,
etc.
2 Structural capital – ‘that which is left after employees go home for the night': processes,
information systems, databases, etc.
3. Customer capital – customer relationships, brands, trademarks, etc.
Dow Chemical provides a good example of this knowledge lever. In 1994 it had over 29000 patents
in
force around the world. However, maintaining the validity of a patent can be costly -up to $250000
over
its lifetime. Dow's Intellectual Asset Management team developed a comprehensive
framework for
actively measuring and managing its patent portfolio. It found many patents not being
effectively
exploited, and others with no obvious ownership. It took measures to exploit patents, either through
internal use, licensing or sale, while allowing others to lapse by not paying renewal fees. Within
three
years the team had generated $125 million in additional revenues, their original target for the year
2000.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 27Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 6
HISTORICAL SHIFTS IN WORLD ECONOMIES AND THE ROLE OF KNOWLEDGE
AND INTELLIGENCE
Where is Wisdom?
We know that data and information does not convey wisdom and we also know that knowledge is
also
not wisdom. More we know, the more we know that we don’t know. Education itself is a
progressive
discovery of our own ignorance.
As your knowledge increases, what happens to your ignorance? It obviously becomes larger, or at
least
your awareness of your ignorance becomes larger. When information and knowledge are
impregnated
with worthy purposes and principles, you have wisdom.
History of Management:
To understand current management dilemma, we might review the demands on management from
the
Agrarian age through Industrial Revolution and on into the Information/Knowledge age which
has
brought with it the quickening and flattening pace pf change.
The Agrarian age:
During the agrarian age people worked first as hunters and gatherers and then as farmers. Most
people
depend and lived on land and the rhythm and pace of life were defined by the seasons. They planted
in
spring, crops grew in summer and was` harvested in the autumn and then ploughed and the
land
remained fallow in the winter. Skills were passed down through families. Trade skills were learned
under
the apprentice/mastery system.
The Industrial age:
The agrarian way of life was changed for some if not for all forever when in 1763 James Watt
invented
the steam engine. The power of steam engine helped in the steal production and also increased
our
ability significantly to produce goods and thus brought the beginning of industrial revolution.
The
higher tensile strength of steal beams enabled the construction of large factories that
housed the
manufacturing machines that were driven by steam power.
The machines were designed to produce goods but needed people to operate them. So where did the
labor come from? The labor came from the land and villages. People flocked from their farms to
work
in the factories which were in and around cities and so town and cities grew larger and larger.
Generally
these people coming from farms were farmers. The capitalists who owned the machines and
factories
required a new type of worker, the manager. The manager was needed to tell the poorly
educated
workers what to do.
In the agrarian age, the seasons defined the pace of life. Once you have the steam engine, you can
run
factory 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The pace of the game of life and business was
changed
forever. In early days, labor was exploited by capitalists and their trusted managers and hence
union
movement was born to fight injustice. Laborers who complained for harsh conditions, it was easy to
get
rid of them as there were plenty more where they came from the villages. Is it not the case going on
still
in many Textile /Leather factories of Pakistan.
The fundamental principle behind the industrial revolution was that managers needed to be
intelligent
and trained to direct workers activity. They understood what needed to be done in the
factory.
Managers directed and workers worked. Western education system developed to supply workers
with
basic primary and basic technical skills and provided managers with secondary enhanced trade
and
commerce and accounting skills. Central idea became that mangers know what to do. They tell
the
workers and workers do it.
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The Information age:
We have moved from industrial revolution into information age. We no longer rely only on
steam
power and electricity. Much of our information is moving down glass fibers at light speed.
The pace of change is also quickening. Manufactured goods account for far less than they used to in
world economies which are now more service driven. The endless range of choice has shifted the
game
of business to a customer focus, customer value, customer loyalty and the creativity to
differentiate
yourself from the competition. In every organization staff is spending more time with the customers
.
They like to know about their customers on a day to day basis and even hour to hour to hour basis.
In
the information age, it is not possible for managers alone to satisfy the customers
and all the
stakeholders of the organization.
Knowledge Perspective and Paradigm Shift:
It is not only the info and knowledge of select few managers which is required to sustain and grow
in
the 21st
century global market. In fact to deal with customer market, you have to take care of the
internal employee market. They are the one who know the business process, sales process,
marketing
process and operation process. If they are happy and competent, they will provide the better service
and
products to the external customers and bring higher profits. The experience, expertise of the staff
must
be continuously enhanced through learning and updation in their formal and informal knowledge.
In the twenty-first-century landscape, firms must compete in a complex and challenging context
that is being
transformed by many factors, from globalization, technological development, and increasingly
rapid
diffusion of new technology, to the development and use of knowledge. This new landscape
requires
firms to do things differently in order to survive and prosper. Specifically, they must look to new
sources
of competitive advantage and engage in new forms of competition. This, in turn,
requires a clear
understanding of the nature of competition and competitive dynamics.
One popular approach to understanding competitive dynamics is the resource-based view of the
firm.
According to this view, the explanation for why some firms ultimately succeed and others fail can
be found
in understanding their resources and capabilities. A firm’s resources and capabilities influence both
the
strategic choices that managers make and the implementation of those chosen strategies.
To understand why certain competitive strategies are more effective than others, one must consider
the
distribution of resources in competing firms. Although a given firm may possess more or less of
any
particular resource, only those resources that are rare, valuable, and difficult to imitate provide a
sustainable
competitive advantage. When the strategies employed are successful in leveraging the firm’s rare,
valuable,
and difficult-to-imitate resources that firm is likely to gain an advantage over its competitors
in the
marketplace and thus earn higher returns.
Competitive advantages that are sustained over time lead to higher performance. These
arguments are
somewhat clear when we consider tangible resources such as buildings, machinery, or access to
capital. And
in the more traditional competitive landscape, these tangible resources were the most important
potential
sources of competitive advantage. Thus, if a firm could modernize its plant, or develop a more
efficient
distribution process, or access cheaper credit, it could compete successfully and prosper. But firms
employ
both tangible and intangible resources in the development and implementation of strategies, and as
the
nature of work and competition changes, intangible resources are becoming more important.
Examples
of intangible resources are reputation, brand equity, and—for our purposes the most important
of
these human capital. In fact, in any competitive landscape it has been argued that intangible
resources are
more likely to produce a competitive advantage because they often are truly rare and can be
more
difficult for competitors to imitate. Among a firm’s intangible resources, human capital may be the
most
important and critical for competitive advantage because it is the most difficult to imitate.
Generally speaking, human capital is more mobile than other intangible resources. Therefore, it
may seem an
unlikely source of sustained competitive advantage. Once an organization integrates human
capital with
other complementary resources and uses this integration to create organizational
capabilities (that is,
leverages them), losing one or a few individuals may not lead to a loss of competitive advantage.
Instead, a
competitor would have to gain access to all of the resources and the system in place to leverage
those resources.
Human Capital as a Strategic Resource
Human capital is a general term that refers to all of the resources that individuals directly contribute
to an
organization: physical, knowledge, social, and reputation. However, we need to under-stand what it
is about
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 29Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
human capital resources that helps individuals contribute to gaining and sustaining a competitive
advantage.
During the industrial age, human capital was valued because of physical resources such as
strength,
endurance, and dexterity— these were the aspects of human capital that were most likely to
lead to
competitive advantage. But as new machinery and technology were introduced, these characteristics
became
less important. In the current economic landscape, human capital is more likely to be valued for
intellect,
social skills, and reputation.
In today’s competitive environment, where there is even more uncertainty and dynamism, these
knowledge-
based resources are even more important than they were in the past.
The term knowledge-based resources refer to skills, abilities, and learning capacity. People can
develop these
through experience and formal training. Social resources (now sometimes referred to as social
capital) include
the personal relationships that bind together members of an organization as well as relationships
that link
organizational members to other external sources of human capital. Through social capital,
individuals can
gain access both to other human resources (the physical and intellectual capital, for example) and to
other
forms of capital (financial, for example).
We must emphasize again, however, that it is not enough to acquire individuals who have such
attributes. It is
also necessary to develop structures, systems, and strategies that allow the organization to exploit
the resources
and gain competitive advantage.
For example, a football team that acquires a strong passing quarter-back only gains a competitive
advantage
when it shifts its offensive strategy to focus on passing. Professional service firms leverage their
human
capital by forming project teams led by senior experienced professionals, often partners in the firm.
The
other members of the project teams usually are younger, less experienced associates. In this
way, they
leverage their most valuable human capital to complete projects for clients. Working together on
the project
also allows the associates to gain some of the tacit knowledge possessed by the more senior
partners; they
learn by doing
Of course, some scholars and practitioners have always under-stood the role of human capital in
creating an
organization’s success. Carly Fiorina, CEO of Hewlett-Packard, emphasized the role of human
capital in an
address she made to MIT graduates: “The most magical and tangible and ultimately the most
important
ingredient in the transformed landscape of 21st
century and in knowledge based economy is people. The
greatest strategy, the greatest financial plan, the greatest turnaround, is only going to be temporary
if it is not
grounded in people”
Knowledge-Based Resources
Knowledge-based resources include all the intellectual abilities and knowledge possessed by
employees, as
well as their capacity to learn and acquire more knowledge. Thus, knowledge-based resources
include what
employees have mastered as well as their potential for adapting and acquiring new information. For
several
reasons, these resources are seen as being extremely important for sustaining competitive advantage
in today’s
environment.
First, the nature of work has been changing over the past several decades, so that many jobs require
people to
think, plan, or make decisions, rather than to lift, assemble, or build. This kind of work requires
both tacit
and explicit knowledge.
But work continues to change, and in unpredictable ways. It is often difficult to state exactly what
kinds of
knowledge a person needs to succeed on the job, and it is almost impossible to predict what
types of
knowledge he or she will need in the future. Change and unpredictability in organizations
mean that
knowledge-based resources such as the ability to learn and personality traits such as adaptability are
extremely
important, and some organizations have begun rewarding employees financially when they
demonstrate an
ability to acquire and master new knowledge.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 30Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 7
STRATEGIC CORPORATE ASSETS OF A 3RD MILLENNIUM ORGANIZATION,
KNOWLEDGE CHARACTERISTICS
Characteristics of Knowledge
Knowledge defies normal economic rules. Harlan Cleveland, writing in his eminently readable
book,
The Knowledge Executive, describes six special characteristics of information or explicit
knowledge. It
is
1. Expandable. Unlike other resources that are managed because of their scarcity value, the more
it is used the more is generated.
2 Compressible. It can be summarized for easier handling and can be packaged into small
physical formats.
3. Substitutable. In many situations it can replace physical and other forms of resource. Thus
telecommunications reduces the need for physical transport.
4. Transportable. It can move from place to place, quickly and easily, ready for collecting when
the recipient chooses.
5. Diffusive. It tends to leak. As technology improves, it become ever more difficult to stop
reproduction and transmission.
6 Shareable. If it is given to another person, the first person does not lose it.
Tacit knowledge is also expandable, diffusive and shareable, but is not as easily transmitted or
diffused. It is intangible and difficult to identify and describe. It is context
dependent. These
characteristics present some interesting management challenges. Making knowledge explicit means
that
it can be more readily copied, diffused and shared. On the other hand this makes it 'leaky', and it
could
reach undesirable parties. The increasing rate of knowledge generation means that much
existing
knowledge has short 'half-life' and its value decays quite quickly. It needs constant
refreshing and
revalidating through use.
• Knowledge involves a human interaction with reality (or with information about reality, or
information about other knowledge or information), where the human is the subject and acts as
the active, creative element, and modifies the latter by way of reconstructing it. Knowledge
involves attribution of meaning and significance by the knower as a person. In fact,
every
reconstruction is a reinterpretation as well.
• When I know something, it is relative to me. There can be no knowledge without me. It is
always in relation to my existence and my knowing it. With my death dies my world, and with it
my knowledge. In knowing something, I individualize, subjectify, and appropriate it and make it
my own. What I know, in the process, becomes my own.
• Knowledge is essentially social in nature. We need universal categories for
generation,
expression, representation, storage, retrieval, and expropriation of knowledge. The categories
are universal in the sense that (a) they are capable of holding the same meanings for all humans
belonging to the same community and (b) the categories can be socialized in terms of being
shared, reconstructed, and applied by other humans belonging to the concerned universe of
discourse.
• In knowing something, I believe it to be true. Without this belief, it could just be
some
information, without that stamp of individualized identity marked on it. This belief is a part of a
system of beliefs, values, and rationality, and hence constitutes a responsibility and potential
commitment.
• Knowing takes place in relation to existing knowledge-it is placing things in context, in relation to
existing constructions of reality, content, and concepts,
• Knowledge involves a judgment, a subsumption of the particular under the universal. It involves
a certain amount of synthesis and integration of discreet information under a category, a
construction, or an attribution of a causality or justifiability, relative to the knower’s frame of
reference.
• Knowledge has a moment of categorical imperative and can induce a cognitive dissonance
between
belief and practice, between the past and the present, between the preset and the future,
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between what is and what ought to be, and so on, and therefore, can form a springboard for
potential action. In other words, knowledge by definition is driven into practice.
• Knowledge is always a part of a dynamic system. Knowledge has the tendency to go for more of
itself, to bypass itself, and t constantly develop itself. It is only limited by mental
and
environmental constraints.
• Knowledge is gregarious by nature and has a tendency to socialize itself. Socialization is
the
means by which individual knowledge gets reinforced, challenged, modified, improved, and
validated.
• Knowledge processes are always a part of an, open system. It is like a game where the goalpost
keeps shifting itself. The meanings, the dictionaries, and even the rules of the language are always
in flux –
as volatile as the turns in modern life. Knowledge creation, by definition, is a process of
innovation.
What Can Happen To Knowledge
Knowledge Can Be Born
What apparently distinguishes Homo sapiens from the rest of the animal world is our
ability to
conceive, store, and manipulate ideas linguistically apart form the stimuli that gave rise to them.
We can
think about and name apples – make recipes for their use, use their visual image for decoration,
even
name computers after them -- without being under the influence of the smell, taste, feel, and
appearance
of actual apples. We can give birth to ideas as well as manipulate and change them.
Certainly every company desires such intellectual fertility on the part of its employees, particularly
its
leaders. But what are the circumstances that prove most conducive to the birth of new
knowledge?
Which individuals are most fertile in their ability to generate new knowledge? Why these
individuals and
not others? How can these individuals be discovered and nurtured? These are questions
asked by
organization and human enterprises of all kinds. Organizations carve knowledge spanners
much as
living organisms carve reproductive opportunities and capabilities. In both cases, the motive is the
same:
survival and maximization of life experience. The latter phrase, admittedly vague, may
involve
fulfillment through growth, and perceptual satisfaction (pleasures of the sense).
Knowledge spanners equip their organizations to confront change successfully, for example,
rapidly
changing global markets can threaten the viability of even the most established businesses.
These
companies rely upon new knowledge to maintain and extend their markets. The companies
highly
valued knowledge spanners come up with the biomedical formula, the algorithm for a faster chip,
the
alloy for a lighter auto-body, or the economic model for a better deployment of resources that allow
their organizations to thrive when others are failing.
Increasingly, the spanning of knowledge involves a partnership between human cognition and
machine
– based intelligence. When a pharmaceutical company conducts a complex series of drug tests by
means
of computer analysis; when a physician makes a diagnosis based primarily on output from an
expert
system; when an aeronautics corporation designs an aircraft form computer – based flight test data,
the
question of where requisite knowledge resides for these tasks is not easily answered. On one
hand,
human project designers and data interpreters are certainly important knowledge sources. On the
other
hand, computers or other systems generate substantial and significant knowledge. Traditionally
based on
human inputs, this artificial knowledge is increasingly self – generated by artificial
intelligence
capabilities.
Any plan for knowledge management must make provision for both direct human knowledge
an
indirect human knowledge, as mediated by machines, which extend and enhance the powers of
mind.
Knowledge Can Die
In terms of sheer quantity, the vast majority of things knows by human beings die with them. Few
of us
record even on – thousandth part of our knowledge accumulated form life
experiences. Put in
organizational terms, we are individually quite poor at “transition planning.” Our stores of
knowledge
go with us to the grave almost entirely whole, leaving each new generation to reinvent much
knowledge
that could have been its birthright.
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It could be argued, of course, that most important knowledge achieved during individual human
lives
gets preserved in the form of books, journal an magazine articles, patents, documentaries, oral
histories,
and other means. By this logic, the loss of sheer quantity of human knowledge through mortality
is
adequately compensated fro by preservation of quality of knowledge. In effect, we are the tip of
the
iceberg and therefore do not mourn the loss of the great unformed and unexamined mass of
knowledge
beneath the surface. For example, we cling to the works of Mozart (the tip of the iceberg) and
are
hardly aware of what it means to lose the capacity (i.e., the genius) to produce such works.
The death of knowledge for an organization occurs by means other than the mortality of its
members.
Firms that downsize without provision to preserve and extend necessary intellectual capital can
find
themselves brain dead after terminations and layoffs. After all, knowledge resides
primarily within
human heads; when “head count” is reduced, inevitably the sum of knowledge within the
organizations
reduced, sometimes critically so. This happens especially when a firm looks first to its highest
paid,
longest tenured employees as prime candidates for corporate bloodletting. Form a
financial
management perspective, terminating a few high paid employees may be less traumatic than firing
many
of the rank – and – file. But from a knowledge–management perspective, cutting off the
experienced
head from the working body may be foolish surgery indeed.
Knowledge can also die due to paradigm shifts. Aspects of knowledge that were important or
sacred for
one generation may cease to matter for another generation. Interpreting human character and health,
for example, was inconceivable for Western medieval men and women apart form the theory of
bodily
“humors” (behavior – influencing fluids), such as phlegm, choler, and black bile. Their knowledge
of
these mysterious substances has become obsolete or anti – intellectual because the paradigms we
use to
understand mental and physical health have change.
When paradigm shifts occur, little intellectual effort is spent proving the past wrong. All
knowledge
resources quickly turn to the larger and apparently more promising task of proving the new vision
right.
In short, when the paradigm shifts, the knowledge of the past is not “killed” or proven to be wrong.
Instead, it is allowed to die from inattention, in this sense, paradigm shifts are largely rhetorical
acts
arising form the ability of new paradigm thinkers to provide powerful explanations of anomalies in
the
old paradigm.
Knowledge management takes the death of knowledge seriously and accepts no paradigm shift on
blind
faith. Knowledge management takes the death of knowledge seriously and accepts no paradigm
shift on
blind faith. Knowledge managements seeks to understand causes for the failing health or
death of
knowledge. It memorializes and perpetuated what can and should be salvaged from the demise of a
paradigm.
Knowledge Can Be Owned
In spite of high literacy rates in developed countries, most knowledge valuable for increasing
wealth is
privately held. Knowledge unrelated to or marginally related to wealth is freely available
because it
serves no one’s specific interest in the marketplace. Such free knowledge is the stuff
of general
education – history, literature, music, art, philosophy, cultural appreciation, languages, and so forth.
In
other words, the works of Shakespeare are available to all of us not because Shakespeare willed it
so –
he charged per view, in fact, as co-owner of the globe Theatre – but because since Shakespeare’s
death
no one has built an industry based on any kind of special or proprietary knowledge contained within
his
plays and poetry. The same cannot be said for the knowledge necessary to make paint, preserve
food,
make or repair computers, or remove air pollution. These and countless other
technological and
industrial functions are based on knowledge that is not made generally available. A
company’s
competitive advantage,” in fact, often lies precisely in its privately held knowledge.
Several implications fan out from the notion of privately owned knowledge. First, the identity of
the
owner must be clarified. Research ad development personnel at computer, drug, cosmetic, and
other
similar companies routinely sign explicit and binding agreements with their employer that all
knowledge
accumulated, discovered, or developed during and after their employment remains the sole
possession
of the employer.
No mater how careful the wording of ownership agreements, of course, truly advantageous
knowledge
often has a way of “getting out,” usually with devastating results in the marketplace.
Netscape’s
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 33Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
“ownership” of Internet browsing technologies, for example was closely imitated –some
have said
stolen – by Microsoft, with substantial market losses to Netscape. Knowledge management
devises
ways to determine what knowledge should be privately held and how it can be
protected from
competitors and clients.
Modern organization find unique ways to pierce the shield of privately held knowledge. In the
many
industries, companies acquire proprietary knowledge (friendly or hostile acquisitions, hiring away
key
employees, and reverse engineering products are common tactics). Then that knowledge is
openly
imitated, with the often-cynical strategy that legal challenges will take years in the courts to resolve
–
years during which the war for market share and profitability will be won and the issue of
knowledge
ownership will become moot.
By and large, companies have been unsuccessful in attempting to protect knowledge
that drives
sustained competitive advantage. Even products and processes that are patented or trademarked
under
the laws of one country are stolen by companies not vulnerable to legal or political sanctions from
that
country. The blatant theft of U.S. television technology in the 1960s by Asian competitors is a
classic
example. So devastating was this loss of proprietary knowledge that, for all intents and purposes,
the
U.S. television manufacturing industry ceased to exist by 1980. Similar “borrowing” has occurred
more
recently in the chip making, disk drives, and telecommunication device industries. U.S.
manufacturers
have largely given up efforts to stop knowledge piracy through international courts or through
the
American political system. Instead, U.S. manufacturers have adopted a “first/best/least” philosophy
of
hitting the market place first and hard with new products, maintaining quality standards, and
pricing
products at levels that discourage start-up enterprises from copying them.
At best, however, this appears to be a desperation strategy that conceives and develops new
markets
only to give them over eventually to the idea pirates. The impetus falls upon American companies
to
continually innovate – and convince the marketplace to purchase “new” – while foreign competitors
play a waiting game based on serving mass markets with inexpensive imitations.
Effective knowledge management assesses what knowledge must be protected for
competitive
advantage, how that knowledge will be protected, and to what degree legal and political entities
can be
trusted to enforce laws related to ownership of intellectual properties.
Knowledge is Immanent as Well as Extant
Not all knowledge worth managing in an organization is explicit and visible. Much
organizational
knowledge is held in creative reserve in the form of human resources and computer expert
systems.
This immanent and preformed knowledge has the potential for becoming extant and formed at
any
moment, just as the energy within a battery can be tapped when needed.
A brain surgeon’s expertise and capacity for action is an example of immanent knowledge. After
years
of study and practice, few brain surgeons can list the items within their knowledge bases. Surgeons’
core
competencies lie in immanent knowledge – deep wells of insight, reflection, memory, and intuition
that
can be summoned when the need arises. The visible, extant “spark” of correct decisions and
actions
come to the fore in life-and-death circumstances. Similar knowledge banks are in the minds of
virtually
all personnel who exercise creative, thinking functions within organizations.
Immanent knowledge remains a challenging but crucially important aspect of knowledge
management.
Just as brain surgeons must create and maintain their immanent knowledge, organizations
may use
knowledge management to preserve such vital knowledge. This prospect forces us to confront
several
key questions. How does one nurture immanent knowledge without force-feeding it in a disruptive
way?
Further, how does one monitor immanent knowledge to ensure that its store of
resources is
increasingly vital and relevant to the needs of the organization? Finally, how does an
organization
prevent unnecessary redundancy in immanent knowledge? Ho many people need specialized
procedures
that only a few will ever perform? Hasty answers are dangerous because the absence of such
knowledge
inhibits “spin-off” insights and may corrupt decision making in related areas. In short, a degree
of
redundancy in immanent knowledge resources probably is desirable if it encourages wholeness of
vision
and broad perspective in decision making.
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Knowledge Can be Stored
It can safely be estimated that more knowledge has been externalized (that is, made observable
and
preservable) in the last 20 years than in the entire previous history of mankind. On paper, film, tape,
and
above all by electronic storage means we have “lent our minds out. For example, 12,000 new sites
per
week continue to appear on the Internet.
But now that we have so energetically externalized knowledge we face an unexpected
and ironic
problem: how to internalized knowledge again. Getting knowledge out of our heads and onto disks
or
paper was a feat of technology; getting facts back into our heads for practical and creative use is a
task
that involves much more than technology.
The central intellectual work of the 21st
century may lie not so much in accumulating externalized banks
of knowledge as in developing time-efficient ways to process selected portions of that
knowledge
through a chip whose essential circuits have not and will not change: the chip between the ears.
“Real-
time” internalization of knowledge may be the most imposing challenge. A training videotape or
movie,
for example, cannot be internalized by the human mind using a “fast-forward” technique. The
tape
must be played in real time for human learning to take place. Traditional lectures and much
educational
software are similarly bound by real-time constraints. By contrast, still photos and, to a lesser
degree,
book or magazine pages can be accessed in “mind time,” with the roving intellectual eye free to
locate
and select bits of content without also involving the entire surrounding context. CD, videodisk,
and
“computer search” technologies offer similar accessibility without the necessity to play
through a
cohesive context to ferret out a desired bit of content.
The most poignant example of this dilemma lies in the efforts of elementary schools to “get wired”
to
the Internet and thereby enhance the accessible knowledge and experience base of their students.
But
when well-intentioned teachers advise students to search for information on topics of interest,
both
teachers and students quickly confront the chaos of knowledge that currently characterizes the
Internet.
A second-grader searching for information on “goldfish” using the Info-seek search
engine was
dumfounded and discouraged to confront more than 100,000 “hits” for his search term – with the
option, adding insult to injury, to seeing them 10 at a time. (“Click to see the next ten.”) Where
does
one begin to make sense or use out of knowledge base that lacks familiar search paths, or heuristics,
congenial to human learning and reflections?
Knowledge Can Be Categorized
In addition to the distinctions already suggested between immanent and extant knowledge, the
various
types of knowledge common within an organization can be enumerated.
Label knowledge is the vast catalog of names that we attach to the flora and fauna that make up the
jungle of our particular organization. As a practical organizational necessity, names for things
matter for
day-to-day operations and efficiency. But label knowledge too often becomes an obsessive-
compulsive
totem for minds that equate organizational learning with mastery of jargon ad labels. In
such an
environment, newcomers to the organization are pilloried by old-timers until the ingénues are able
to
speak the specialized language of terms, tags, and titles correctly. Entire cultures within branches of
the
military, academic disciplines, and the professions are built up in large part of such sensitivity to
label
knowledge. God help the “grunt” who doesn’t know the internal label language of the Army – or
the
sociologist, for that matter, who accidentally calls a spade a spade. It goes almost without saying
that
label knowledge makes up an exclusionary wall by which lawyers separate themselves,
expensively, from
the world of common sense and forth bright expression.
Process knowledge involves knowing how things work, even if one cannot name all components
active
within the process (i.e., label knowledge). Business environments value process knowledge
on the
micro-level – engineers who know how a heating system operates, for example – but often fail
to
recognize the importance of process knowledge at the macro-level. This has occurred, and still
occurs,
in spite of nearly a decade of Business Process Reengineering that explicitly focused
management
attention on gaining knowledge about processes. How can one describe the core processes at work
in a
large organization such as General Electric. Individually, each employee knows (or should know)
the
processes in which he or she is involved. But what can be said of larger process patterns – and who
is in
a position to observe and describe those processes?
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 35Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Knowledge management should pay attention to both the micro- and macro-levels of
process
knowledge. If the macro-level process is the building of a pyramid, for example, that
knowledge
influences the specific work of stonecutters and laborers at the micro-level. But, beyond a vague
notion
of increasing shareholder value, too many organizations despair of attaining process knowledge at
such
a macro-level. In effect, they do not know whether they are building a pyramid or a coliseum, but
their
employees had better be quick about doing so.
Skill knowledge knows how to do something of value to the organization. This level of knowledge
has
long been managed devotedly by companies through job descriptions, training programs,
performance
evaluations, and other means. But once skill sets have been determined, companies tend to look
upon
them as unchanging constellations in the night sky – patterns that are “there” along with the
furniture at
the company. These skill sets become the basis of most hiring, and hence define the overall
core
competencies of the organization.
The coming era requires a much more fluid view of skill knowledge. Computer companies have
already
found that an employee’s ability to learn quickly and well is an infinitely more valuable skill in a
rapidly
changing business environment than is a more vocationally oriented, specific skill.
Knowledge
management for the new century requires that skill knowledge be defined and developed so that
new
patterns (constellations of skill points) can come together quickly to meet emerging market needs.
People knowledge. This diffuse but virtually important category of knowledge comprises
all the
insights, intuitions, and relational information we use to work with other people. In the iceberg
analogy
previously cited, this kind of knowledge is truly subsurface but within organizations.
Usually it is
managed ineffectively or not at all preface but vast within organizations. Usually it
is managed
ineffectively or not at all precisely because of its lack of visibility. Few companies think about
what
knowledge their employees should have about one another’s motives, communication
styles, or
professional goals. Interestingly, the same companies expect employees to congeal into
efficient,
cohesive work teams but devote little thought to the people knowledge that makes such tams
possible.
Knowledge management brings people knowledge to visibility and to a position of prominence in
a
framework for understanding and using knowledge within the corporation.
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LESSON 8
PERSPECTIVES OF KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND THE FORCES DRIVING KM
Why Knowledge Management?
A new word for the consumer in today’s market, “prosumer,” refers to the consumer who is no
longer
in the passive market where goods are offered at the exact face value. Prosumers are more educated
consumers, and they demand more. They provide feedback to manufacturers regarding the design
of
products and services from a consumer perspective . This has initiated new and radical changes in
the
business world. Even with recent technology developments such as networking, e-mail, and the
Web,
business has yet to fully respond to the societal, cultural, and technical challenges. However, a
positive
response to knowledge sharing and knowledge management among growth-oriented firms is
beginning
to appear.
KM has already demonstrated a number of benefits and has offered justification for
further
implementation. The Internet facilitated its development and growth via fast and timely
sharing of
knowledge. By sharing knowledge, an organization creates exponential benefits from the
knowledge as
people learn from it. This makes business processes faster and more effective and empowers
employees
in a unique way. For example, Microsoft’s Hotmail service advanced the wide use of e-mail that
allowed
users to exchange information through any Web browser. Today’s Web-based interface is the norm
for
most Internet service providers.
Based on a number of published studies, KM has had a positive impact on business processes.
The
goal is to capture the tacit knowledge required by a business process and encourage knowledge
workers
to share and communicate knowledge with peers. With such knowledge, it is easier to determine
which
processes are more effective or less effective than others. The main constraint in KM, however,
is
initially capturing it. However, if an organization can succeed in capturing and dispersing
knowledge,
the benefits are endless. A company can leverage and more fully utilize intellectual assets. It can
also
position itself in responding quickly to customers, creating new markets, rapidly
developing new
products, and dominating emergent technologies.
Another benefit of KM is the intangible return on knowledge sharing rather than knowledge
hoarding.
Too often, employees in one part of a business start from “scratch” on a project because the
knowledge
needed is somewhere else but not known to them.
As a result of KM, systems have been developed to gather, organize, refine, and distribute
knowledge
throughout the business. In his study of Smart Business, Botkin (1999) suggests six top attributes of
knowledge products and services:
• Learn. The more you use them, the smarter they get and the smarter you get, too.
• Improve with use. These products and services are enhanced rather than depleted when used,
and they grow up instead of being used up.
• Anticipate. Knowing what you want, they recommend what you might want next.
• Interactive. There is two-way communication between you and them.
• Remember. They record and recall past actions to develop a profile.
• Customize. They offer unique configuration to your individual specifications in real time at no
additional cost.
During the 1960s and 1970s, technology was focused on automating high-volume static processes
such
as claims processing, mortgage loan updating, airline reservation systems, and the like. The
emergence
of e-commerce in the late 1980s and 1990s showed how information technology could implemented
a
new way of doing business effectively. Ever-increasing processing power, high
bandwidth data
transmission, and networking made it possible to re-envision how business gets done. It
has also
changed the business environment and introduced new competitive imperatives. Among them are:
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 37Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• Reacting instantly to new business opportunities, which led to decentralized decision
making (and competency) at the front lines, where the action is. With that came the
desire to build mutual trust between knowledge workers and management and to cooperate in
handling time-sensitive tasks.
• Building better sensitivity to “brain drain.” It has been said that “expertise gravitates
toward the highest bidder” .. More and more companies realize the importance of managing
and preserving expertise turnover. For the human resources department, the key question is
“How does the firm replace expertise when it retires, resigns, or simply leaves?
• Ensuring successful partnering and core competencies with suppliers, vendors,
customers, and other constituents. Today’s technology has enabled companies to
reengineer the ways to do business. Getting partners up to your speed requires more than fast
technology. Knowledge workers and others within the company should ensure that cooperation
and coordination of work are practiced for the good of the firm.
Andersen consulting (now Accenture) provides another example of a well-developed knowledge-
sharing
system, called ANet. This electronic system connects employees and encourages the
sharing of
knowledge. ANet allows an employee to use the total knowledge of Accenture
(formerly Arthur
Andersen) to solve a customer problem anywhere in the world through electronic bulletin boards
and to
follow up with visual and data contacts. In theory, ANet expands the capabilities and
knowledge
available to any customer to that of the entire organization. It further enhances employee
problem-
solving capacity by providing access to compiled subject, customer-reference, and
resource files
available either directly through the system or from CD-ROMs available to all offices.
Based on
experience, Accenture reported that technological changes alone could not make ANet successfully
used
by employees. Major changes within the organization, such as changes in incentives and culture,
were
needed to create participation.
KM Justification
• Creates exponential benefits from the knowledge as people learn from it
• Has a positive impact on business processes
• Enables the organization to position itself for responding quickly to customers, creating new
markets, developing new products, and dominating emergent technologies
• Builds mutual trust between knowledge workers and management and facilitates cooperation in
handling time-sensitive tasks
• Builds better sensitivity to “brain drain”
• Ensures successful partnering and core competencies with suppliers, vendors, customers, and
other constituents
• Shortens the learning curve, facilitates sharing of knowledge, and quickly enables less trained
brokers to achieve higher performance levels
• Enhances employee problem-solving capacity by providing access to compiled subject,
customer-reference, and resource files available either directly through the system or from CD-
ROMs available to all offices.
Companies that fail to embed a viable KM operation probably suffer from several oversights or
pitfalls:
• Failing to modify the compensation system to reward people working as a team. The
traditional method of compensating people based on the old-fashioned “information-hoarding”
practice does not work in a knowledge-sharing environment. Merit increases and bonuses
should be based on team contribution and team performance rather than quantity or volume.
• Building a huge database that is supposed to cater to the entire company. Generalized
systems do not usually work well, because information and knowledge are not stratified to
address specialized areas of expertise. Ideally, the human resources department should first
determine who works best with who based on commonality of job type or job experience and
then discover the knowledge that can be shared for each employee to be more successful.
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• Viewing KM as a technology or a human resource area. This oversight relates to the
earlier one – where human resources and information technology efforts are poorly
coordinated – and defeats the purpose behind embedding KM into the fabric of the
organization. The two departments should work jointly at introducing KM as part of the
organizational processes.
• Placing too much emphasis on technology. Although intranets, knowledge-based tools,
data warehouses, and other computer-based software are part of the way today’s organization
must adopt, technology is only the enabler of knowledge management. The knowledge it makes
available must be organized and disseminated to human decision makers to be of any use.
• Introducing KM into the organization via a simple project to minimize possible losses.
This is the wrong way to start KM. A company should start with a strategy and a champion,
with a focus on a worthwhile, high profile project that can set the tone for the rest of the
organization. It is a high risk approach, but one that is most likely to pay dividends in the long
run.
• Pursuing KM without being ready. Spurred by the paradigm shift in our economy, many
corporations pursue KM without evaluating whether they are organizationally ready 9stewart et
al. 2000, 45). In other words, corporations that have been operating under classical
management principles cannot be successful in adopting KM without major changes in culture,
management attitudes, and communication skills.
• Having poor leadership. Like any high priority project, KM is best implemented with
determined champions and top management commitment. For example, General Electric (GE)
recognizes an organizational culture open to ideas from all levels of the company.
By
encouraging best-practice sharing, the company can grasp the knowledge within the employees
and innovate the organization’s processes. Jack Welch, former CEO, has established a
knowledge management university and frequently teaches the classes himself. GE has
incorporated all levels of the business and is well designed to share knowledge. The company is
successfully able to use employee input and knowledge to produce a strategic advantage.
The Forces Driving KM.
• Increasing Domain Complexity. The complexity of the underlying knowledge domains is
increasing. As a direct consequence, the complexity of the knowledge that is required
to
complete a specific business process task has increased as well. Globalization has increased the
domain complexity for many organizations, which need to provide products and services that
meet the needs of customers across the globe.
• Accelerating Market Volatility. The pace of change, or volatility, within each market domain
has increased rapidly in the past decade. The event of September 11 2001, crippled the travel
industry almost overnight. In order to stimulate travel, companies in this industry were forced
to reduce prices to levels way below their break-even prices. As a result, many companies in
this sector were forced into bankruptcy.
• Intensified Speed of Responsiveness. The time required to take action based on subtle
changes within and across domains is decreasing. The rapid advance in technology continually
changes the decision-making landscape, making it imperative that decisions be made
and
implemented quickly, lest the window of opportunity closes. In order to be able to continue to
support relevant IT education, universities need to adapt their curriculum to current industry
trends. In the past, degree curriculums were more static with infrequent revisions. In today’s
environment three-year-old IT curriculums are old – in terms of Internet years!
• Diminishing Individual Experience. High employee turnover rates have resulted in
individuals with decision-making authority having less tenure within their organizations than
ever before. The recent dot-com explosion created many new opportunities for IT
professionals that lured them away from their positions. As a result, many organizations had to
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 39Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
rehire new talent to fulfill their IT needs, and are now left with IT professionals who lack the
business experience or understand the business culture at their organizations. This creates a
huge barrier in terms of adequately supporting the needs of the organization.
The recent dot-com explosion created many new opportunities for IT professionals that lured
them away from their positions. As a result, many organizations had to rehire new talent to
fulfill their IT needs, and are now left with IT professionals who lack the business experience
or understand the business culture at their organizations. This creates a huge barrier in terms
of adequately supporting the needs of the organization.
The Drivers
With these justifications to consider, several key KM drivers are worth noting. Each driver
makes a
compelling case for KM.
Technology Drivers The proliferation of technology, data communications, networking,
and
wireless transmission has revolutionized the way employees store, communicate, and exchange data
at
high speed. The World wide Web has changed KM from a fad to an e-business reality. With a
personal
computer , anyone can access people and information at any time and from anywhere. Today, the
same
technological infrastructure makes it possible to store, communicate, and exchange knowledge.
This
makes technology as core capability leveler, leaving knowledge as a competitive differentiator. It
means
that although technology can move information or knowledge from Chicago to Bombay to Lahore
at
lightening speed, it is people who turn knowledge into timely and creative decisions.
Tomorrow’s
successful companies are ones that use information technology to leverage their employees’
knowledge
in ways that makes knowledge immediately available and useful. It also implies quality
maximization and
cost minimization over the long term.
Process Drivers One of the most critical sets of KM drivers is designed to improve work
processes. Implied in this area is the elimination of duplicate mistakes by learning from the past and
by
transferring the best experiential knowledge from one location or project in the firm to another.
Starting
from scratch with each project makes no sense in terms of efficiency, productivity, and value-
added
contribution to the company’s bottom line.
Another area where KM can improve process is the way companies react to market changes. “Just
in
time” is one approach to minimizing investment in inventory and more expeditiously
meting the
demands of the consumer. Responsiveness that exceeds the competition becomes the key
contributor
to differentiation. It requires knowledge of control processes. KM means allowing companies to
apply
unique knowledge that makes them more responsive to market changes by the hour.
Personnel-Specific Drivers This area of KM drivers focuses on the need to create
cross-
functional teams of knowledge workers to serve anywhere in the organization and minimize
personnel
turnover as a threat to collective knowledge. More and more of what was once viewed as impendent
firms are now closely coupled. Products and services are jointly handled from diverse disciplinary
areas
(such as packaging, manufacturing, engineering, and technical skills), where creative
cooperation is
essential for innovation. Brainstorming, competitive response, and proactive positioning-all
require
collaboration and coordination of various tasks within and among corporations.
Another personnel-specific driver is minimizing knowledge walkouts. Highly marketable
employees
with unique knowledge can spell disaster for their employer. Competence drain that
goes to the
competition is probably the worst that can happen to a company struggling through the new
knowledge
economy.
Knowledge-Related Drivers Several KM drivers relate to the very concept of knowledge sharing
and knowledge transfer within the firm. They include revisiting overlooked employee
knowledge,
making critical knowledge available at the time it is needed, and finding a mechanism to
expedite
available knowledge for immediate use. Companies often know what they know but have
difficulty
locating it. Take the case of a customer who wanted to return a product that was initially purchased
from the same outfit in a different city to a local chain store. A code had to be entered into
the
computer to debit the initial store by the price of the product and then credit the local store by the
same
amount. There was only one employee in the local store who knew the code. She happened to be on
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 40Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
vacation. The customer service employee could not find critical existing knowledge in time. So, she
had
to contact the other store for instructions on how to handle the returned item. Counting wait time
and
learning the procedure took close to 1 hour, while the customer was waiting.
Financial Drivers As an asset, knowledge defies economic theory, where assets are subject to
diminishing returns over the long run. Knowledge assets increase in value as more and more people
use
them. With this in mind, knowledge follows the law of increasing returns – the more knowledge is
used,
the more value it provides. KM provides a worthwhile opportunity to integrate knowledge in a way
that
enriches the quality of decision making throughout the organization.
In the final analysis, the goal of KM is to produce a positive return on investment in people,
processes,
and technology. It means measurable efficiencies in production.
What is Knowledge Management?
Knowledge management (KM) is a newly emerging, interdisciplinary business model that has
knowledge
within the framework of an organization as its focus. It is rooted in many disciplines, including
business,
economics, psychology, and information management. It is the ultimate competitive
advantage for
today’s firm. Knowledge management involves people, technology, and processes in overlapping
parts.
Researchers as well as practitioners have yet to agree on a definition. However, each definition of
KM
contains several integral parts:
• Using accessible knowledge from outside sources.
• Embedding and storing knowledge in business processes, products, and services.
• Representing knowledge in data bases and documents
• Promoting knowledge growth through the organization’s culture and incentives
• Transferring and sharing knowledge throughout the organization
• Assessing the value of knowledge assets and impact on a regular basis.
In some ways, KM is about survival in a new business world – a world of competition that
increases in
complexity and uncertainly each day. It is a world that challenges the traditional ways of doing
things.
The focus is not only on finding the right answers, but also on asking the right questions. What
worked
yesterday may or may not work tomorrow. The focus is on “doing the right thing” rather than
“doing
things right” so that core competencies do not become core rigidities in the future.
KM is the process of capturing and making use of a firm’s collective expertise anywhere in the
business
– on paper, in documents, in databases (called explicit knowledge), or in people’s heads called
tacit
knowledge). It is implied that up to 95 percent f information is preserved as tacit knowledge. It is
the
fuel or raw material for innovation – the only competitive advantage that can sustain a company in
an
unpredictable business environment. It is not intended to favor expert systems of the early 1990s,
when
computers were programmed to emulate human experts’ thought processes. The goal is to present
a
balanced view of how computer technology captures, distributes, and shares
knowledge in the
organization by linking human experts and documented knowledge in an integrated KM system.
The goal is for an organization to view all its processes as knowledge processes.
This includes
knowledge creation, dissemination, upgrade, and application toward organizational survival.
Today’s
knowledge organization has a renewed responsibility to hire knowledgeable employees and
specialists to
manage knowledge as an intangible asset in the same way that one calls on an investor to manage a
financial portfolio. A firm seeks to add value by identifying, applying, and integrating
knowledge in
unprecedented ways, much like an investor adds value by unique combinations of stocks and
bonds.
The process is part science, part art, and part luck.
Alternative definitions of Knowledge Management
• Knowledge management is the process of gathering a firm’s collective expertise wherever it
resides – in databases, on paper, or in people’s heads – and distributing it to where it can help
produce the biggest payoff (Hibbard 1997).
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 41Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• KM is a newly emerging, interdisciplinary business modeling with all aspects of knowledge
within the context of the firm, including knowledge creation, codification, sharing, and how
these activities promote learning and innovation (encompassing technology tools and
organizational routines in overlapping parts) Berkeley 2001).
• KM caters to the critical issues of organizational adaptation, survival, and competence in the
face of increasingly discontinuous environmental change. Essentially, it embodies
organizational processes that seek synergistic combinations of data and information processing
capacity of information technology, and the creative and innovative capacity of human beings
(Malhotra 1999).
• Knowledge management is the art of creating value from an organization’s intangible assets
(Sveiby 2000).
• Knowledge management is the classification, dissemination, and categorization of information
and people throughout an organization (Taft 2000).
• Knowledge management is the discipline of capturing knowledge-based competencies and then
storing and diffusing that knowledge into business. It is also the systematic and organized
attempt to use knowledge within an organization to improve performance (KPMG 2000).
• KM is really about recognizing that regardless of what business you are in, you are competing
based on the knowledge of your employees (Johnson 2001).
• KM is a conscious strategy of getting the right knowledge to the right people at the right time;
it is also helping people share and put information into action in ways that strive to improve
organizational performance (O’Dell et al. 2000).
• Knowledge management is a framework, a management mind-set, that includes building on
past experiences (libraries, data banks, smart people) and creating new vehicles for exchanging
knowledge (knowledge-enabled intranet sites, communities of practice, networks (O’Dell et al.
2000).
• KM is accumulating knowledge assets and using them effectively to gain a
competitive
advantage (Brooking 1996).
• KM is a framework within which the organization views all its processes as
knowledge
processing, where all business processes involve creation, dissemination, renewal, and
application of knowledge toward organizational sustenance and survival (Malhotra 2000).
• Knowledge management includes a combination of software products and business practices
that help organizations capture, analyze, and distill information (Craig 2000).
• KM is not about technology; it is about mapping processes and exploiting the knowledge
database. It is applying technology to people’s minds (Deveau 2000).
• Knowledge management is the sharing of information throughout a company or even between
business partners. It creates an environment in which the company leverages all its knowledge
assets (Trepper 2000).
• KM can automate the classification of documents while using machine logic that comes as
close as possible to human logic (Hersey 2000).
• Knowledge management is a discipline of identifying, capturing, retrieving, sharing,
and
evaluating an enterprise’s information assets (Bair 2001).
The Knowledge Organization
A conceptual structure of the knowledge organization is as follows.. The middle layer
addresses the KM life cycle – knowledge creation, knowledge collection or capture,
knowledge organization, knowledge refinement, and knowledge dissemination.
The ideal knowledge organization is one where people exchange knowledge across the functional
areas
of the business by using technology and established processes. People exchange ideas and
knowledge
for policy formulation and strategy. Knowledge is also internalized and adopted within the culture
of
the organization. All knowledge workers (people) are in an environment where they can freely
exchange
and produce knowledge assets by using various technologies. This process influences the company
as a
whole in a positive way.
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KM is Not About
• Knowledge management is not reengineering. Reengineering implies one-shot, drastic
“electrical shock” change in organizational processes to improve efficiency. It is a mechanical
shift from one stage of operation to a more efficient stage, and it usually involves radical
changes of business processes and the people involved. In contrast, KM implies continuous
change and addresses future threats and unique opportunities. There is continuous learning,
unlearning, and relearning to ensure smooth change from top to bottom. The focus is on
change that will generate gradual but solid gains in the competitive environment. Knowledge
management is engrained in the day-to-day operations of the business and directed by people
who are directly connected with the changing world of their company’s business.
• Knowledge management is not a discipline. It is another way of improving quality,
profitability, and growth.
• Knowledge management is not a philosophic calling. KM goes to the core of an
organization’s intangible asset (knowledge), revisits the knowledge, and taps into it.
• Knowledge management is not intellectual capital, per se. Intellectual capital (IC)
represents the value of a company’s trademarks, patents, or brand names. Intellectual capital is
a company’s collective brainpower, or a composite of experience, knowledge, information, and
intellectual property – all the property of the organization. Although treated in the literature the
same as knowledge, knowledge, per se, is the consequence of actions and interactions of people
with information and knowledge exchange based on experience over time.
• Knowledge management is not based on information. Information can become knowledge
after people use it in ways that create value. Knowledge has been viewed as information in
action. As we shall explain in Chapter 2, information is context-sensitive; knowledge
is
consensus-oriented.
• Knowledge management is not about data. Data (facts without context) or information
(interpretation or patterns of data) is not knowledge.
• Knowledge value chain is not information value chain. In contrast, knowledge value chains
view humans as the key components assessing and reassessing information stored in
a
technological system. Best practices into organizational business processes are carried out after
active human inquiry, and such processes are continuously updated in line with the changing
external environment.
• Knowledge management is not limited to gathering information from the company’s
domain experts or retiring employees and creating databases accessible by intranets.
KM is a collective concept of the organization’s entire core knowledge.
• Knowledge management is not digital networks. KM is about improving business
processes with people and technology in mind. Effective technology is the enabler of KM, and
people must be in the equation from the start to use technology effectively.
• Knowledge management is not about “knowledge capture,” per se. Knowledge cannot be
captured in its entirety. Problems involving collaboration, cooperation, and
organizational
culture must be addressed before on can be sure or reliable knowledge capture.
Regardless of the business, a company competes based on the knowledge of its employees. A
company
also has a management mind-set that relies on past experience (such as smart people, documents, or
databases) and creates a new way for exchanging knowledge by using intranets, the Internet, local
area
networks, and the like. Consider the case of a British supermarket chain that used a customer
data-
mining application to assess buying behavior. After running correlation analyses among
several
variables, it quickly discovered a clear association between the purchases of diapers and beer by
male
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 43Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
customers on Friday afternoons. Armed with this knowledge, the store began to stack diapers and
beer
together.
Q: Explain the difference with respect to the centrality of decision making between
decision makers today and from pre-1990 and why this is leading to a greater emphasis
on effective KM.
In the past the knowledge for making high quality decisions lay primarily in the personal
knowledge
and experience of the decision maker (CEO). The recent increase in complexity and
decreases in
required response time and business experience of decision leaders requires that additional sources
of
knowledge (e.g., the WWW, other group members) be incorporated into the decision-making
process
to develop the highest quality, most informed decisions. These trends are some of the driving
forces in
the need for more effective KM.
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LESSON 9
KNOWLEDGE HIERARCHY …. FROM DATA AND INFORMATION TO KNOWLEDGE
AND WISDOM
KM Myths
KM is interwoven into all of an organization’s processes. Although effective utilization of
technology is
essential, KM is not constrained by collecting knowledge from domain experts and building
networked
databases or databases supported by the company’s intranet. Finally, KM is not defined in terms of
the
specific knowledge needs of every employee, the relevant knowledge needed, or the knowledge to
be
shared.
There are several myths as well:
Myth 1:Knowledge management is a fad. As mentioned earlier, there are many pessimists in
industry
who doubt the “good fit” potential of KM. Being at a crossroads, vendors push older software
products
under the KM label. BPR and artificial intelligence had their positive turn, although they suffered
from
raised expectations. Unlike earlier trends, however, true KM becomes embedded in the way
people
work in business. So, knowing what you know or what you need to know cannot be a fad.
Myth 2:Knowledge management and data warehousing are essentially the same. The
term data
warehousing implies a repository of data, not knowledge. Knowledge, per se, is how
you take
information and transform it into action. Data warehousing is critical for KM. it is where data,
critical
documents, e-mail, and other forms of information are available for eliciting knowledge at the
time
when it is needed. For example, Sears, Roebuck & Co. has a customer data
warehouse with
demographic information on over 100 million households to help the sales force improve marketing
and sales quality. For example, a repairperson working on a customer’s refrigerator notices through
the
KM system that such a customer is a likely prospect for a new freezer. Data mining serves a similar
purpose, in that patterns within a mass of data allow management to better understand trends
and
directions in a product or consumer preference – a necessary dimension of KM.
Myth 3:Knowledge management is a new concept. As a concept, KM has been practiced by
successful
firms as far back as the early 1980s. Companies like Ford and General Motors Corporation have
been
exchanging design information and collaborating on design projects worldwide using technology
all
along. Today’s version of KM goes under customer profiling, where a supermarket clerk scans a
store-
generated customer card to determine patterns of purchases and consumer preferences by data,
by
product, and by location. The idea is the same as it has been for the past 2 decades, except that
in
today’s KM, technology has taken on a special role in the way knowledge is shared and
disseminated.
Myth 4:Knowledge management is mere technology. This is a serious misconception. KM is
really
about people, relationships, and a new way of working together as an entity in an organizational
setting.
It is a unique way of thinking about work and about working. Imagine a knowledge community
of
employees with common interests sharing information on best practice that help everyone do a
more
efficient job. KM will work only if there is trust and confidence among coworkers. Over 80 percent
of
all technology-centered KM efforts have been known to fail because of a lack of attention to people
.
Myth 5:Technology can store and distribute human intelligence. Data may be stored in a centralized
database for employee access, but that does not ensure that employees will use the information.
Ia
turbulent competitive environment, one cannot assume that companies can predict the
right
information for the right employee. So, it is hardly the case that technology
distributes human
intelligence. It is impossible to build a KM system that predicts who the right person is and at what
time
he or she needs specific information for decision making. Tacit knowledge exists within a
person’s
brain; information or “knowledge” stored within the database can be viewed as a valuable
exchange
between people to make sense of a situation but should not be interpreted as human intelligence. In
other words, knowledge repositories stored in computer do not allow for renewal of existing
knowledge
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 45Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
and creation of new knowledge. KM should be considered as a system to be used with
concentration on
the human aspect aided by technology for decision making.
Myth 6:Knowledge management is another form of reengineering. Reengineering is efficiency-
driven-a
one-item attempt at introducing radical change in organizational processes to improve efficiency.
The
emphasis is on cost reduction and making better use of existing operations. Jump-starting
such a
business, however, often results in failure. KIM is an ongoing renewal of organizational processes
to
learn in advance about the company’s future opportunities and contingencies. The concentration is
on
value added activities that demand innovation and creativity. This is ingrained in the
day-to-day
processes of the business. Technology plays a critical role in the way information becomes
available at
electronic speed.
Myth 7:Company employees have difficulty sharing knowledge. The answer is yes and no,
depending
on a number of factors: attitude of the knower, who the requester is, company culture, sensitivity of
the
knowledge requested, availability of attractive motivators, and trust level among company
personnel.
Under the traditional business model, employees with unique knowledge accumulated over
years of
experience tended to protect “turf” by not sharing such knowledge. In a KM environment,
where
knowledge sharing means great potential for everyone including the organization, knowledge
workers
need to be sold on how knowledge sharing will brig them mutual benefits. The terms sharing means
“willing giving away a part” and “holding in common.” It is a “give to get” attitude, and
because
“knowing” is personal, asking someone to share is to ask him or her to give something of
themselves.
Mature or secure people in a stable work environment tend to share knowledge more than others
whose
experience is to the contrary. Also, knowledge sharing can improve bonds between people,
provided the
act of sharing is reciprocal.
Myth 8:Knowledge management works only within an organization. On the surface, this may be
true,
but some of the most valuable knowledge comes from the outside – suppliers, brokers,
government
agencies, and customers. The problem with extending KM initiatives to outside sources is
incompatible
technology, security issues, and complexity of the design.
Myth 9:Technology is a better alternative than face-to-face. We have seen over the years that when
it
comes to real-life experience and use of human knowledge, technology does not hold all the
answers.
The emerging mind-set within today’s forward-looking, creative organizations is that KM must
entail
cultural and organizational change as well as technology-based innovations. Data warehousing and
data
mining are all contributors to extracting and sharing knowledge, but the best knowledge
resides in
human minds. This make a face-to-face approach to knowledge acquisition and knowledge sharing
a
better alternative.
Myth 10: It is a “no brainier” to share what you know. In general, secure ad mature people are
less reluctant to share what they know with others. Unfortunately, in traditional business, people
with
years of experience tended to hoard knowledge rather than share it, because it gave them
leverage,
control, and assurance of a job. Furthermore, “knowing” is personal. To ask people to share
knowledge
is tantamount to expecting them to give something of themselves. Sharing knowledge often
depends on
who the requester is, how sensitive is the knowledge requested, the attitude of the “knower,” and
the
motivational forces at play. To share knowledge, the business has to undergo special employee
training,
instill trust within the business, and give employees and management a chance to cement
relationships
based on trust. A summary of the KM myths is shown in following list.
The Myths of Knowledge Management
1. Knowledge management is a fad.
2. Knowledge management and data warehousing are essentially the same.
3. Knowledge management is a new concept.
4. Knowledge management is mere technology.
5. Technology distributes human intelligence.
6. Knowledge management is another form of reengineering.
7. Company employees have difficulty sharing knowledge.
8. Knowledge management works only within an organization.
9. Technology is a better alternative than face-to-face.
10. It is “no brainier’ to share what you know.
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Understanding Knowledge
The most critical word in the KM area is knowledge. Unfortunately, there is a continuing myth
that
knowledge resides only in books, reports, or documents. This cannot be true any more than
viewing
musical notes on a page constitutes music. What we have here are representations of information
and
music, respectively. What do we mean when we talk about knowledge? Two key
issues are
distinguishing between knowledge and information and determining how they are
interrelated.
Knowledge is neither data nor information, although it is related to both. The terms
are not
interchangeable, and knowing what is needed often determines organizational success or failure.
Cognitive psychology provides and essential background for understanding knowledge and
expertise.
This goal of cognitive psychology is to identify the cognitive structures and processes that
relate to
skilled performance within an area of operation. Cognitive science in general is the
interdisciplinary
study of human intelligence. Its two main components are experimental psychology, which studies
the
cognitive processes that constitute human intelligence, and artificial intelligence, which
studies the
cognition of computer-based intelligent systems.
With these relationships in mind, one can see cognitive psychology’s contribution to
KM.
Understanding the limitations and biases provided by cognitive psychology helps in
understanding
expertise. Human limitations-such as memory capacity and the physical limits imposed by
human
sensory and motor systems-must be considered when attempting to understand how the human
expert
carries out a task.
The process of eliciting and representing expert knowledge typically involves a knowledge
developer
and one or more human experts. To capture human knowledge, the developer interviews the
expert(s)
and asks for information regarding a specific area of expertise that the expert is adept at solving.
The
expert maybe asked to “think aloud,” to verbalize his or her thought processes, while
solving the
problem. People cannot always give complete, accurate reports of their mental processes. Experts
may
have greater difficulty in conveying some kinds of knowledge, such as procedural knowledge
(explained
later in the chapter). Psychologists have long been aware of problems related to verbal reports,
and
through research, they have developed methods for circumventing them.
Cognitive psychology research contributes to a better understanding of what constitutes
knowledge,
how knowledge is elicited, and how it should be represented in a corporate knowledge base for
others
to tap. Because knowledge developers should take knowledge elicitation (also called
knowledge
capture) seriously, they should have a strong educational and practical background in
cognitive
psychology and cognitive processes. Knowledge capture techniques are covered in Chapter 4.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 49Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Data, Information, and Knowledge
Data
Data are unorganized and unprocessed facts. They are static; they just sit there. For example, Ali is
6
feet tall. This is data; it does not necessarily lead one anywhere. However, the meaning one brings
to the
evaluation of this data could be important. Such an evaluation may indicate that Ali’s height
would
make him an asset to the basketball team. This becomes information.
Data is a set of discrete facts about events – structured records of transactions. When a customer
goes
to the store and buys merchandise, the number of socks and the price he or she paid are all data.
The
data tells nothing about the motivation behind the purchase, the quality of the socks, or the
reputation
of the store. Quantitatively, stores evaluate patterns of purchases, number of customers
purchasing
specific items, and other items those customers purchased. Evaluation such as these can be used
to
derive information about customer behavior, the price-sensitivity of certain merchandise, and the
like.
This means that data is a prerequisite to information.
All organizations need data, and some companies depend more heavily on data than others.
For
example, insurance companies, banks, the internal revenue service, and the social security
administration
are heavy number crunchers. Millions of transactions are processed daily. The problem with too
much
data is that it offers no judgment ad no basis for action. This means that an organization must
decide on
the nature and volume of data needed to create information.
Information
The word information is derived from the word inform, which means “to give shape to”
information
means shaping the data to arrive at meaning in the eyes of the perceiver.
Information is an aggregation of data that makes decision making easier. It is also facts and figures
based on reformatted or processed data. For example, a profit and loss statement provides
information.
It is an assembling of facts into a form that shows an organization’s state of health over a specific
time
period. Here is another example of information:
Five farmers of northern Beirut, who had switched crops from watermelon to sugarcane with the
high hope of a
quick profit, could not bear the anguish of crop failures for two consecutive seasons. They
committed suicide after
having to sell the farm to pay the bank loan.
Unlike data, information is understanding relations. It has meaning, purpose, and relevance. It
has a
shape, because it is organized for a purpose. The data may have been reorganized, statistically
analyzed,
or have had errors removed – all performed to add meaning to a message, a report, or a document.
The
medium is not the message, although it could affect the message. An analogy: Having a telephone
does
not ensure worthwhile conversation, although certain telephones make the message clear and
more
easily understood. Today, having more information technology is not a guarantee more
easily
understood. Today, having more information technology is not a guarantee for improving the state
of
information.
Information is accessible to employee’s ad managers through the company’s local area
networks,
intranet, e-mail, Internet, satellite infrastructure, snail mail, or hand delivery. Unlike
data that
emphasizes quantity and efficiency of processing, the focus of information is qualitative:
Does the
report tell me something I don’t know? Is there new meaning in the semiannual report? The
implication
is that data becomes information when meaning or value is added to improve the quality of decision
making.
Knowledge
Knowledge has always been an essential component of all human progress. Our ancestors must
have
employed an enormous amount of knowledge to form an axe-like object. From know-how to use
seeds
for planting to the invention of machinery, to travel to the moon – all required an accumulation
of
special knowledge to achieve the task. When it comes to basics, people use their
intelligence and
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 50Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
creativity to come up with the value-added products and services that take on the
competition.
Knowledge capital is essentially a reflection of how well an organization leverages the knowledge
of its
workforce, the needs of its customers, and the knowledge of the suppliers to ensure
value-added
outcome. Knowledge capital is the way an organization derives wealth from its information
resources
on a regular basis.
Knowledge is the most cherished remedy for complexity and uncertainty. It is a
higher level of
abstractions that resides in people’s minds. It is broader, richer, and much harder to capture than
data
or information. People seek knowledge, because it helps them succeed in their work.
(Relevant)
information available in the right format, at the right time, and at the right place for decision
making.
Knowledge has different meanings, depending on the discipline where it is used. In this text,
knowledge
is “ human understanding of a specialized field of interest that has been acquired through study and
experience.” It is based on learning, thinking, and familiarity with the problem area in a department,
a
division, or in the company as a whole. The focus is on sustainable competitive advantage.
Knowledge
is not information, and information is not data. Davenport and Prusake (2000) define knowledge as
“a
fluid mix of framed experience, values, contextual information, and expert insight that
provides a
framework for evaluating and incorporating new experiences and information.”
Knowledge is derived from information in the same way information is derived from data. It may
be
viewed as an understanding of information based on its perceived importance or relevance to a
problem
area. It can also be thought of as a person’s range of information. Embracing a wider sphere
than
information, knowledge includes perception, skills, training, common sense, and experience. It
is the
sum total of our perceptive processes that helps us to draw meaningful conclusions. For example,
an
investor requires knowledge to evaluate two companies’ profit and loss statements in order to
determine
which one is the healthier company.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 51Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Data Information Knowledge
Statement about reality
(Acharya 2001)
Unsorted bits of fact
(Dixon 200)
A representation of a fact,
number word, image, picture,
or sound
Measurements
(Applehans et al. 1999)
A discrete, objective fact
about events
(Davenport and Prusak 2000)
Organized, systematized data
(Acharya 2001)
Data that has been sorted,
analyzed, and displayed
(Dixon 2000)
Data that has been assigned a
meaning (Liebowitz and
Wilcox 1999)
Data that is meaningful or
useful to someone (Dickerson
1998)
Potential for action; resides in
the user (Malhotra 1998)
A statement of fact about
measurements (Applehans et
al. 1999)
Descriptive knowledge
(Characterizing the state of
some past, present, future, or
hypothetical solution)
Holsapple and Whinston
1996)
Data that makes a difference
(Davenport and Prusak 2000)
Human interaction with
reality (Acharya 2001)
Meaningful links people make
in their minds between
information and its
application in action in a
specific setting (Dixon 2000)
The whole set of insights,
experiences, and procedures
that are considered correct
and true and that, therefore,
guide the thoughts, behavior,
and communication of people
(Liebowitz and Wilcox 1999)
An ideational (i.e., conceptual
rather than physical) construct
generated via the agency of
the human mind (Housel and
Bell 1999)
An organizational resource
consisting of the sum of what
is known (Holseapple 1996)
A fluid mix of framed
experience, values, contextual
information, and expert
insight that provides a
framework for evaluating and
incorporating new
experiences and information
(Davenport ad Prusak 2000)
Systematizing and structure
information for a specific
purpose (Johannessen et al.
1994)
Information whose validity
has been established through
tests of proof (Libeskind
1996)
As can be seen, information is all around, but only a fraction of it is useful in
problem solving.
Knowledge has to be built and requires regular interaction with others in the know in the
organization.
It is social, time critical, interactive, evolving, and created for a purpose but drawing on experience
from
other times and domains. Cooperation and productivity are expected as people work to achieve, not
to
control. Teamwork is a prerequisite for people to talk, compare, and exchange thoughts, leading to
a
culture that makes it clear that “What is my job?” is les important than “What is the purpose of
what I
am doing?”
In summary,
• Knowledge can be defined as the ``understanding obtained through the process of experience or
appropriate study.''
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 52Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• Knowledge can also be an accumulation of facts, procedural rules, or heuristics.
o A fact is generally a statement representing truth about a subject matter or domain.
o A procedural rule is a rule that describes a sequence of actions.
o A heuristic is a rule of thumb based on years of experience.
• Intelligence implies the capability to acquire and apply appropriate knowledge.
o Memory indicates the ability to store and retrieve relevant experience according to
will.
o Learning represents the skill of acquiring knowledge using the method of
instruction/study.
• Experience relates to the understanding that we develop through our past actions.
• Knowledge can develop over time through successful experience, and experience can lead to
expertise.
• Common sense refers to the natural and mostly unreflective opinions of humans.
Data, Information and Knowledge
• Data represents unorganized and unprocessed facts.
o Usually data is static in nature.
o It can represent a set of discrete facts about events.
o Data is a prerequisite to information.
o An organization sometimes has to decide on the nature and volume of data that is
required for creating the necessary information.
• Information
o Information can be considered as an aggregation of data (processed data) which makes
decision making easier.
o Information has usually got some meaning and purpose.
• Knowledge
o By knowledge we mean human understanding of a subject matter that has been acquired through
proper study and experience.
o Knowledge is usually based on learning, thinking, and proper understanding of the
problem area.
o Knowledge is not information and information is not data.
o Knowledge is derived from information in the same way information is derived from
data.
o We can view it as an understanding of information based on its perceived importance
or relevance to a problem area.
o It can be considered as the integration of human perceptive processes that helps them
to draw meaningful conclusions.
Kinds of Knowledge
• Deep Knowledge: Knowledge acquired through years of proper experience.
• Shallow Knowledge: Minimal understanding of the problem area.
• Knowledge as Know-How: Accumulated lessons of practical experience.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 53Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• Reasoning and Heuristics: Some of the ways in which humans reason are as follows:
o Reasoning by analogy: This indicates relating one concept to another.
o Formal Reasoning: This indicates reasoning by using deductive (exact) or inductive
reasoning.
Deduction uses major and minor premises.
In case of deductive reasoning, new knowledge is generated by using
previously specified knowledge.
Inductive reasoning implies reasoning from a set of facts to a general
conclusion.
Inductive reasoning is the basis of scientific discovery.
A case is knowledge associated with an operational level.
• Common Sense: This implies a type of knowledge that almost every human being possess in
varying forms/amounts.
• We can also classify knowledge on the basis of whether it is procedural, declarative, semantic, or
episodic.
o Procedural knowledge represents the understanding of how to carry out a specific
procedure.
o Declarative knowledge is routine knowledge about which the expert is conscious. It is
shallow knowledge that can be readily recalled since it consists of simple and
uncomplicated information. This type of knowledge often resides in short-term
memory.
o Semantic knowledge is highly organized, ``chunked'' knowledge that resides mainly in
long-term memory. Semantic knowledge can include major concepts, vocabulary, facts,
and relationships.
o Episodic knowledge represents the knowledge based on episodes (experimental
information). Each episode is usually ``chunked'' in long-term memory.
• Another way of classifying knowledge is to find whether it is tacit or explicit
o Tacit knowledge usually gets embedded in human mind through experience.
o Explicit knowledge is that which is codified and digitized in documents, books, reports,
spreadsheets, memos etc.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 54Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 10
EXTRACTING GOLD FROM DATA; UNDERSTANDING CONVERSION OF DATA
INTO KNOWLEDGE.
Q#1 How do the terms “data” and “knowledge” differ? Describe each term with the help of
a similar example, elucidating the difference between the two.
To examine the differences between the terms data and knowledge, we need to understand the
meaning of these terms.
Data comprises facts, observations, or perceptions that by themselves represent raw numbers
or assertions, and may therefore be devoid of context, meaning, or intent.
Some examples of data could be:
a. The age and gender of each spectator in a cricket match during a game.
b. The price of each model of personal computer from every possible vendor at a particular
point in time.
On the other hand, Knowledge has been distinguished from data in two different ways. A
more simplistic view considers knowledge as being at the highest level in a hierarchy with
information at the middle level and data at the lowest level. For example, an e-mail address is a
piece of data, the fact that it belongs to a customer is information, and the fact that
this
customer needs to be e-mailed reminders every week to pay last month’s dues is knowledge.
The second way would be to define knowledge in an area as justified beliefs about relationships
among concepts relevant to that particular area.
If we consider the examples mentioned above:
a. While the age and gender of each spectator attending a game is only data, when used in
conjunction with other information like the buying preferences of different consumers,
stadium planners could forecast the kind of prducts that will be sold during a particular
game.
b. Similarly, the price of each model of personal computer from every possible vendor, along
with other information like the shipping cost for each vendor and the mail-in rebates
available for each vendor and for each computer model, provides a potential buyer the
knowledge as to how much he is likely to spend on each computer model he is considering.
To sum up, Knowledge differs from Data in the sense that it helps produce information from
data or more valuable information from less valuable information which in turn results in the
facilitation of an action.
Q# 2 “Information” contains “data” but not all “data” is “information.” Justify this
statement.
Data is devoid of context, meaning, or intent. Information is, in fact, a subset of
data.
Information only includes those data that possess context, relevance, and purpose.
Information typically involves the manipulation of raw data to obtain a more meaningful
indication of trends or patterns in the data.
Let us consider some examples:
a. The total number of television viewers who watched the Super Bowl is mere data.
However, when the data says that the maximum numbers of viewers are found during the
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 55Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
third and fourth quarters of the game, this is information for companies who want to
decide when to place a television commercial.
b. The price of a large bag of popcorn at a movie theatre is data. However when the theatre
management wishes to stay competitive, it is imperative that he finds out the price of
popcorn in all his competing theatres, and averages it out. This is also an example of raw
data which becomes useful information.
Thus we see from the examples above that information is in fact derived from data by way of
some manipulation performed on the data. All information is hence data, but not all data can
be considered information.
Q# 3 Explain why the same set of data can be considered as useful information by some and
useless data by others. Further, could this useful information be termed as
“knowledge”? Why?
Data is devoid of context, meaning, or intent. Information is in fact, a subset of
data.
Information typically involves the manipulation of raw data to obtain a more meaningful
indication of trends or patterns in the data. Information only includes those data that possess
context, relevance, and purpose. So one could say that Information is processed Data.
However, irrespective of whether data is processed or not, whether certain facts are
information or only data depends on the individual who is using those facts.
Useful information can be termed as knowledge, only if it enables action and decisions, or
provides information with direction. Knowledge is intrinsically similar to information and data.
It is the richest and deepest of the three, and is consequently also the most valuable.
Q# 4 Describe the ways in which “knowledge” differs from “data” and “information.” Justify
your answer with a relevant diagram.
Knowledge can be distinguished from data and information in two ways.
The basic view considers knowledge as being at the highest level in a hierarchy
with
information at the middle level and data at the lowest level. According to this view, knowledge
refers to information that enables action and decisions, or information with direction. Hence,
knowledge is intrinsically similar to information and data, although it is the richest and deepest
of the three, and is consequently also the most valuable.
The more advanced view of knowledge is based on the fact that the basic view doesn’t fully
explain the characteristics of knowledge. The advanced view considers knowledge as
intrinsically different from information. It defines knowledge in an area as justified beliefs
about relationships among concepts relevant to that particular area.
To sum up, knowledge helps produce information from data or more valuable information
from less valuable information, and this information facilitates action. Based on the new ly
generated information, as well as the relationship with other concepts, knowledge enables the
beholder to make decisions.
Q# 5 Explain the importance of knowledge in creation and utilization of information.
Knowledge helps produce information from data or more valuable information from less
valuable information, resulting in the facilitation of an action or decision.
As discussed above, knowledge helps convert data into information. The use of information to
make the decision requires knowledge as well. The decisions, as well as certain
unrelated
factors, lead to events, which cause generation of further data. The events, the use
of
information, and the information system might cause modifications in the knowledge itself.
Knowledge is vital in the ongoing cycle of creation of data, information, and decision making,
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 56Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
which in turn leads to events which generate further data and information. Knowledge is both
the catalyst and the end product of this continuous cycle of events.
Q# 6 How does the subjective view of knowledge differ from the objective view? Explain how
knowledge can be viewed as a state of mind, as a practice, as objects, as access to
information and as capability.
Knowledge can be viewed subjectively or objectively.
The Subjective view of knowledge refers to it as an ongoing accomplishment, which
continuously affects and is influenced by social practices. It cannot be placed at a
single
location, as it has no existence independent of social practices and human experiences.
The Subjective view represents knowledge as using two possible perspectives:
a) As a state of mind – this view considers knowledge as being a state of an individual’s
mind and organizational knowledge is viewed as the beliefs of the individuals within the
organization.
b) As a practice -- this perspective, also knowledge is viewed as being held by a group and
cannot be broken down into separate elements possessed by individuals. Moreover, this
knowledge resides not in anyone’s head but in practice. Knowledge is reflected in
organizational activities rather than in the minds of the organization’s individuals.
According to the Objective view, reality is independent of human perceptions and can be
structured in terms of categories and concepts. In this way knowledge can be located in the
form of an object or a capability that can be discovered or improved by human agents. The
objective view considers knowledge from three possible perspectives.
When looked at objectively, knowledge is represented in three possible perspectives: as an
object, as access to information, or as a capability:
a) Knowledge as Objects – views knowledge as an item that can be stored, transferred,
manipulated, and can exist in a variety of locations.
b) Knowledge as Access to Information -- considers knowledge as something that enables
access and utilization of information. This perspective extends the view of knowledge as
objects, emphasizing the accessibility of the knowledge objects.
c) Knowledge as Capability -- this perspective differs from the last two perspectives on
Knowledge as Objects in terms of the way in which knowledge can be applied to influence
an action. This perspective places emphasis on knowledge as a strategic capability that can
potentially be applied to seek a competitive advantage.
Q#7 What is the difference between knowledge characterized as “know what” and “know
how”? In these situations, how would you classify the knowledge a computer
programmer has?
One of the ways in which knowledge can be classified is into Declarative Knowledge and
Procedural Knowledge.
a) Declarative Knowledge (Substantive Knowledge) – which focuses on beliefs about
relationships among variables. Declarative knowledge can be stated in the form of
propositions, expected correlations, or formulas relating concepts represented as variables.
It is for this reason that Declarative knowledge is often characterized as “know what.”
Example: The average fuel consumption of a particular car is declarative knowledge.
b) Procedural Knowledge - focuses on beliefs relating sequences of steps or actions to achieve
a certain outcome. It is for this reason that procedural knowledge is often characterized as
“know how.”
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 57Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Example: Following steps to fix a car to improve its petrol mileage, involves
procedural knowledge.
The knowledge a computer programmer has can be termed as both declarative as well as
procedural knowledge. The programmer needs to know the syntax of the language which is
declarative knowledge. However he also needs to know the logic steps to take to develop his
computer program, which is where his procedural knowledge is used.
Explicit knowledge is however used at a very basic level. This was probably used by the player
to learn the rules of the game, but once the player is familiar with the rules, this knowledge is
converted to tacit knowledge in his brain.
Q# 8 What is general knowledge? How does it differ from specific knowledge? Describe the
types of specific knowledge with suitable examples.
One form of classifying knowledge is whether it is possessed widely or narrowly. This is usually
in the form of General Knowledge or Specific Knowledge.
General Knowledge is possessed by a large number of people and is easily transferred from one
person to another. For example, it is general knowledge that the earth revolves around the sun.
This knowledge is easily passed on from high school teacher to students.
Specific Knowledge, on the other hand, is often referred to as Idiosyncratic Knowledge due to
the fact that it is possessed by a very limited number of individuals, and is difficult to transfer
among individuals. In the example above, while it is general knowledge that the earth revolves
around the sun, it is specific knowledge of scientists who know the exact distance between the
earth and the sun based on its orbit.
Further, specific knowledge can be of two types: technically-specific knowledge and
contextually-specific knowledge.
a) Technically-specific knowledge is deep knowledge about a specific area and
includes
knowledge about the tools and techniques that may be used to address problems in that
area. This kind of knowledge is often acquired as a part of some formal training and is then
augmented through experience in the field. For example, the exact distance between the
earth and the sun, as mentioned in the example above.
b) Contextually-specific knowledge refers to the knowledge of particular circumstances of
time and place in which work is to be performed. Contextually-specific knowledge pertains
to the organization and the organizational subunit within which tasks are performed. This
type of knowledge cannot be acquired through formal training, but instead must be
obtained from within the specific context. For example, an astro-physicist is able to
calculate based on his experience and knowledge the exact duration and time an eclipse is
likely to occur.
Q# 9 What is “expertise”? Distinguish among the three types of expertise.
Expertise is defined as knowledge of higher quality, which addresses the degree of knowledge.
This term refers to very specific knowledge, and one who possesses expertise is able to perform
a task much better that those who do not. A person can be an expert at a particular task
irrespective of how sophisticated that area of expertise is.
To truly understand the meaning of an expert, and expertise, the skill levels of experts from
different domains should not be compared to each other and the concept of expertise must be
further classified for different types of domains. All experts require more or less the same
cognitive skills. The difference however lies in the depth of their expertise when compared to
others from their own domains. For example, a race car driver has more skill than the average
car driver.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 58Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Q. # 10 Contrast the differences between knowledge in people and knowledge in artifacts.
Describe the various repositories of knowledge within organizational entities.
Knowledge resides in several different locations or reservoirs. These can be classified into
Knowledge in People, Knowledge in Artifacts, and Knowledge in Organizational Entities.
1. Knowledge in People -- A considerable component of knowledge is stored in people, often
in individuals within organizations. Considerable knowledge also resides within groups due
to the relationships among the members of the group. Groups also form beliefs about what
works well and what does not, and this knowledge is over and above the knowledge
residing in each individual member. Communities of practice, which develop as individuals
interact frequently with each other to discuss topics of mutual interest, are a good example
of this.
2. Knowledge in Artifacts -- Significant amount of knowledge is stored in organizational
artifacts. It could be stored in practices, organizational routines, or sequential patterns of
interaction. Knowledge in artifacts are often embedded in procedures, rules, and norms
that is developed through experience over time and guide future behavior. Considerable
knowledge is also often stored in technologies and systems. Knowledge repositories
represent a third way of storing knowledge in artifacts. For example, a log of customer calls
forms a good repository of information to develop a frequently asked questions section of
an organization’s Website.
3. Knowledge in Organizational Entities -- Knowledge in these entities can be considered at
three levels:
a) Organizational units/Parts of the Organization -- represents a formal grouping of
individuals, who come together not because of common interests but rather, because of
organizational structuring. When individuals occupying certain roles in an organizational
unit depart and are replaced by others, the incumbents inherit some, but not all, of the
knowledge developed by their predecessors, via the systems, practices, and relationships
within that unit.
b) An Entire Organization -- such as a business unit or a corporation, also stores certain
knowledge, especially contextually specific knowledge. Its norms, values, practices, and
culture within the organization, and across its organizational units, contain knowledge that
is not stored within the mind of any one individual. The way in which the organization
responds to environmental events is dependent on the knowledge stored in individuals and
organizational units as well as in the overall organizational knowledge that has developed
through positive and negative experiences over time.
c) Interorganizational relationships -- As organizations establish and consolidate relationships
with customers and suppliers, they draw upon knowledge embedded in those relationships.
Organizations often learn from their customers’ experience with products about how these
can be improved. They can also learn about new products that might be appealing to
customers.
Q# 11 Determine the various types of knowledge you are used to. You should be able to state
at least one of each type.
Knowledge has been classified and characterized in several different ways. In reading this
chapter, we see examples of the various types of knowledge being used.
Declarative Knowledge – has been used in terms of the meanings of English words (such as
“physical,” “cognitive,” etc., and the meanings of various punctuation marks, such as “,” and
“.”
Procedural Knowledge – was used in the actual reading of this book. When you reached the
end of a page, you knew that you now needed to move on to the next page or turn to the next
page, until you’ve reached the end of the book.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 59Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Tacit Knowledge – gained from reading the preface of this book, which tells you about the
book and its contents, helps understand this chapter.
Explicit Knowledge – contained in the text of the chapter helps understand the tables and
figures in the chapter.
General Knowledge – about topics such as restaurant, coins, and hurricanes , was used to
understand the concepts explained in the chapter.
Specific Knowledge – was used to apply the concepts the student read about in the chapter to
real -world situations she may have encountered at her work place.
Japanese companies, however, have a very different understanding of knowledge. They recognize
that
the knowledge expressed in words and numbers represents only the tip of the iceberg. They
view
knowledge as being primarily “tacit” – something not easily visible and expressible. Tacit
knowledge is
highly personal and hard to formalize, making it difficult to communicate or to share with
others.
Subjective insights, intuitions, and hunches fall into this category of knowledge.
Furthermore, tacit
knowledge is deeply rooted in an individual’s action and experience, as well as in the ideals, values,
or
emotions he or she embraces.
To be more precise, tacit knowledge can be segmented into two dimensions. The first is the
technical
dimension, which encompasses the kind of informal and hard-to-down skills or crafts captured in
the
term “know-how.” A master craftsman, for example, develops a wealth of expertise “at his
fingertips”
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 73
Knowledge creation
Continuous innovation
Competitive advantageKnowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
after years of experience. But he is often unable to articulate the scientific or technical principles
behind
what he knows.
At the same time, tacit knowledge contains an important cognitive dimension. It consists of
schemata,
mental models, beliefs, and perceptions so ingrained that we take them for granted. The
cognitive
dimension of tacit knowledge reflects our image of reality (what is) and our vision for the future
(what
ought to be). Though they cannot be articulated very easily, these implicit models shape the way
we
perceive the world around us.
The distinction between explicit knowledge and tacit knowledge is the key to
understanding the
differences between the Western approach to knowledge and the Japanese approach to
knowledge.
Explicit knowledge can easily be “processed” by a computer, transmitted electronically, or
stored I
databases. But the subjective and intuitive nature of tacit knowledge makes it difficult to process
or
transmit the acquired knowledge in any systematic or logical manner. For tacit
knowledge to be
communicated and shared within the organization, it has to be converted into words or numbers that
anyone can understand. It is precisely during the time this conversion takes place – from
tacit to
explicit, and, as we shall see, back again into tacit – that organizational knowledge is created.
Although Western managers have been more accustomed to dealing with explicit
knowledge, the
recognition of tacit knowledge and its importance has a number of crucially relevant implications.
First,
it gives rise to a whole different view of the organization – not as machine for processing
information
but as a living organism. Within this context, sharing an understanding of what the company stands
for,
where it is going, what kind of a world it wants to live in, and how to make that world a reality
becomes
much more crucial than processing objective information. Highly subjective insights,
intuitions, and
hunches are an integral part of knowledge. Knowledge also embraces ideals, values, and emotion as
well
as images and symbols. These soft and qualitative elements are crucial to an understanding of
the
Japanese view of knowledge.
The Japanese have come to realize that tacit knowledge cannot be easily communicated to
others.
Everyone in Japan would agree that Shigeo Nagashima, nicknamed “Mr. Baseball” in Japan, is one
of
the greatest baseball players of all time. Having had the opportunity of meeting him in person, we
asked
him why he was so successful in rising to the occasion and hitting so many game-winning runs in
tight
moments. He used a lot of figurative language and body movement, but couldn’t explain exactly
what
he meant. His words were not very logical or systematic. In the end, Nagashima simply said, “You
have
to feel it.”
In fact, the most powerful learning comes from direct experience. A child learns to eat, walk, and
talk
through trial and error; she or he learns with the body, not only with the mind.
Similarly, managers in Japan emphasize the importance of learning from direct experience as
well as
through trial and error. Like a child learning to eat, walk, and talk, they learn with their
minds and
bodies. This tradition of emphasizing the oneness of body and mind has been a unique feature of
Japanese thinking since the establishment of Zen Buddhism. It stands in sharp contrast to the
thinking
behind the “learning organization,” in phrase that has become a conceptual catch all of
the new
business organization. Peter Senge (1990), the apostle of the learning organization, utilizes
“systems
thinking” to shift the mind from seeing the parts to seeing the whole. Systems thinking, according
to
Senge, is a conceptual framework, a body of knowledge and tools that has been developed over the
past
50 years in the West to help people see the full pattern more clearly. The focus of the
learning
organization is clearly on learning with the mind, not with the body. Senge goes a step further and
says
that trial-and-error learning is a delusion, since the most critical decisions made in an organization
have
system wide consequences stretching over years and decades, a time frame that makes learning
from
direct experience impossibility.
The second implication of tacit knowledge follows naturally from the first. Once the importance of
tacit knowledge is realized, then on begins to think about innovation in a whole new way. It is not
just
about putting to ether diverse bits of data and information. It is a highly individual process of
personal
and organizational self-renewal. The personal commitment of the employees and their identity with
the
company and its mission become indispensable. In this respect, the creation of new knowledge is
as
much about ideals as it is about ideas. And that fact fuels innovation. The essence of innovation is
to
recreate the world according to a particular ideal or vision. To create new knowledge means
quite
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 74Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
literally to re-create the company and everyone in it in an ongoing process of
personal and
organizational self renewal. It is not the responsibility of the selected few-a specialist in research
and
development, strategic planning, or marketing – but that of everyone in the organization.
Creating new knowledge is also not simply a matter of learning from others or acquiring
knowledge
from the outside. Knowledge has to be built on its own, frequently requiring intensive and laborious
interaction among members of the organization. New-product development team members at
Canon,
for example, hold “camp sessions” at a local hotel over a weekend to brainstorm through a
critical
problem or issue. In this respect, the Japanese approach is at variance with the
“best” and
“benchmarking” practices carried out at companies like GE, AT&T, and Xerox that are
bent on
learning from others.
Two Dimensions of Knowledge Creation
Although much has been written about the importance of knowledge in management, little
attention
has been paid to how knowledge is created and how the knowledge-creation process is managed. In
this
section we will develop a framework in which traditional and nontraditional views of knowledge
are
integrated into the theory of organizational knowledge creation. Our basic framework
of human
knowledge contains two dimensions-epistemological and ontological
Let us start with the ontological dimension. In a strict sense, knowledge is created only by
individuals.
An organization cannot create knowledge without individuals. The organization supports
creative
individuals or provides contexts for them to create knowledge. Organizational knowledge
creation,
therefore, should be understood as a process that "organizationally" amplifies the knowledge
created by
individuals and crystallizes it as apart of the knowledge network of the organization. This process
takes
place within an expanding "community of interaction," which crosses intra- and inter-
organizational
levels and boundaries.
As for the epistemological dimension, we draw on Michael Polanyi's (1966) distinction between
tacit
knowledge and explicit knowledge. Tacit knowledge is personal, context-specific, and therefore
hard to
formalize and communicate. Explicit or "codified" knowledge, on the other hand, refers to
knowledge
that is transmittable in formal, systematic language Polanyi's argument on the
importance of tacit
knowledge in human cognition may correspond to the central argument of Gestalt psychology ,
which
has asserted that perception is determined in terms of the way it is integrated into the overall pattern
or
Gestalt. However, while Gestalt psychology stresses that all images are intrinsically integrated,
Polanyi
contends that human beings acquire knowledge by actively creating and organizing
their own
experiences. Thus, knowledge that can be expressed in words and numbers represents only the tip
of
the iceberg of the entire body of knowledge. As Polanyi (1966) puts it, "We can know more than
we can
tell" .
In traditional epistemology, knowledge derives from the separation of the subject and the object
of
perception; human beings as the subject of perception acquire knowledge by analyzing external
objects.
In contrast, Polanyi contends that human beings create knowledge by involving
themselves with
objects, that is, through self-involvement and commitment, or what Polanyi called
"indwelling." To
know something is to create its image or pattern by tacitly integrating particulars. In order to
understand
the pattern as a meaningful whole, it is necessary to integrate one's body with the particulars.
Thus
indwelling breaks the traditional dichotomies between mind and body, reason 'and emotion, subject
and
object, and knower and known. Therefore, scientific objectivity is not a sole source of knowledge.
Much
of our knowledge is the fruit of our own purposeful endeavors in dealing with the world.
While Polanyi argues the contents of tacit knowledge further in a philosophical context,
it is also
possible to expand his idea in a more practical direction. Tacit knowledge includes
cognitive and
technical elements. The cognitive elements center on what Johnson-Laird (1983) calls "mental
models,"
in which human beings create working models of the world by making and manipulating analogies
in
their minds. Mental models, such as schemata, paradigms, perspectives, beliefs, and, viewpoints,
help
individuals to perceive and define their world. On the other hand, the technical element
of tacit
knowledge includes concrete know-how, crafts, and skills. It is important to note here that the
cognitive
elements of tacit knowledge refer to an individual's images of reality and visions for the future, that
is,
"what is" and "what ought to be." As will be discussed later, the articulation of tacit mental models,
in a
kind of "mobilization" process, is a key factor in creating new knowledge.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 75Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Knowledge of experience tends to be tacit, physical, and subjective, while knowledge of rationality
tends
to be explicit, metaphysical, and objective. Tacit knowledge is created "here and now" in a
specific,
practical context and entails what Bateson (1973) referred to as "analog" quality.
Sharing tacit
knowledge between individuals through communication is an analog process that requires a kind
of
"simultaneous processing" of the complexities of issues shared by the individuals. On the other
hand,
explicit knowledge is about past events or objects "there and then" and is oriented toward a context-
free
theory. It is sequentially created by what Bateson calls "digital" activity.
Knowledge Conversion/Creation: Interaction Between Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
Westerners tend to emphasize explicit knowledge, the Japanese tend to stress tacit knowledge. In
our
view, however, tacit knowledge and explicit knowledge are not totally separate but
mutually
complementary entities. They interact with and interchange into each other in the creative activities
of
human beings. Our dynamic SECI model of knowledge creation is anchored to a critical
assumption
that human knowledge is created and expanded through social, interaction between tacit knowledge
and
explicit knowledge. We call this interaction "knowledge conversion." It should be noted
that this
conversion is a "social" process between individuals and not confined within an individual.
According
to the rationalist view, human cognition is a deductive process of individuals, but an individual is
never
isolated from social interaction when he or she perceives things. Thus, through this "social
conversion"
process, tacit and explicit knowledge expand in terms of both quality and quantity (Nonaka, 1990b).
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 76Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 14
DIMENSIONS OF AND MULTIPLE VIEWS OF KM IN ORGANIZATIONS
Knowledge has become the preeminent economic resource-more important .than raw material;
more important, often, than money, Considered as an economic output, Information and
knowledge are more important than automobiles, oil, steel, or any of the products of the
industrial Age.,
In today's Information Age economy, knowledge is increasingly regarded as the preeminent
contributor
to value creation across industrial and service landscapes. The collection of information has always
been
of interest and value .to companies. However, it is the emergence of tools that enable companies to
manage and leverage their information and knowledge in meaningful ways that has
engendered
revolutionary change in the way knowledge is regarded. Unfortunately, the ability to
manage and
leverage knowledge has led to a proliferation of knowledge management approaches,
measurement
tools, initiatives, definitions, and procedures. This proliferation has created confusion and
inhibits
companies from reaching their desired destination.
Knowledge Management Overview
Companies in a wide variety of industries have launched knowledge management initiatives.
According
to leading practitioner in the field the potential impact of knowledge management on the national
and
global economy is immense. International Data Corporation {IDC) believes that the market impact
of
knowledge management will be analogous to that of the Internet. The firm makes the following
primary
points:
• Knowledge management will be a catalyst for many il1formationtechnology (IT) product and
service markets.
• Knowledge management will allow companies to establish exclusive market niches.
• Knowledge management will be an integral enhancement for many existing offerings.
There is agreement on some of the principal difficulties associated with designing and
implementing
knowledge management practices:
• Culture change can be painful and exceptionally slow.
• Investment in necessary tools can be tenuous, incremental.
• Knowledge management is a high-level solution sell.
• A wall of confusion about knowledge measurement inhibits growth.
This last point is perhaps the most daunting. Most practitioners of knowledge management
assessments
have focused on qualitative issues; few have employed reliable measure merit tools or applied
rigorous
quantitative analysis to the clients' processes.
Regardless of the difficulties, companies are beginning to realize the extraordinary benefits that can
be
gained from the implementation of knowledge management pro- grams. For example,
automakers
Chrysler, Ford, and General Motors all have aggressive knowledge management initiatives under
way.
Petroleum and chemical companies Amoco, Dow, and Monsanto are implementing
knowledge
management practices. Companies as diverse as health care company Columbia/HCA Healthcare
Corp.
and clothing maker Fruit of the Loom, Ltd., have embraced the movement.
Knowledge management offers opportunities for companies to:
• Capture and analyze corporate information and apply it strategically in the form of
data
warehousing and data mining, decision support systems, and executive information systems.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 77Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• Create processes for worldwide access to information, enabling employees to make faster, more
informed, and better decisions through intranets, groupware, and group decision
support
systems.
• Leverage the accumulated knowledge of past experiences across the company. .Develop and
complete projects with improved speed, agility, and safety.
Knowledge Management And Value Creation
Companies making the investment in knowledge management can realize huge bottom line
benefits.
Those neglecting to do so can suffer tremendous costs in terms of lost revenues,
customers, and
markets. Consider the significant tangible benefits realized by the following companies:
• Chevron realized a $170 million annual savings by pooling and sharing knowledge that had
been scattered and localized in various offices around the world. One team saved $.150 million
by sharing ways to reduce the use of electric power and fuel. Another team saved
$20mi.11ionbycomparingdata on gas compressors.
• Dow Chemical increased its annual.1icensing revenues by $100 million by
strategically
managing its patents arid licenses.
Knowledge Management Initiatives
External structure initiatives Internal structure initiatives Competency initiatives
Gain knowledge from
customers
Build knowledge-sharing
culture.
Create careers based on
knowledge management
Offer customers additional
knowledge
Create new revenues from
existing knowledge
Capture individuals’ tacit
knowledge, store it, spread it,
and reuse it.
Measure knowledge-creating
processes and intangible assets.
Create microenvironments for
tacit knowledge transfer.
Companies: Benetton, General
Electric, National Bicycle,
Netscape, Ritz Carlton, Agro
Corp., Frito-lay, Dow Chemical,
Skandia, Steelcase
Companies; 3M, Analog
Devices, Boeing, Buckman
Labs, Chaparral Steel, Ford
Motor Co., Hewlett-Packard,
Chevron, British Petroleum,
Telia, Celemi, Skandia
Companies: Buckman Labs,
IBM, Pfizer, Hewlett-Packard,
Honda, Xerox, National
Technological University,
Matsushita
It is clear that knowledge management is emerging as the critical strategic activity. Unfortunately, it
is
also clear that a consolidated approach to interpreting, implementing, and applying
knowledge
management principles has yet to emerge. Knowledge management should be seen as a remedy
for
earlier attempts at "reengineering" rather than its latest version. Knowledge management's
focus on
identifying and maximizing knowledge value creation stands in sharp contrast to the "slash-and-
burn"
techniques associated with many reengineering strategies. Indeed, many of the reengineering efforts
of
companies have led to downsizing efforts that have actually cut huge swaths out of the knowledge
base
of these companies. Many are now struggling to repair the damage that resulted.
Personalized knowledge may be obtained from customers during their introductions to the interface
by:
• Providing some type of financial incentives, such as lower prices or discounts.
• Using Web-based client-server technologies to track browser behavior.
The benefits of incorporating customer knowledge via the company interface are many:
• Customer perception of more control over the transaction process.
• Closer bonding with customers.
• Lower company transaction costs.
• Greater volume of transactions per time period.
Appealing interfaces empower customers to do as much self-service as possible. The key to success
is
building interfaces, electronic and human, that deploy as much knowledge as customers need and
want,
to make the transaction process satisfying.
2. Make sure the customer product description and company description are as close as possible.
Customers expect that products and services will match their descriptions. Know based descriptions
can
be used to ensure that they are delivered as specified. The knowledge required to produce the
product
or service can be used to ensure that customer providers have the same product description.
This is especially true for business-to-business transactions: Outsourcing decisions are common,
and
decisions are predicated on the belief that the outsourced service livered as specified.
Similarly, customers use lists of ingredients, fat content, and calories per serving, certifications, and
so
forth as guides for believing that they are getting a food product as specified. Brand names often
serve
as a surrogate for products and services that he customer's expectations and the knowledge required
to
make them.
Over time, customers have become more discerning and look for more than brand names. For
example,
products and services that are assumed to be of high quality customer expectations for performance
over time. Given that it takes more edge to build a high-quality than a low-quality product or
service,
there should be a difference in the description of each. Companies can use this principle to guide
their
advertising, requirements for outsourcers, and production processes to ensure the knowledge
required
to produce a high-quality product/service has actually been applied.
Getting technology to do the work of humans has been the Holy Grail of the Information
Age.
Deciding what human work to move to information technology has been debated
since the
introduction of computers in the early 1950s. We believe the essence of the problem is deciding
what
human knowledge to deploy in information technology (IT). In general the more
complex the
knowledge is, the harder it is to deploy in IT.
Moving knowledge assets to IT offers a host of advantages if two basic principles are followed.
1. Move simple, procedural knowledge that is employed frequently to IT.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 81Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
The focus of early automation efforts followed this principle as companies developed file-
processing
systems to do much of the tedious work in accounting, billing, and basic manufacturing. Since
this
knowledge is employed frequently and follows very specific, well-defined rules, moving it to IT
allowed
companies to dramatically lower the cost peruse of the know ledge.
IT systems have advanced over time, making it easier to embed procedural knowledge that is
activated
frequently. The latest attempt to follow this principle can be found in enterprise resource
planning
(ERP) software from companies such as SAP, People- Soft, Baan, JD Edwards, and Oracle.
These
systems have succeeded largely where they have stuck to this principle. They have fallen down
where
they have attempted1o tackle more complex knowledge or knowledge that is used infrequently.
For
example, attempts to use an ERP system at Hewlett-Packard Labs failed largely because the
system
attempted to embed engineering knowledge.8 Several studies on Nova Corporation and CBPO
found
that attempts to automate simple knowledge that was used infrequently resulted in costs
that far
exceeded those of leaving the knowledge inhuman operators' heads and hands.
2. Capture and embed knowledge in IT that is volatile and might be lost when employees leave
the company.
When employees leave a company, they often take with them knowledge that is critical to
continued
smooth operations. It may not be possible to always capture complex are at the mercy of their
technical
employees whose heads contain the kind of complex knowledge necessary to build and grow a
technical
platform that will allow the company to rapidly expand.
In one case, .the business development executive of an Internet start-up company described his
strategy
for dealing with this issue as "a knowledge redundancy strategy: .two key1echnical employees for
every
key technical job." His company hired two employees for every area where critical technical
knowledge
was required, Given venture capitalists' demands for nearly immediate and continued growth,
technical
failure was not allowable. This is a rational approach because such complex knowledge is not ill
ready
supply in the employment marketplace and is nearly impossible to embed in IT.
However, the
management realized that its long-term sustainability depends on capturing and embedding
critical
technical knowledge in less volatile forms such as IT and is currently moving to do so.
The field of artificial intelligence supports this general principle and has spawned expert systems
and
neural networks. Many of the earliest commercial attempts to embed complex knowledge in IT
systems
were based on what would be lost when "experts" in well-defined areas retired or left the
company.
Neural networks use an inductive approach, learning from the patterns that evolve from the
behaviors
of quasi- animate objects such as electronic ant colonies.
Groupware systems have attempted to capture critical complex knowledge assets so that they can
be
indexed and reused by others in a company.. Many of the large consulting firms such
as Arthur
Andersen and Ernst & Young use groupware systems like Lotus Notes for just this purpose.
Ernst
&Young has a system named Ernie that allows clients to "ask Ernie" when they confront problems
involving relatively complex consulting knowledge, be used for a variety of specific tasks. A
variety of
such agents embed knowledge used to meet specific goals and are reviewed in Chapter
As information technology advances allow for greater embedding o(complex human knowledge,
they
will provide a way to capture and reuse critical employee knowledge. However, until someone
discovers
the algorithm for creativity, it is unlikely that all employee knowledge will be amenable to
embedding in
IT.
Monitoring and Measuring Knowledge
The basic goal for monitoring knowledge is to determine; how well it is producing value in
corporate
processes. This requires following the use of knowledge throughout an Organization's core
processes
and its interactions with the marketplace. As an organization interacts with its
customers and
competitors, it can learn what works and doesn't work. It learns from its customers what products
and
services are valued because customers are willing to pay for them. It also learns that its competitors
are
not far behind. This learning must be transformed into actionable activities within core processes to
develop and produce evermore appealing products and services. The rate at which this knowledge
can
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 82Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
be transformed into corporate core process knowledge will determine how quickly value is
created
through the offering of new products and services.
• Data are letters and numbers without meaning. Data are independent, isolated measurements,
characters, numerical characters and symbols.
• Information is data that are included in a context that makes sense. For example, 40 degrees
can have different meanings depending on the context. There can be a medical geographical or
technical context. If a person has 40 degrees Celsius in fever, that is quite serious. If a city is
located 40 degrees north, we know that it is far south of Norway. If an angle is 40 degrees, we
know what it looks like. Information is data that make sense, because is can be understood
correctly. People turn data into information by organizing it into some unit of analysis, for
example, dollars, dates, or customers. Information is data endowed with relevance and purpose.
• Knowledge is information combined with experience, context, interpretation and reflection.
Knowledge is a renewable resource that can be used over and over, and that accumulates in an
organization through use and combination with employees' experience. Humans have
knowledge; knowledge cannot exist outside the heads of individuals in the company.
Information becomes knowledge when it enters the human brain. This knowledge transforms
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 114Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
into information again when it is articulated and communicated to others. Information is an
explicit representation of knowledge; it is in itself not knowledge. Knowledge can be truths and
lies, perspectives and concepts, judgments and expectations. Knowledge is used to receive
information by combining, prioritizing and decision making; and by planning, implementing
and controlling.
• Wisdom is knowledge combined with learning insights and judgmental abilities. Wisdom is
more difficult to explain than knowledge, since the levels of context become even more
personal, and thus the higher-level nature of wisdom renders it more obscure than knowledge.
While knowledge is mainly sufficiently generalized solutions, wisdom is best thought of as
sufficiently generalized approaches and values that can be applied in numerous and varied
situations. Wisdom cannot be created like data and information, and cannot be shared with
others like knowledge. Because the context is so personal, it becomes almost exclusive to our
own minds and incompatible with the minds of others without extensive transaction. This
transaction requires not only a base of knowledge and opportunities for experiences that help
create wisdom, but also the processes of introspection, retrospection, interpretation and
contemplation. We can value wisdom in others, but we can only create it ourselves.
In our resource-based perspective of knowledge, data are raw numbers and facts,
information is
processed data, and knowledge is information combined with human thoughts. Knowledge is the
result
of cognitive processing triggered by the inflow of new stimuli. Information is converted to
knowledge
once it is processed in the mind of individuals, and the knowledge becomes information once
it is
articulated and presented to others. A significant implication of this view of knowledge is that
for
individuals to arrive at the same understanding of information, they must share the same
knowledge
framework.
The Knowledge-Strategy Link
The traditional SWOT framework, updated to reflect today's knowledge- intensive
environment,
provides a basis for describing a knowledge strategy. In essence, firms need to perform a
knowledge-
based SWOT analysis, mapping their knowledge resources and capabilities against their
strategic
opportunities and threats to better understand their points of advantage and weakness. They can use
this map to strategically guide their knowledge management efforts, bolstering their
knowledge
advantages and reducing their knowledge weak-nesses. Knowledge strategy, then, can be thought of
as
balancing knowledge-based resources and capabilities with the knowledge required for
providing
products or services in ways superior to those of competitors. Identifying which
knowledge-based
resources and capabilities are valuable, unique, and inimitable as well as how those
resources and
capabilities support the firm's product and market positions are essential elements of a
knowledge
strategy (Zack, 1.999).
To explicate the link between strategy and knowledge, an organization must articulate its
Strategic
intent, identify the knowledge required to execute its intended strategy, and compare that to its
actual
knowledge, thus revealing its strategic knowledge gaps (Zack, 1999).
Every firm competes in a particular way-operating within some industry and adopting
competitive
position within that industry .Competitive strategy may result from an explicit grand
decision -the
traditional perspective on strategy -or from an accumulation of smaller incremental decisions. It
may
even be revealed in hindsight, by looking back on actual behaviors and events over time..
Regardless of
the strategy formation process, organizations have a de facto strategy that must first be
articulated
(Zack, 1999).
Every strategic position is linked to some set of intellectual resources and capabilities. That is,
given
what the firm believes it must do to compete, there are some things it must know and know how to
do.
The strategic choices that companies make -regarding technologies, products, services, markets,
and
processes -have a profound influence on the knowledge, skills, and core competencies
required to
compete and excel in an industry (Zack, 1999).
On the other hand, what a firm does know and knows how to do limits the ways it can
actually
compete. The firm, given what it knows, must identify the best product and market opportunities
for
exploiting that knowledge. The firm 's existing knowledge creates an opportunity and a constraint
on
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 115Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
selecting viable competitive positions, while the firm ' s selected competitive position
creates a
knowledge requirement. Success requires dynamically aligning knowledge-based
requirements and
capabilities (Zack, 1999).
Assessing an organization's knowledge position requires cataloging its existing intellectual
resources by
creating what is commonly called a knowledge map. Knowledge can be characterized in many
ways.
Popular taxonomies distinguish between tacit and explicit knowledge, general and situated
context
specific knowledge, and individual and collective knowledge. Knowledge can also be
categorized by
type, including declarative (knowledge about), procedural (know-how), and causal
(know-why),
conditional (know when), and relational (know-with). While these distinctions are useful for
mapping
and managing I knowledge at the process level once a knowledge strategy has been formulated,
our
purpose requires knowledge taxonomy oriented towards strategy and which reflects the
competitive
uniqueness of each organization (Zack, 1999).
Categorizing or describing what a business firm knows and must know about its industry or
competitive
position is not easy. Although firms within particular industries, firms maintaining similar
competitive
positions, or those employing similar technologies and other resources often share some
common
knowledge, there are no simple answers regarding what a firm must know to be competitive if
there
were, the there would be no sustainable advantage (Zack, 1999).
A typical company develops an approach to describing and classifying its strategic or
competitive
knowledge that is in some ways unique. In fact, each firm's general awareness of and orientation to
the
link between knowledge and strategy tends to be somewhat unique and may, itself,
represent an
advantage. Regardless of how knowledge is categorized based on content, every firm's
strategic
knowledge can be categorized by its ability to support a competitive position. Specifically,
knowledge
can be classified according to whether it is core, advanced, or innovative (Zack, 1999). Knowledge
is
not static and what is innovative knowledge today will ultimately become the core
knowledge of
tomorrow. Thus defending and growing a competitive position requires continual
learning and
knowledge acquisition. The ability of an organization to learn, accumulate knowledge
from its
experiences, and reapply that knowledge is itself a skill or competence that-beyond
the core
competencies directly related to delivering its product or service -may provide strategic advantage
(Zack,
1999).
Although knowledge is dynamic, the strategic knowledge framework in Figure below offers the
ability to
take a snapshot of where the firm is today vis-a-vis its desired strategic knowledge profile (to assess
its
external knowledge gaps). Additionally, it can be used to plot the historical path and future
trajectory of
the firm's knowledge. The framework may be applied by area of competency or,
taking a more
traditional strategic perspective, by strategic business unit, division, product line, function, or
market
position. Regardless of the particular way ea.ch firm categorizes its knowledge, each category can
be
further broken down into elements that are core, competitive, or innovative to produce a
strategic
knowledge map (Zack, 1999).
Having mapped the firm’s competitive knowledge position, an organization can perform a gap
analysis.
The gap between what a firm must do to compete and what it actually is doing represents a strategic
gap. Addressing this gap is the stuff of traditional strategic management. As suggested by the
SWOT
frame-work, strengths and weaknesses represent what the firm can do; opportunities and threats
dictate
what it must do. Strategy, then, represents how the firm balances its competitive cans and musts
to
develop and protect its strategic niche (Zack, 1999).
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 116Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Strategic Knowledge Framework
At the same time, underlying a firm's strategic gap is a potential knowledge gap. That is, given a
gap
between what a firm must do to compete and what it can do, there may also be a gap between what
the
firm must know to execute its strategy and what it does know. Based on a strategic knowledge
and
capabilities map, an organization can identify the extent to which its various categories of
existing
knowledge are in alignment with its strategic requirements. The result is a set of potential
knowledge
gaps. In some cases, an organization might even know more than needed to support its competitive
position. Nevertheless, a knowledge strategy must address any possible misalignments. The greater
the
number, variety, or size of the current and future knowledge gaps, and the more volatile the
knowledge
base because of a dynamic or uncertain competitive environment, the more aggressive the
knowledge
strategy required. A firm not capable of executing its intended or required strategy must either align
its
strategy with its capabilities or acquire the capabilities to execute its strategy (Zack, 1999).
Knowledge Gap Derived From and Aligned with Strategic Business Gap
Having performed a strategic evaluation of its knowledge-based resources and
capabilities, an
organization can determine which knowledge should be developed or acquired. To give
knowledge
management a strategic focus, the firm’s knowledge management initiatives should be directed
toward
closing this strategic knowledge gap. The important issue is that the knowledge gap is directly
derived
from and aligned with the strategic gap, as illustrated above. This simultaneous alignment of
strategy
and knowledge management efforts are divorced from strategic planning and execution.
However,
having an appropriate knowledge strategy in place is essential for assuring that knowledge
management
efforts are being driven by and are supporting the firm’s competitive strategy (Zack, 1999).
Combination
To Explicit
To Tacit
From Tacit
From ExplicitKnowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
can stimulate a new spiral of knowledge creation when it is shared with others through
socialization. Internalization requires the individual to identify the knowledge relevant
to
oneself within the organization’s explicit knowledge. In internalization processes, the explicit
acquiring the knowledge can re-experience what others go through. Alternatively, individuals
could acquire tacit knowledge in virtual situations, either vicariously be reading or listening to
others’ stories, or experientially through simulations or experiments. Learning by doing, on-the-
job training, learning by observation, and face-to-face meetings are some of the internalization
processes by which individuals acquire knowledge
Knowledge creation is a continuous process of dynamic interactions between tacit and
explicit
knowledge. Such interactions are shaped by shifts between different modes of knowledge
conversion,
not just through one mode of interaction. Knowledge created through each of the four
modes of
knowledge conversion interacts in the spiral of knowledge creation. Nonaka et al. (2000) emphasize
that
it is important to note that the movement through the four modes of knowledge conversion forms a
spiral, not a circle.
The first element of the Nonaka et al. (20000 model for knowledge creation is the SECI process.
The
second element is ba, which is the name given the location or context where knowledge creation
takes
place. Knowledge needs a context to be created. The context is defined in terms of who participates
and
how they participate. Knowledge needs a physical context to be created; there is no creation
without a
place. Ba, which can be translated to place, offers such a context. Ba does not necessarily mea a
physical
place. The Japanese word ba means a place at a specific time. Ba is the real cultural, social and
historic
context which is of importance to each knowledge worker, and which enables each knowledge
worker
to understand and appreciate information. Ba is the place where information is understood so that it
becomes knowledge.
The key concept in understanding ba is interaction. Knowledge creation is a dynamic human
process
that transcends existing boundaries. Knowledge is created through the interactions among
individuals or
between individuals and their environments, rather than by an individual operating alone. Ba
is the
context shared by those who interact with each other, and through such interactions,
those who
participate in ba and the context itself evolve through self-transcendence to create
knowledge.
Participants of ba cannot be mere onlookers. Instead, they are committed to ba through action and
interaction.
Ba lets participants share time and space, and yet it transcends time and space. In knowledge
creation,
especially in socialization and externalization, it is important for participants to share time and
space. A
close physical interaction is important in sharing the context and forming a common language
among
participants. Also, since knowledge is intangible, unbounded and dynamic and cannot be stocked,
ba
works as the platform of knowledge creation by collecting the applied knowledge of the area into a
certain time and spaces and integrating it. However, as ba can be a mental or virtual place as well as
a
physical place, it does not have to be bound to a certain space and time.
The third and final element of the knowledge creation model is knowledge assets. Assets are
firm-
specific resources that are used to create value for the firm. Knowledge assets are resources
required to
support the knowledge creating process. Important knowledge assets are trust, roles and routines.
Trust
is required to stimulate knowledge workers to share knowledge and to enter into a social
knowledge
creation process. Roles have to be defined so that knowledge workers are familiar with
how the
knowledge creation process is to take place. Routines are important to know, so that
different
knowledge workers in different roles handle time and place and frequencies for knowledge
creation
equally. Knowledge assets must be built and used internally in order to be valuable to the firm, as
they
cannot be acquired externally.
To understand how knowledge assets are created, acquired and exploited, Nonaka et
al. (2000)
proposed to categorize knowledge assets into four types: experiential knowledge assets,
conceptual
knowledge assets, systemic knowledge assets and routine knowledge assets. Experiential
knowledge
assets consist of the shared tacit knowledge that is built through shared hands-on experience
amongst
the members of the organization, and between the members of the organization and its
customers,
suppliers and affiliated firms. Skills and know-how that area acquired and accumulated by
individuals
through experiences at work are examples of experiential knowledge assets.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 130Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Conceptual knowledge assets consist of explicit knowledge articulated through mages,
symbols and
language. They are the assets based on the concepts held by customers and members
of the
organization. Systemic knowledge assets consist of systematized and packaged explicit knowledge,
such
as explicitly stated technologies, product specifications, manuals, and documented and
packaged
information about customers and suppliers. Routine knowledge assets consist of the tacit
knowledge
that is routinized and embedded in the actions and practices of the organization.
Know-how,
organizational culture and organizational routines for carrying out the day-to-day
business of the
organization are examples of routine knowledge assets.
These four types of knowledge assets form the basis of the knowledge creating process. To manage
knowledge creation and exploitation effectively, a company has to map its stocks of knowledge
assets.
However, cataloguing the existing knowledge is not enough. As stated above, knowledge assets
are
dynamic, and new knowledge assets can be created from existing knowledge assets.
The three elements of the knowledge creation model – SECI, ba and assets – represent requirements
which all have to be taken care of by management to achieve successful knowledge creation. The
SECI
process takes care of the interaction between tacit and explicit knowledge, while ba is the place for
this
interaction, and knowledge assets are the resources for this interaction. When moving through the
SECI
process in a spiral, the organization develops new knowledge. This spiral is dependent on ba
and is
stimulated by conditions of growth based on available knowledge assets.
Management is important in all three elements. Executive management is responsible for
articulating
corporate knowledge ambitions. Middle management is responsible for creating and sustaining ba.
Both
executive and middle management are responsible for the availability of knowledge
assets. The
knowledge-creating process cannot be managed in the traditional sense of management, which
centers
on controlling the flow of information. Managers ca, however, lead the organization to actively
and
dynamically create knowledge by providing certain conditions.
Researchers and practitioners argue that most of the knowledge applied by individuals in
organization is
tacit knowledge. Traditionally, organizations have been concerned with management of
explicit
knowledge, which is of less importance to the business at any point in time. However, tacit and
explicit
knowledge are dependent on each other to be complete sources of knowledge. When we apply
the
SECI process, we see that there is an interaction between explicit and tacit knowledge, which
creates
new knowledge. In the externalization stage, tacit knowledge is concerted into explicit knowledge.
The
successful conversion of tacit knowledge into explicit knowledge depends on the common
knowledge
space as well as use of means such as metaphors, analogy and mental models. Such
means help
individuals express knowledge in words and numbers and share it in the form of data,
scientific
formulae, specification, manuals and the like This kind of knowledge can be readily transmitted
between
individuals both formally and systematically.
Nonaka et al. (2000) argue that fostering love, care, trust and commitment amongst
organizational
members is important, as it forms the foundation of knowledge creation. For knowledge (especially
tacit
knowledge) to be shared and for the self-transcending process of knowledge creation to occur, there
should be strong love, caring and trust among organization members. As information creates power,
an
individual might be motivated to monopolize it, hiding it even from his or her colleagues. However,
as
knowledge needs to be shared to be created and exploited, it is important for leaders to
create an
atmosphere in which organization members feel safe sharing their knowledge. It is also important
for
leaders to cultivate commitment amongst organization members to motivate the sharing and
creation of
knowledge, preferably based on a corporate knowledge vision.
Nonaka et al. (2000) defined knowledge assets as firm-specific resources that are indispensable to
create
value for the firm; knowledge assets are inputs, outputs and moderating factors of the
knowledge-
creating process. For example, trust amongst organizational members is produced as an output of
the
knowledge-creating process, and at the same time trust moderates how ba functions as a platform
for
the knowledge-creating process. This definition of knowledge assets focuses on
resources for
knowledge creation.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 131Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 26
KNOWLEDGE SPIRAL AND SUSTAINED ORGANIZATIONAL ADVANTAGES
THROUGH SECI PROCESS
Knowledge Conversion: Interaction between Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
The history of Western epistemology can be seen as a continuous controversy about which type of
knowledge is more truthful. While Westerners tend to emphasize explicit knowledge, the Japanese
tend
to stress tacit knowledge. In our view, however, tacit knowledge and explicit knowledge are not
totally
separate but mutually complementary entities. They interact with and interchange into each other in
the
creative activities of human beings. Our dynamic model of knowledge creation is anchored to a
critical
assumption that human knowledge is created and expanded through social, interaction between
tacit
knowledge and explicit knowledge. We call this interaction "knowledge conversion." It should be
noted
that this conversion is a "social" process between individuals and not confined within an
individual.
According to the rationalist view, human cognition is a deductive process of
individuals, but an
individual is never isolated from social interaction when he or she perceives things. Thus, through
this
"social conversion" process, tacit and explicit knowledge expand in terms of both quality and
quantity
(Nonaka, 1990b).
The idea of "knowledge conversion" may be partially consonant with the ACT model developed
in
cognitive psychology .This model hypothesizes that for cognitive skills to develop, all
declarative
knowledge, which corresponds to explicit knowledge in our theory, has to be
transformed into
procedural knowledge, which corresponds to tacit knowledge, used in such activities as riding a
bicycle
or playing the piano. The ACT model has one limitation. It views the transformation as a special
case,
because this model's research interest is focused on the acquisition and transfer of procedural
(tacit)
knowledge, not declarative (explicit) knowledge. In other words, proponents of this model
consider
knowledge transformation as mainly unidirectional from declarative (explicit) to procedural
(tacit),
whereas we argue that the transformation is interactive and spiral.
Four Modes of Knowledge Conversion
The assumption that knowledge is created through the interaction between tacit and explicit
knowledge
allows us to postulate four different modes of knowledge conversion. They are as follows: (1) from
tacit
knowledge to tacit knowledge, which we call socialization; (2) from tacit knowledge
to explicit
knowledge, or externalization; (3) from explicit knowledge to explicit knowledge, or combination;
and
(4) from explicit knowledge to tacit knowledge, or internalization. Three of the four types of
knowledge
conversion-socialization, combination, and internalization-have been discussed from
various
perspectives in organizational theory. For example, socialization is connected with the theories of
group
processes and organizational culture; combination has its roots in information
processing; and
internalization is closely related to organizational learning. However, externalization has been
somewhat
neglected. Each of these four modes of knowledge conversion will be discussed in detail below,
along
with actual examples.
Socialization: From Tacit to Tacit
Socialization is a process of sharing experiences and thereby creating tacit knowledge such as
shared
mental models and technical skills. An individual can acquire tacit knowledge directly
from others
without using language. Apprentices work with their masters and learn craftsmanship not
through
language but through observation, imitation, and practice. In the business setting, on-the-job
training
uses basically the same principle. The key to acquiring tacit knowledge is experience. Without
some
form of shared experience, it is extremely difficult for one person to project her- or himself into
another
individual's thinking process. The mere transfer of information will often make little sense,
if it is
abstracted from associated emotions and specific contexts in which shared experiences are
embedded.
The following three examples illustrate how socialization is employed by Japanese companies
within the
product development context.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 132Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
The first example of socialization comes from Ronda, which set up "brainstorming camps" (tama
dashi
kai)-informal meetings for detailed discussions to solve difficult problems in development projects.
The
meetings are held outside the workplace, often at a resort inn where participants discuss
difficult
problems while drinking sake, sharing meals, and taking a bath together in a hot spring. The
meetings
are not limited to project team members but are open to any employees who are interested in
the
development project under way. In these discussions, the qualifications or status of the discussants
are
never questioned, but there is one taboo: criticism without constructive suggestions. Discussions
are
held with the understanding that "making criticism is ten times easier than coming
up with a
constructive alternative." This kind of brainstorming camp is not unique to Ronda but has been used
by
many other Japanese firms. It is also not unique to developing new products and services but is also
used to develop managerial systems or corporate strategies. Such a camp is not only a forum for
creative
dialogue but also a medium for sharing experience and enhancing mutual trust among participants.
It is
particularly effective in sharing tacit knowledge and creating anew perspective. It reorients the
mental
models of all individuals in the same direction, but not in a forceful way. Instead, brainstorming
camps
represent a mechanism through which individuals search for harmony by engaging themselves in
bodily
as well as mental experiences.
The second example, which shows how a tacit technical skill was socialized, comes from the
Matsushita
Electric Industrial Company. A major problem at the Osaka-based company in developing an
automatic
home bread-making machine in the late 1980s centered on how to mechanize the dough-
kneading
process, which is essentially tacit knowledge possessed by master bakers. Dough kneaded by a
master
baker and by a machine were x-rayed and compared, but no meaningful insights were obtained.
Ikuko
Tanaka, head of software development, knew that the area's best bread came from
the Osaka
International Hotel. To capture the tacit knowledge of kneading skill, she and several
engineers
volunteered to apprentice themselves to the hotel's head baker. Making the same delicious bread as
the
head baker's was, not easy. No one could explain why. One day, however, she noticed that the
baker
was not only stretching but also "twisting" the dough, which turned out to be the secret for making
tasty bread. Thus she socialized the head baker's tacit knowledge through observation, imitation,
and
practice.
Socialization also occurs between product developers and customers. Interactions with
customers
before product development and after market introduction are, in fact, a never-ending
process of
sharing tacit knowledge and creating ideas for improvement. The way NEC developed its first
personal
computer is a case in point. The new-product development process began when a group from
the
Semiconductor and IC Sales Division conceived of an idea to sell Japan's first microcomputer kit,
the
TK-80, to promote the sales of semiconductor devices. Selling the TK-80 to the public at large was
a
radical departure from NEC's history of responding to routine orders from Nippon Telegraph
and
Telephone (NTT). Unexpectedly, a wide variety of customers, ranging from high school students
to
professional computer enthusiasts, came to NEC's BIT-INN, a display service center in the
Akihabara
district of Tokyo, which is famous for its high concentration of electronic goods retailers.
Sharing
experiences and continuing dialogues with these customers at the BIT-INN resulted in the
development
of NEC's best-selling personal computer, the PC-8000, a few years later.
Externalization: From Tacit to Explicit
Externalization is a process of articulating tacit knowledge into explicit concepts. It is a
quintessential
knowledge-creation process in that tacit knowledge becomes explicit, taking the shapes of
metaphors,
analogies, concepts, hypotheses, or models. When we attempt to conceptualize an image, we
express its
essence mostly in language-writing is an act of converting tacit knowledge into articulable
knowledge .
Yet expressions are often inadequate, inconsistent, and insufficient. Such discrepancies
and gaps
between images and expressions, however, help promote "reflection" and interaction
between
individuals.
The externalization mode of knowledge conversion is typically seen in the process of concept
creation
and is triggered by dialogue or collective reflection.13 A frequently used method to create a
concept is
to combine deduction and induction. Mazda, for example, combined these two reasoning
methods
when it developed the new RX-7 concept, which is described as "an authentic sports car that
provides
an exciting and comfortable drive." The concept was deduced from the car maker's corporate
slogan:
"create new values and present joyful driving pleasures" as well as the positioning of the new car as
"a
strategic car for the U.S. market and an image of innovation." At the same time, the new concept
was
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 133Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
induced from "concept" trips," which were driving experiences by development team members in
the
United States as well as from "concept clinics," which gathered opinions from customers
and car
experts. When we cannot find an adequate expression for an image through analytical methods
of
deduction or induction, we have to use a non analytical method. Externalization is, therefore,
often
driven by metaphor and/or analogy. Using an attractive metaphor and/or analogy is highly effective
in
fostering direct commitment to the creative process. Recall the Ronda City example. In developing
the
car, Riroo
Watanabe and his team used a metaphor of "Automobile Evolution." His team viewed the
automobile
as an organism and sought its ultimate form. In essence, Watanabe was asking,
"What will the
automobile eventually evolve into?"
I insisted on allocating the minimum space for mechanics and the maximum space for
passengers. This seemed to be the ideal car, into which the automobile should evolve.
...The first step toward this goal was to challenge the "reasoning of Detroit," which had
sacrificed comfort for appearance. Our choice was a short but tall car...spherical,
therefore lighter, less expensive, more comfortable, and solid.
The concept of a tall and short car-"Tall Boy"-emerged through an analogy between the concept
of
"man-maximum, machine-minimum" and an image of a sphere that contains the maximum
volume
within the minimum area of surface, which ultimately resulted in the Honda City.
The case of Canon's Mini-Copier is a good example of how an analogy was used effectively for
product
development. One of the most difficult problems faced by the development team was producing at
low,
cost a disposable cartridge, which would eliminate the necessity for maintenance
required in
conventional machines. Without a disposable cartridge, maintenance staff would have to be
stationed
allover the country, since the copier was intended for family or personal use. If the usage frequency
were high, maintenance costs could be negligible. But that was not the case with a personal copier.
The
fact that a large number of customers would be using the machine only occasionally meant that the
new
product had to have high reliability and no or minimum maintenance. A maintenance study showed
that
more than 90 percent of the problems came from the drum or its surrounding parts. Aimed at
cutting
maintenance costs while maintaining the highest reliability, the team developed the
concept of a
disposable cartridge system in which the drum or the heart of the copier is replaced after a
certain
amount of usage.
The next problem was whether the drum could be produced at a cost low enough to be consistent
with
the targeted low selling price of the copier. A task force assigned to solve this cost problem had
many
heated discussions about the production of conventional photosensitive drum cylinders with a
base
material of aluminum-drawn tube at a 1ow cost. One day Riroshi Tanaka, leader of the task force,
sent
out for some cans of beer. Once the beer was consumed, he asked, "How much does it
cost to
manufacture this can?" The team then explored the possibility of applying the process of
manufacturing
the beer can to manufacturing the drum cylinder, using the same material. By clarifying similarities
and
differences, they discovered a process technology to manufacture the aluminum drum at a low
cost,
thus giving rise to the disposable drum.
These examples within Japanese firms clearly show the effectiveness of the use of
metaphor and
analogy in creating and elaborating a concept . As Honda's Watanabe commented, "We are more
than
halfway there, once a product concept has been created." In this sense, the leaders' wealth of
figurative
language and imagination is an essential factor in eliciting tacit knowledge from project members.
Among the four modes of knowledge conversion, externalization holds the key to knowledge
creation,
because it creates new, explicit concepts from tacit knowledge. How can we convert tacit
knowledge
into explicit knowledge effectively and efficiently? The answer lies in a sequential use of
metaphor,
analogy, and model. As Nisbet (1969) noted, "much of what Michael Polanyi has called 'tacit
knowledge'
is expressible-in so far as it is expressible at all-in metaphor" . Metaphor is away of
perceiving or
intuitively understanding one thing by imaging another thing symbolically.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 134Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Theory of Organizational Knowledge Creation in Product Development
Product (Company) Metaphor/Analogy Influence on Concept Creation
City
(Honda)
“Automobile Evolution”
(Metapor)
The sphre
(analogy)
Hint of maximizing passenger
space as ultimate auto
development “Man-maximum,
machine-minimum” concept
created.
Hint of achieving maximum
passenger space through
minimizing surface area “Tall
and short car (Tall Boy)”
concept created
Mini-Copier
(Canon)
Aluminum beer can
(analogy)
Hin of similarities between
inexpensive aluminum beer can
and photosensitive drum
manufacture
“Low-cost manufacturing
process” concept created
Home Bakery (Mathsushita) Hotel bread (metaphor) Osaka
International Hotel head baker
(analogy)
Hint of more delicious bread
“Twist dough” concept created
Metaphors are one communication mechanism that can function to reconcile discrepancies in
meaning.
Moreover, metaphor is an important tool for creating a network of new concepts. Because a
metaphor
is "two thoughts of different things...supported by a single word, or phrase, whose
meaning is a
resultant of their interaction".), we can continuously relate concepts that are far apart in our mind,
even
relate abstract concepts to concrete ones. This creative, cognitive process continues as we think of
the
similarities among concepts and feel an imbalance, inconsistency, or contradiction in their
associations,
thus often leading to the discovery of new meaning or even to the formation of a new paradigm.
Contradictions inherent in a metaphor are then harmonized by analogy , which reduces the
unknown by
highlighting the "commonness" of two different things. Metaphor and analogy are often
confused.
Association of two things through metaphor is driven mostly by intuition and holistic imagery and
does
not aim to find differences between them. On the other hand, association through analogy is carried
out
by rational thinking and focuses on structural/functional similarities between two things, and
hence
their differences. Thus analogy helps us understand the unknown through the known and bridges
the
gap between an image and a logical model.
Once explicit concepts are created, they can then be modeled. In a logical model, no
contradictions
should exist and all concepts and propositions must be expressed in systematic language and
coherent
logic. But in business terms, models are often only rough descriptions or drawings, far from being
fully
specific. Models are usually generated from metaphors when new concepts are created in the
business
con text.
Combination: From Explicit to Explicit
Combination is a process of systemizing concepts into a knowledge system. This mode of
knowledge
conversion involves combining different bodies of explicit knowledge. Individuals
exchange and
combine knowledge through such media as documents, meetings, telephone
conversations, or
computerized communication networks. Reconfiguration of existing information through
sorting,
adding, combining, and categorizing of explicit knowledge (as conducted in computer databases)
can
lead to new knowledge. Knowledge creation carried out in formal education and training at
schools
usually takes this form. An MBA education is one of the best examples of this kind.
In the business context, the combination mode of knowledge conversion is most often seen
when
middle managers break down and operationalize corporate visions, business concepts, or
product
concepts. Middle management plays a critical role in creating new concepts through
networking of
codified information and knowledge. Creative uses of computerized communication networks
and
large-scale databases facilitate this mode of knowledge conversion.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 135Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
At Kraft General Foods, a manufacturer of dairy and processed foods, data from the POS (point-of-
sales) system of retailers is utilized not only to find out what does and does not sell well but also to
create new "ways to sell," that is, new sales systems and methods. The company has developed
an
information-intensive marketing program called "micro-merchandizing," which provides
supermarkets
with timely and precise recommendations on the optimal merchandise mix and with sales
promotions
based on the analysis of data from its micro-merchandising system. Utilizing Kraft's individual
method
of data analysis, including its unique classification of stores and shoppers into six categories, the
system
is capable of pinpointing who shops where and how. Kraft successfully manages its product
sales
through super-markets by controlling four elements of the "category management"
methodology-
consumer and category dynamics, space management, merchandizing management, and
pricing
management.
At the top management level of an organization, the combination mode is realized when mid-
range
concepts {such as product concepts) are combined with and integrated into grand concepts {such as
a
corporate vision) to generate anew meaning of the latter. Introducing anew corporate image in
1986, for
example, Asahi Breweries adopted a grand concept dubbed "live Asahi for live people." The
concept
stood for the message that "Asahi will provide natural and authentic products and services for those
who seek active minds and active lives."
Along with this grand concept, Asahi inquired into the essence of what makes beer appealing,
and
developed Asahi Super Dry beer based on the new-product concept of "richness and sharpness."
The
new-product concept is a mid-range concept that made the grand concept of Asahi more
explicitly
recognizable, which in turn altered the company's product development system. The taste of beer
was
hitherto decided by engineers in the production department without any participation by the
sales
department. The "richness and sharpness" concept was realized through cooperative
product
development by both departments.
Other examples of interaction between grand concepts and midrange concepts abound. For
example,
NEC's "C&C" (computers and communications) concept induced the development of the
epoch-
making PC-8000 personal computer, which was based on the mid-range concept of
"distributed
processing." Canon's corporate policy, "Creation of an excellent company by transcending the
camera
business," led to the development of the Mini-Copier, which was developed with the mid-range
product
concept of "easy maintenance." Mazda's grand vision, "Create new values and present joyful
driving,"
was realized in the new RX-7, "an authentic sports car that provides an exciting and comfortable
drive."
Internalization: From Explicit to Tacit
Internalization is a process of embodying explicit knowledge into tacit knowledge. It is closely
related to
"learning by doing." When experiences through socialization, externalization, and
combination are
internalized into individuals' tacit knowledge bases in the form of shared mental models or
technical
know-how, they become valuable assets.
All the members of the Ronda City project team, for example, internalized their experiences of the
late
1970s and are now making use of that know-how and leading R&D projects in the company.
For
organizational knowledge creation to take place, however, the tacit knowledge
accumulated at the
individual level needs to be socialized with other organizational members, thereby starting anew
spiral
of knowledge creation.
For explicit knowledge to become tacit, it helps if the knowledge is verbalized or
diagrammed into
documents, manuals, or oral stories. Documentation helps individuals internalize what they
experienced,
thus enriching their tacit knowledge. In addition, documents or manuals facilitate the transfer of
explicit
knowledge to other people, thereby helping them experience the experiences of others indirectly
(i.e.,
"re-experience" them). GE, for example, documents all customer complaints and inquiries in a
database
at its Answer Center in Louisville, Kentucky, which can be used, for example, by members of a
new-
product development team to "re-experience" what the telephone operators experienced.
GE
established the Answer Center in 1982 to process questions, requests for help, and complaints
from
customers on any product 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Over 200 telephone operators respond to
as
many as 14,000 calls a day. GE has programmed 1.5 million potential problems and their solutions
into
its computerized database system. The system is equipped with an on-line diagnosis function
utilizing
the latest artificial intelligence technology for quick answers to inquiries; any problem-solution
response
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 136Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
can be retrieved by the telephone operator in two seconds. In case a solution is not available,
12
specialists with at least four years of repair experience think out solutions on site. Four
full-time
programmers put the solutions into the database, so that the hew information is usually installed
into
the system by the following day. This information is sent to the respective product divisions
every
month. Yet, the product divisions also frequently send their new-product development people to
the
Answer Center to chat with the telephone operators or the 12 specialists, thereby "re-
experiencing"
their experiences.
Internalization can also occur even without having actually to "re-experience" other
people's
experiences. For example, if reading or listening to a success story makes some
members of the
organization feel the realism and essence of the story, the experience that took place in the past may
change into a tacit mental model. When such a mental model is shared by most members
of the
organization, tacit knowledge becomes part of the organizational culture. This practice is prevalent
in
Japan, where books and articles on companies or their leaders abound. Freelance writers or
former
employees publish them, some-times at the request of the companies. One can find about two dozen
books on Ronda or Soichiro Ronda in major bookstores today, all of which help instill a
strong
corporate culture for Honda.
An example of internalization through "learning by doing" can be seen at Matsushita when it
launched a
companywide policy in 1993 to reduce yearly working time to 1,800 hours. Called MIT'93 for
"Mind
and Management Innovation Toward 1993," the policy's objective was not to reduce costs
but to
innovate the mindset and management by reducing working hours and increasing individual
creativity.
Many departments were puzzled about how to implement the policy, which was clearly
communicated
as explicit knowledge. The MIT'93 promotion office advised each department to experiment with
the
policy for one month by working 150 hours. Through such a bodily experience, employees got to
know
what working 1,800 hours a year would be like. An explicit concept, reducing working time to
1,800
hours, was internalized through the one-month experience. Expanding the scope of bodily
experience is
critical to internalization. For example, Ronda City project leader Riroo Watanabe kept saying
"Let's
give it a try" to encourage the team members' experimental spirit. The fact that the development
team
was cross-functional enabled its members to learn and internalize a breadth of development
experiences
beyond their own functional specialization. Rapid prototyping also accelerated the
accumulation of
developmental experiences, which can lead to internalization.
Contents of Knowledge and the Knowledge Spiral
As already explained, socialization aims at the sharing of tacit knowledge. On its own, however, it
is a
limited form of knowledge creation. Unless shared knowledge becomes explicit, it cannot be
easily
leveraged by the organization as a whole. Also, a mere combination of discrete pieces of
explicit
information into anew whole-for example, a comptroller of a company collects
information from
throughout the company and puts it together in a financial report-does not really
extend the
organization's existing knowledge base. But when tacit and explicit knowledge interact,
as in the
Matsushita example, an innovation emerges. Organizational knowledge creation is a continuous
and
dynamic interaction between tacit and explicit knowledge. This interaction is shaped by shifts
between
different modes of knowledge conversion, which are in turn induced by several triggers (see Figure
3-3).
First, the socialization mode usually starts with building a "field" of interaction. This field
facilitates the
sharing of members' experiences and mental models. Second, the externalization mode is triggered
by
meaningful "dialogue or collective reflection," in which using appropriate metaphor or analogy
helps
team members to articulate hidden tacit knowledge that is otherwise hard to communicate. Third,
the
combination mode is triggered by "networking" newly created knowledge and existing knowledge
from
other sections of the organization, thereby crystallizing them into anew product, service, or
managerial
system. Finally, "learning by doing" triggers internalization.
The content of the knowledge created by each mode of knowledge conversion is naturally different
(see
Figure 3-4). Socialization yields what can be called "sympathized knowledge," such as shared
mental
models and technical skills. The tacit skill of kneading dough in the Matsushita
example is a
sympathized knowledge. Externalization out-puts "conceptual knowledge." The concept of "Tall
Boy"
in the Honda example is a conceptual knowledge created through the metaphor of
"Automobile
Evolution" and the analogy between a sphere and the concept of "man-maximum, machine-
minimum."
Combination gives rise to "systemic knowledge," such as a prototype and new component
technologies.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 137Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
The micro-merchandizing program in the Kraft General Foods example is a systemic knowledge,
which
includes retail management methods as its components. Internalization produces
"operational
knowledge" about project management, production process, new-product usage, and
policy
implementation. The bodily experience of working 150 hours a month in the Matsushita case is
an
operational knowledge of policy implementation.
These contents of knowledge interact with each other in the spiral f knowledge creation. For
example,
sympathized knowledge about consumers' wants may become explicit conceptual knowledge
about a
new-product concept through socialization and externalization. Such conceptual knowledge
becomes a
guideline for creating systemic knowledge through combination. For example, a new-product
concept
steers the combination phase, in which newly developed and existing component
technologies are
combined to build a prototype. Systemic knowledge (e.g., a simulated production process for the
new
product) turns into operational knowledge for mass production of the product through
internalization.
In addition, experience-based operational knowledge often triggers anew cycle of knowledge
creation.
For example, the users' tacit operational knowledge about a product is often
socialized, thereby
initiating improvement of an existing product or development of an innovation.
Thus far, we have focused our discussion on the epistemological dimension of
organizational
knowledge creation. As noted before, how-ever, an organization cannot create knowledge by
itself.
Tacit knowledge of individuals is the basis of organizational knowledge creation.
The organization has to mobilize tacit knowledge created and accumulated at the individual level.
The
mobilized tacit knowledge is "organizationally" amplified through four modes of knowledge
conversion
and crystallized at higher ontological levels. We call this the "knowledge spiral," in which the
interaction
between tacit knowledge and explicit knowledge will become larger in scale as it
moves up the
ontological levels. Thus, organizational knowledge creation is a spiral process, starting at the
individual
level and moving up through expanding communities of interaction that crosses sectional,
departmental,
divisional, and organizational boundaries.
This process is exemplified by product development. Creating a product concept involves a
community
of interacting individuals with different backgrounds and mental models. While the members from
the
R&D department focus on technological potential, those from the production and
marketing
departments are interested in other issues. Only some of those different experiences, mental models,
motivations, and intentions can be expressed in explicit language. Thus, the socialization
process of
sharing tacit knowledge is required. Moreover, both socialization and externalization are necessary
for
linking individuals' tacit and explicit knowledge. Many Japanese companies have adopted
brainstorming
camps as a tool for that purpose.
The product created by this collective and cooperative process will then be reviewed for its
coherence
with mid-range and grand concepts. Even if the newly created product has superior quality, it
may
conflict with the divisional or organizational goals expressed by the mid-range and grand
concepts.
What is required is another process at a higher level to maintain the integrity of the whole, which
will
lead to another cycle of knowledge creation in a larger context.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 138Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 27
ENABLERS OF SECI PROCESS
Enabling Conditions for Organizational Knowledge Creation
The role of the organization in the organizational knowledge-creation process is to provide the
proper
context for facilitating group activities
Identifying, nurturing and harvesting knowledge is a principal concern in the information society
and
the knowledge age. Effective use of knowledge-facilitating tools and techniques is critical, and a
number of computational tools have been developed. While numerous techniques are available, it
remains difficult to analyze or compare the specific tools. In part, this is because knowledge
management is a young discipline. The arena is evolving rapidly as more people enter the fray
and
encounter new problems.
In addition, new technologies support applications that were impossible before. Moreover,
the
multidisciplinary character of knowledge management combines several discipline,
including
business and management, computer science, cybernetics, and philosophy. Each of these fields
may
lay claim to the study of knowledge management, and the field is frequently defined so broadly
that
anything can be incorporated. Finally, it is difficult to make sense of the many tools available. It is
not
difficult to perform a search to produce a list of more than one hundred software providers. Each of
the
software packages employs unique visions and aims to capture its share of the market.
One of the views is that knowledge is a social process. As such, it asserts that knowledge resides
in people’s heads and that it is tacit. As such, it cannot be easily codified and is only revealed
through
its application. As tacit knowledge cannot be directly transferred from person to person, its
acquisition
occurs only through practice. Consequently, its transfer between people is slow, costly and
uncertain.
Technology, within this perspective, can only support the context of knowledge work. It has
been
argued that IT-based systems used to support knowledge management can only be of benefit if used
to support the development and communication of human meaning. One reason for the failure of IT
in some knowledge management initiatives is that the designers of the knowledge management
systems fail to understand the situation and work practices of the users and the complex human
processes involved in work.
While technology can be used with knowledge management initiatives, Ward and Peppard (2002)
argue that it should never be the first step. Knowledge management is to them primarily a human
and
process issue. Once these two aspects have been addressed, then the created processes are
usually very amenable to being supported and enhanced by the use of technology.
Our focus here, however, is on technology that captures, stores, and distributes
structured
knowledge for use by people. The goal of these technologies is to take knowledge that exists in
human heads and partly in paper documents, and make it widely available throughout
an
organization.
Knowledge Management Processes and ICT
Alavi and Leidner (2001) have developed a systematic framework that will be used to analyze
and
discuss the potential role of information technology in knowledge management. According to
this
framework, organizations consist of four sets of socially enacted knowledge processes: (1) creation
(also
referred to as construction), (2) storage and retrieval, (3) transfer, and (4) application. The
knowledge-
based view of the firm represents here both the cognitive and social nature of
organizational
knowledge and its embodiment in the individual’s cognition and practices as well as the collective
(i.e., organizational) practices and culture. These processes do not represent a monolithic
set of
activities, but an interconnected and intertwined set of activities.
Knowledge Creation
Organizational knowledge creation involves developing new content or replacing existing
content
within the organization’s tacit and explicit knowledge. Through social and collaborative processes
as
well as individuals’ cognitive processes (e.g., reflection), knowledge is created. The
model
developed by Nonaka et al. (2001) involving SECI, ba and knowledge assets, views
organizational
knowledge creation as involving a continual interplay between the tacit and explicit
dimensions of
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knowledge and a growing spiral flow as knowledge moves through individual, group, and
organizational
levels. Four modes of knowledge creation have been identified: socialization,
externalization,
internalization and combination.
Nonaka et al. (2001) suggest that the essential question of knowledge creation is establishing an
organization’s ba, defined as a common place or space for creating knowledge. Four types of
ba
corresponding to the four modes of knowledge creation are identified: (1) originating ba, (2)
interacting
ba, (3) cyber ba, and (4) exercising ba. Originating ba entails the socialization mode of knowledge
creation and is the ba from which the organizational knowledge creation process begins.
Originating
ba is a common place in which individuals share experiences primarily through face-to-face
interactions
and by being at the same place at the same time. Interacting ba is associated with the externalization
mode of knowledge creation and refers to a space where tacit knowledge is converted to explicit
knowledge and shared among individuals through the process of dialogue and
collaboration.
Cyber ba refers to a virtual space of interaction and corresponds to the combination mode of
knowledge creation. Finally, exercising ba involves the conversion of explicit to tacit knowledge
through the internalization process. Understanding the characteristics of various ba and
the
relationship with the modes of knowledge creation is important to enhancing
organizational
knowledge creation. For example, the use of IT capabilities in cyber ba is advocated to enhance the
efficiency of the combination mode of knowledge creation. Data warehousing and data
mining,
document management systems, software agents and intranets may be of great value in cyber ba.
Considering the flexibility of modern IT, other forms of organizational ba and the corresponding
modes
of knowledge creation can be enhanced through the use of various forms of information systems.
For example, information systems designed for support or collaboration, coordination,
and
communication processes, as a component of the interacting ba, can facilitate teamwork and
thereby
increase an individual’s contact with other individuals.
Electronic mail and group support systems have the potential of increasing the number of weak ties
in
organizations. This in turn can accelerate the growth of knowledge creation. Intranets enable
exposure
to greater amounts of online organizational information, both horizontally and vertically, than
may
previously have been the case. As the level of information exposure increases, the
internalization mode of knowledge creation, wherein individuals make observations and
interpretations of information that result in new individual tacit knowledge, may increase. In this
role, an intranet can support individual learning (conversion of explicit knowledge to
personal tacit
knowledge) through provision of capabilities such as computer simulation (to support
learning-by-
doing) and smart software tutors.
Computer-mediated communication may increase the quality of knowledge creation by enabling a
forum
for constructing and sharing beliefs, for confirming consensual interpretation, and for
allowing
expression of new ideas. By providing an extended field of interaction among organizational
members
for sharing ideas and perspectives, and for establishing dialog, information systems may
enable
individuals to arrive at new insights and/or more accurate interpretations than if left to
decipher
information on their own.
Although most information repositories serve a single function, it is increasingly common for
companies
to construct an internal “portal” so that employees can access multiple different
repositories and
sources from one screen. It is also possible and increasingly popular for repositories to contain not
only
information, but also pointers to experts within the organization on key knowledge topics. It is
also
feasible to combine stored information with lists of the individuals who contributed the knowledge
and
who could provide more detail or background on it.
For knowledge creation, there is currently idea-generation software emerging. Idea-
generation
software is designed to help stimulate a single user or a group to produce new ideas, options,
and
choices. The user does all the work, but the software encourages and pushes, something like
a
personal trainer. Although idea-generation software is relatively new, there are several packages on
the
market. Idea Fisher, for example, has an associative lexicon of the English language
that cross-
references words and phrases. These associative links, based on analogies and metaphors, make it
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 147Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
easy for the user to be fed words related to a given theme. Some software packages use questions to
prompt the user toward new, unexplored patterns of thought. This helps users to break out of
cyclical
thinking patterns and conquer mental blocks.
Knowledge Storage and Retrieval
According to Alavi and Leidner (2001), empirical studies have shown that while organizations
create
knowledge and learn, they also forget (i.e., do not remember or lose track of the
acquired
knowledge). Thus, the storage, organization, and retrieval of organizational knowledge, also
referred to
as organizational memory, constitute an important aspect of effective organizational
knowledge
management. Organizational memory includes knowledge residing in various component
forms,
including written documentation, structured information stored in electronic databases, codified
human
knowledge stored in expert systems, documented organizational procedures and processes and
tacit
knowledge acquired by individuals and networks of individuals.
Advanced computer storage technology and sophisticated retrieval techniques, such as
query
languages, multimedia databases, and database management systems, can be effective
tools in
enhancing organizational memory. These tools increase the speed at which organizational
memory
can be accessed.
Groupware enables organizations to create intraorganizational memory in the form of
both
structured and unstructured information and to share this memory across time and space. IT can
play an important role in the enhancement and expansion of both semantic and episodic
organizational
memory. Semantic memory refers to general, explicit and articulated knowledge, whereas
episodic
memory refers to context-specific and situated knowledge. Document management technology
allows
knowledge of an organization’s past, often dispersed among a variety of retention facilities, to be
effectively stored and made accessible. Drawing on these technologies, most consulting firms
have
created semantic memories by developing vast repositories of knowledge about customers,
projects,
competition, and the industries they serve.
Grover and Davenport (2001) found that in Western organizations, by far the most
common
objective of knowledge management projects involves some sort of knowledge
repository. The
objective of this type of project is to capture knowledge for later and broader access by others
within
the same organization. Common repository technologies include Lotus Notes, Web-based intranets,
and
Microsoft’s Exchange, supplemented by search engines, document management tools, and other
tools
that allow editing and access. The repositories typically contain a specific type of information
to
represent knowledge for a particular business function or process, such as:
• “Best practices” information within a quality or business process management function;
• Information for sales purposes involving products, markets, and customers;
• Lessons learned in projects or product development efforts;
• Information around implementation of information systems;
• Competitive intelligence for strategy and planning functions;
• “Learning histories” or records of experience with a new corporate direction or approach.
Knowledge retrieval can find support in content management and information extraction
technology,
which represent a group of techniques for managing and extracting information from
documents,
ultimately delivering a semantic meaning for decision makers or learners alike. This type of
computer
applications is targeted at capturing and extracting the content of free-text documents.
There are
several tasks that fall within the scope of content management and information extraction.
• Abstracting and summarizing. This task aims at delivering shorter, informative
representations of larger (sets of) documents.
• Visualization. Documents can often be visualized according to the concepts and
relationships that play a role. Visualization can be either in an introspective manner, or using
some reference model/view of a specific topic.
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• Comparison and search. This task finds semantically similar pieces of information.
• Indexing and classification. This considers (partial) texts, usually according to certain
categories.
• Translation. Context-driven translation of texts from one language into another. Language
translation has proven to be highly context specific, even among closely related languages.
Some kind of semantic representation of meaning is needed in order to be able to make good
translations.
• Question formulation and query answering. This is a task in human-computer interaction
systems.
• Extraction of information. This refers to the generation of additional information that is
not explicit in the original text. This information can be more or less elaborate.
Knowledge Transfer
Knowledge transfer occurs at various levels in an organization: transfer of knowledge
between
individuals, from individuals to explicit sources, from individuals to groups, between groups, across
groups, and from the group to the organization. Considering the distributed nature of
organizational
cognition, an important process of knowledge management in organizational settings is the
transfer
of knowledge to locations where it is needed and can be used. However, this is not a simple process
in
that organizations often do not know what they know and have weak systems for locating
and
retrieving knowledge that resides in them. Communication processes and information flows drive
knowledge transfer in organizations.
Knowledge transfer channels can be informal or formal, personal or impersonal. IT can support
all four forms of knowledge transfer, but has mostly been applied to informal, impersonal means
(such
as discussion databases) and formal, impersonal means (such as corporate directories). An
innovative
use of technology for transfer is use of intelligent agent software to develop interest
profiles of
organizational members in order to determine which members might be interested recipients of
point-
to-point electronic messages exchanged among other members. Employing video technologies can
also
enhance transfer.
IT can increase knowledge transfer by extending the individual’s reach beyond the
formal
communication lines. The search for knowledge sources is usually limited to immediate coworkers
in
regular and routine contact with the individual. However, individuals are unlikely to encounter new
knowledge through their close-knit work networks because individuals in the same clique tend
to
possess similar information. Moreover, individuals are often unaware of what their cohorts are
doing.
Thus, expanding the individual’s network to more extended, although perhaps weaker, connections
is
central to the knowledge diffusion process because such networks expose individuals to more
new
ideas.
Computer networks and electronic bulletin boards and discussion groups create a
forum that
facilitates contact between the person seeking knowledge and those who may have access to the
knowledge. Corporate directories may enable individuals to rapidly locate the individual who has
the
knowledge that might help them solve a current problem. For example, the primary content of such
a
system can be a set of expert profiles containing information about the backgrounds, skills
and
expertise of individuals who are knowledgeable on various topics. Often such metadata
(knowledge
about where knowledge resides) prove to be as important as the original knowledge
itself.
Providing taxonomies or organizational knowledge maps enables individuals to rapidly locate either
the knowledge or the individual who has the needed knowledge, more rapidly than would be
possible
without such IT-based support.
The term IT for information technology is used in this book. Some use ICT for information
and
communication technology to stress the importance of communication in knowledge
management. Communication is important in knowledge management because technology
provides support for both intraorganizational as well as interorganizational knowledge
networks.
Knowledge networks need technology in the form of technical infrastructure, communication
networks
and a set of information services. Knowledge networks enable knowledge workers to share
information
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from various sources.
Traditional information systems have been of importance to vertical integration for a long time.
Both
customers and suppliers have been linked to the company through information systems.
Only
recently has horizontal integration occurred. Knowledge workers in similar businesses cooperate
to
find optimal solutions for customers. IT has become an important vertical and
horizontal
interorganizational coordination mechanism. This is not only because of the availability
of
broadband and standardized protocols. It is also caused by falling prices for communication
services
and by software programs’ ability to coordinate functions between firms.
Knowledge Application
An important aspect of the knowledge-based view of the firm is that the source of competitive
advantage resides in the application of the knowledge rather than in the knowledge
itself.
Information technology can support knowledge application by embedding knowledge
into
organizational routines. Procedures that are culture-bound can be embedded into IT so that the
systems themselves become examples of organizational norms.
Technology-enforced knowledge application raises a concern that knowledge will
continue to be
applied after its real usefulness has declined. While the institutionalization of best
practices by
embedding them into IT might facilitate efficient handling of routine, linear, and predictable
situations
during stable or incrementally changing environments, when change is radical and discontinuous,
there is
a persistent need for continual renewal of the basic premises underlying the practices archived in
the
knowledge repositories. This underscores the need for organizational members to remain attuned
to
contextual factors and explicitly consider the specific circumstances of the current environment.
Although there are challenges with applying existing knowledge, IT can have a positive influence
on
knowledge application. IT can enhance knowledge integration and application by facilitating the
capture,
updating, and accessibility of organizational directives. For example, many organizations are
enhancing
the ease of access and maintenance of their directives (repair manuals, policies, and
standards) by
making them available on corporate intranets. This increases the speed at which changes
can be
applied. Also, organizational units can follow a faster learning curve by accessing the knowledge
of
other units having gone through similar experiences. Moreover, by increasing the size of
individuals’
internal social networks and by increasing the amount of organizational memory available,
information
technologies allow for organizational knowledge to be applied across time and space.
IT can also enhance the speed of knowledge integration and application by codifying and
automating
organizational routines. Workflow automation systems are examples of IT applications that reduce
the
need for communication and coordination and enable more efficient use of organizational routines
through timely and automatic routing of work-related documents, information, rules, and
activities.
Rule-based expert systems are another means of capturing and enforcing well-specified
organizational procedures.
In summary;
Knowledge creation: Examples of supporting information technologies are data mining and
learning
tools, which enable combining new sources of knowledge and just in time learning.
Knowledge storage and retrieval: Examples of supporting information technologies are electronic
bulletin boards, knowledge repositories, and databases, which provide support of
individual and
organizational memory as well as inter-group knowledge access.
Knowledge transfer: Examples of supporting information technologies are electronic
bulletin
boards, discussion forums, and knowledge directories, which enable more extensive
internal
networks, more available communication channels, and faster access to knowledge
sources.
Knowledge application: Examples of supporting information technologies are expert systems
and
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workflow systems, which enable knowledge application in many locations and more rapid
application of
new knowledge through workflow automation.
Knowledge Management Systems
There is no single information system that is able to cover all knowledge management needs in a
firm.
This is evident from the widespread potential of IT in knowledge management processes.
Rather,
knowledge management systems (KMS) refer to a class of information systems applied to
managing
organizational knowledge. These systems are IT applications to support and enhance
the
organizational processes of knowledge creation, storage and retrieval, transfer, and application
(Alavi &
Leidner, 2001).
Requirements from Knowledge Management
The critical role of information technology and information systems lies in the ability to
support
communication, collaboration, and those searching for knowledge, and the ability to
enable
collaborative learning. We have already touched on important implications for information systems
in
previous chapters of this book:
1. Interaction between information and knowledge. Information becomes knowledge when it
is combined with experience, interpretation and reflection. Knowledge becomes information
when assigned an explicit representation. Sometimes information exists before
knowledge;
sometimes knowledge exists before information. One important implication of this two-way
direction between knowledge and information is that information systems designed to
support knowledge in organizations may not appear to be radically different from other
forms of IT support, but will be geared toward enabling users to assign meaning to information
and to capture some of their knowledge in information (Alavi & Leidner, 2001).
2. Interaction between tacit and explicit knowledge. Tacit and explicit knowledge depend on
each other, and they influence each other. The linkage of tacit and explicit knowledge
suggests that only individuals with a requisite level of shared knowledge are able to exchange
knowledge. They suggest the existence of a shared knowledge space that is required in order
for individual A to understand individual B’s knowledge. The knowledge space is the
underlying overlap in the knowledge base of A and B. This overlap is typically tacit
knowledge. It may be argued that the greater the shared knowledge space, the less the
context needed for individuals to share knowledge within the group and, hence, the higher the
value of explicit knowledge. IT is both dependent on the shared knowledge space and an
important part of the shared knowledge space. IT is dependent on the shared
knowledge space because knowledge workers need to have a common understanding of
available information in information systems in the organization. If common understanding is
missing, then knowledge workers are unable to make use of information. IT is an
important part of the shared knowledge space because information systems make common
information available to all knowledge workers in the organization. One important
implication of this two-way relationship between knowledge space and information
systems is that a minimum knowledge space has to be present so that IT can contribute to
growth in the knowledge space (Alavi & Leidner, 2001).
3. Knowledge management strategy. Efficiency-driven businesses may apply the stock
strategy, in which databases and information systems are important. Effectiveness-driven
businesses may apply the flow strategy, in which information networks are important. Expert-
driven businesses may apply the growth strategy, in which networks of experts, work
processes and learning environments are important (Hansen et al., 1999).
4. Combination in SECI process. The SECI process consists of four knowledge
conversion modes. These modes are not equally suited for IT support. Socialization is the
process of converting new tacit knowledge to tacit knowledge. This takes place in the human
brain. Externalization is the process of converting tacit knowledge to explicit knowledge. The
successful conversion of tacit knowledge into explicit knowledge depends on the sequential
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 151Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
use of metaphors, analogy and model. Combination is the process of converting explicit
knowledge into more complex and systematic sets of explicit knowledge. Explicit knowledge is
collected from inside and outside the organization and then combined, edited and processed to
form new knowledge. The new explicit knowledge is then disseminated among the members
of the organization. According to Nonaka et al. (2000), creative use of computerized
communication networks and large-scale databases can facilitate this mode of knowledge
conversion. When the financial controller collects information from all parts of the
organization and puts it together to show the financial health of the organization, that report
is new knowledge in the sense that it synthesizes explicit knowledge from many different
sources in one context. Finally, internalization in the SECI process converts explicit knowledge
into tacit knowledge. Through internalization, explicit knowledge created is shared throughout
an organization and converted into tacit knowledge by individuals.
5. Explicit transfer of common knowledge. If management decides to focus on
common
knowledge as defined by Dixon (2000), knowledge management should focus on the sharing of
common knowledge. Common knowledge is shared in the organization using five
mechanisms: serial transfer, explicit transfer, tacit transfer, strategic transfer and expert
transfer. Management has to emphasize all five mechanisms for successful sharing and creation
of common knowledge. For serial transfer, management has to stimulate meetings and
contacts between group members. For explicit transfer, management has to stimulate
documentation of work by the previous group. For tacit transfer, management has to
stimulate contacts between the two groups. For strategic transfer, management has to identify
strategic knowledge and knowledge gaps. For expert transfer, management has to create
networks in which experts can transfer their knowledge. These five mechanisms are not
equally suited for IT support. Explicit transfer seems very well suited for IT support, as the
knowledge from the other group is transferred explicitly as explicit knowledge in words and
numbers and shared in the form of data, scientific formulae, specifications, manuals and the
like. Expert transfer also seems suited for IT support when generic knowledge is transferred
from one individual to another person to enable the person to solve new problems with new
methods.
6. Link knowledge to its uses. One of the mistakes in knowledge management presented by
Fahey and Prusak (1998) was disentangling knowledge from its uses. A major manifestation
of this error is that knowledge management initiatives become ends in themselves. For
example, data warehousing can easily degenerate into technological challenges. The
relevance of a data warehouse for decisions and actions gets lost in the turmoil spawned by
debates about appropriate data structures.
7. Treat knowledge as an intellectual asset in the economic school. If management decides
to follow the economic school of knowledge management, then intellectual capital accounting
should be part of the knowledge management system. The knowledge management system
should support knowledge markets in which knowledge buyers, knowledge sellers and
knowledge brokers can use the system.
8. Treat knowledge as a mutual resource in the organizational school. The potential
contribution of IT is linked to the combination of intranets and groupware to connect members
and pool their knowledge, both explicit and tacit.
9. Treat knowledge as a strategy in the strategy school. The potential contributions of IT
are manifold once knowledge as a strategy is the impetus behind knowledge management
initiatives. One can expect quite an eclectic mix of networks, systems, tools, and knowledge
repositories.
10. Value configuration determines knowledge needs in primary activities. Knowledge needs
can be structured according to primary and secondary activities in the value configuration.
Depending on the firm being a value chain, a value shop or a value network, the knowledge
management system must support more efficient production in the value chain, adding value
to the knowledge work in the value shop, and more value by use of IT infrastructure in the
value network.
11. Incentive Alignment. The first dimension of information systems design is concerned with
software engineering (error-free software, documentation, portability, modularity & architecture,
development cost, maintenance cost, speed, and robustness). The second dimension is
concerned with technology acceptance (user friendliness, user acceptance, perceived ease-
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 152Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
of-use, perceived usefulness, cognitive fit, and task-technology fit). The third dimension that is
particularly important to knowledge management systems is concerned with incentive
alignment. Incentive alignment includes incentives influencing user behavior and the users’
interaction with the system, deterrence of use for personal gain, use consistent with
organizational goals, and robustness against information misrepresentation (Ba et al.,
2001).
Benefits from Knowledge Management Systems IT are applied in knowledge management for
several
important reasons:
• IT is an enabler of improved individual performance among knowledge workers.
• IT is an enabler of improved organizational performance by new business processes.
• IT is an enabler of improved interorganizational performance by effective knowledge networks.
Knowledge management initiatives applying information technology occur for many different
reasons. A
survey in the U.S. produced the following ranking of reasons for IT in knowledge management
(CIO,
2001):
1. Improve profitability and income (67%);
2. Secure talent and expertise (54%);
3. Improve customer service and customer satisfaction (52%);
4. Secure company market share against new competitors (44%);
5. Shorten time to market of new products (39%);
6. Enter new market segments (39%);
7. Reduce costs (38%);
8. Develop new goods and services (35%).
The survey research did also include questions concerning knowledge management
systems.
Responding companies ranked software based on dollar amount to be spent (CIO, 2001):
1. Infrastructure for knowledge management (61%);
2. Intelligent systems for knowledge search (39%);
3. Data warehouse (21%);
4. Document handling (17%);
5. Company portals (16%);
6. Groupware (13%);
7. Mail delivery (11%);
8. Intelligent agents for knowledge search (9%);
9. Workflow systems (8%);
10. E-learning (7%).
General Electric’s CEO has suggested that knowledge sharing is important for organizations,
Why ?
Knowledge sharing is the process through which explicit or tacit knowledge is communicated to
other
individuals. Knowledge sharing involves the recipient acquiring the shared knowledge as well as
being
able to take action based on it, as opposed to recommendations based on the knowledge being
shared,
which only results in utilization of knowledge without the recipient internalizing the shared
knowledge.
Knowledge sharing can occur across individuals as well as across groups, departments, or
organizations.
If knowledge exists at a location that is different from where it is needed, either knowledge sharing
or
knowledge utilization without sharing is necessary.
Depending on whether explicit or tacit knowledge is being shared, exchange or socialization
processes
are used. Socialization facilitates the sharing of tacit knowledge in cases in which new tacit
knowledge is
being created, as well as when new tacit knowledge is not being created. Exchange, on the other
hand,
focuses on the sharing of explicit knowledge. It is used to communicate or transfer explicit
knowledge
among individuals, groups, and organizations. In its basic nature, the process of exchange of
explicit
knowledge does not differ from the process through which information is communicated.
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If knowledge exists at a location that is different from where it is needed, either knowledge sharing
or
knowledge utilization without sharing is necessary. Sharing knowledge is clearly an important
process in
enhancing organizational innovativeness and performance. Its importance is elucidated by the fact
that
it was one of the three business processes for which General Electric’s CEO Jack Welch took
personal
responsibility, besides the allocation of resources and development of people.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 154Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 29
ORGANIZATIONAL ISSUES IN MANAGING KNOWLEDGE WORKER
Knowledge Workers
The typical knowledge worker in corporate sector works in marketing, intellectual property,
engineering,
programming, and other occupations that involve more thought than physical labor. For
example,
artists in the marketing division who produce the media files are typically considered
knowledge
workers, as media can constitute the intellectual capital of a company, whether the
company is a
knowledge organization or not. Knowledge workers typically add to the value of the corporation by
contributing to the corporate knowledge assets, by documenting problems solving
activities, by
reporting best practices, and by disseminating information in newsletters, online, and
in other
publications. In each case, the knowledge worker is either the conduit for or the
source of the
information.
Customer support representatives are commonly considered knowledge workers because they
work
with information from customers through direct contact; through interactions through the phone,
e-
mail, or traditional mail; or through directly observing customer activity in a retail setting.
Managers at
all levels can be considered knowledge workers if they are involved in creating new revenues
from
existing knowledge by reformatting and repackaging information in existing markets or
introducing
existing products into new markets.
Most KM initiatives revolve around knowledge workers, whether they’re interacting with
customers
directly, indirectly through computer systems, or with other knowledge workers and managers.
Knowledge Workers
• A knowledge worker is a person who transforms business and personal experience into
knowledge.
• Usually a knowledge worker is found to be innovative, creative and he/she is fully aware of the
organizational culture.
• A knowledge worker can be thought of as a product of values, experiences, processes, education,
and training.
Personality/Professional Attributes
• Understands and adopts the organizational culture.
• Aligns personal/professional growth with corporate vision.
• Possesses the attitude of collaboration/sharing.
• Possesses innovative capacity/creative mind.
• Has got the clear understanding of the business (in which he/she is involved.
• Always willing to learn, and willing to adopt new methodologies.
• Possesses self-control and can learn by himself/herself.
• Willing to accommodate uncertainties
• Core competencies:
o Thinking skills
o Innovative teams/teamwork
o Continuous learning
o Innovation/Creativity
o Risk taking/Potential success
o A culture of responsibility towards knowledge
o Decisive action taking
Knowledge Worker’s Business Roles in Learning Organization
• A Learning organization is an organization of people with total commitment to improve their
capacity,
to create and to produce. It can respond to uncertainty, to challenges, and to the change in general.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 155Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• The rate of learning of an organization can turn out to be the most critical source of competitive
advantage.
Management and Leadership
• In KM, we distinguish between managers and leaders.
• Traditional managers usually focus on the present. They are usually action-oriented and spend
most
of the time supervising, delegating, controlling, and ensuring compliance with set procedures.
• Traditional managers were once workers and were promoted to managers. When they manage
subordinates, they are aware of each aspect of the business since they were once there.
• Smart managers usually focus on organizational learning in order to ensure operational
excellence.
• Smart managers can not be expected to have mastered the work of the subordinates. They can take
on the role of leaders where change is the primary goal.
• The challenge is to get the organization moving towards achieving goals (in line with the rate of
change).
• The leader's role in a learning organization is more of a facilitator than a supervisor.
• He acts more like a teacher than like an order giver.
• In case of teaching, the focus is on the transfer of knowledge from the instructor to the learner.
The instructor is supposed to be the expert and his/her role is to deliver quality content and to
communicate the content with potential.
• Learning should essentially promote a way of thinking, not just convey facts.
• In a learning organization, the smart manager can play the role of the instructor, and the
knowledge
workers can play the role of learners.
• The smart manager provides opportunities for knowledge workers to brainstorm ideas, exchange
knowledge, and come up with new and better ways of doing business.
Work Management Tasks
Work management tasks include the following:
• Retrieving, creating, sharing, and using knowledge in everyday activities.
• Managing knowledge workers and nurturing their knowledge-oriented activities.
• Ensuring readiness to work.
• Maintaining work motivation among knowledge workers.
• Allocating effort and switching control among tasks.
• Managing collaboration and concurrent activities among knowledge workers.
• Sharing information and integrating work among knowledge workers.
• Recruiting knowledge-seeking and bright individuals factors to be considered by the managers:
• Time constraint.
• Knowledge workers doing work that the organization did not hire them to do.
• Working smarter/harder.
• Work Schedule.
Technology and Knowledge Worker
• The primary activities of knowledge work:
o Assessment
o Decision Making
o Monitoring
o Scheduling
• A knowledge worker can act as a manager, a supervisor, or a clerk who is actively engaged in
thinking, information processing, analyzing, creating, or recommending procedures based on
experience and cumulative knowledge.
• IT plays a key role in the learning organization in the following processes:
o Knowledge capture
o Information distribution
o Information interpretation
• There exists a multitude of equipment and software supporting knowledge worker's tasks. They
include:
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o E-mail
o LAN
o Intelligent Workstations
• Intelligent workstations automate repetitive, and tedious tasks. They should perform the following
functions:
o Administrative support functions
o Personal computing functions
o Managing intelligent databases
Knowledge Worker Loyalty
One of the corporation’s major intangible assets, and one that can be enhanced through knowledge
worker management, is knowledge worker loyalty. Although loyalty is difficult to quantify
exactly,
knowledge worker behavior that is consistent with loyalty can be quantified. This behavior
can be
modeled by considering factors that positively and negatively affect behaviors associated with
loyalty,
such as a worker continuing in a relationship with the corporation even when competing companies
offer greater compensation for comparable work.
The issue of knowledge worker loyalty to the corporation typically arises when
management is
considering whether to invest additional resources in a particular knowledge worker or
group of
knowledge workers. In the computerized knowledge economy, where someone with knowledge
and
skills in demand can work from virtually anywhere with a computer and an Internet connection, the
issue of loyalty is an important one.
Knowledge worker loyalty can be assessed by modeling loyalty based on the positive and
negative
contributors to behaviors. Positive contributors to knowledge worker loyalty include difficulty
locating
alternative employment, the emotional bond between the knowledge worker and the company,
the
knowledge worker’s investment of time in the company, and compensation. For example, the
greater
the difficulty locating alternative employment, the greater the loyalty effect. Similarly, the more
time and
energy a knowledge worker invests in a relationship with a company, the more likely the
relationship
will continue. In addition, the greater the compensation, the more likely a knowledge
worker will
continue working with the company. The greatest contributor to knowledge worker loyalty,
however, is
a personal, emotional bond with other people in the company.
The negative contributors to loyalty behavior are numerous employment alternatives and a
high
level of frustration with the company. The more employment alternatives that are available, the
less
knowledge workers are likely to stay with the company. Finally, nothing spoils an
otherwise ideal
relationship faster than a knowledge worker’s frustration with management or personal problems
with
other knowledge workers.
Modeling loyalty behavior shows how knowledge worker behavior can be influenced, depending
on
which elements in the model are stressed. For example, a generous compensation
package and a
friendly, supportive work environment contribute to a continued relationship with the
company.
Conversely, offering knowledge workers little or no increase in compensation at an annual review
and
ignoring their complaints and suggestions sends a clear message that they should look.
Test Your Understanding
1. What is a knowledge worker? Do you agree with any of the definitions in the chapter? Why
or why not?
A knowledge worker is a person who transforms business and personal experience into
knowledge through capturing, assessing, applying, sharing, and disseminating it within
the
organization to solve specific problems or to create value. Students may select any definition
and comment on it.
2. List and briefly explain personality and professional attributes of knowledge workers.
• Holds unique values and understands and adopts the culture of the organization
• Aligns personal and professional growth with corporate vision and achievement of strategic
goals
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 157Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• Adopts an attitude of collaboration and sharing
• Have innovative capacity and a creative mind
• Has a clear understanding of the business he is a part
• Willing to learn, unlearn, and adopt new ways that result in better ways of doing a job
• In command of self-control and self-learning
• Willing to grow with the company
3. The self-directed knowledge worker must consider several core competencies. Explain
three core competencies of your choice. Why are they called core competencies?
• Thinking skills: having a vision how the product or the company can be better
• Continuous learning: unlearning and relearning in tune with fast-changing conditions
• Innovative teams: via collaboration, cooperation, and coordination
They are called core because each one of them is a tool that the knowledge worker would
definitely need to use in action.
4. Elaborate on the business roles in the learning organization.
When discussing business roles in the learning organizations, management and leadership
become more important. Smart managers focus on organizational learning to ensure
operational excellence. In contrast, the leader’s role is more of a facilitator, a teacher, a steward
of the collective knowledge of the staff, and a designer.
5. In what ways are data and information considered as givens?
The period between the 1960’s and 1980’s has witnessed success in data processing
and
information processing. The focus then was on efficiency, where computers replaced human
redundant arithmetic work. There were quantitative savings and everyone benefited. In the
1990’s information was collected, processed, and converted into relevant knowledge for the
decision maker. At this level, the focus shifted from quantitative to qualitative performance-
oriented value-added decision-making.
6. What is the difference between management and leadership? Traditional managers and
smart managers?
The goal of management is stability on the job and meeting deadlines. While, The primary goal
of leadership is change. The challenge is to get the department or organization moving in the
direction of the goal(s) in line with the rate of change.
Traditional managers are action oriented, they spend most of the time delegating, supervising,
controlling, and ensuring compliance with set procedures. When they manage subordinates,
they know all aspects of the business because they were once there.
In contrast, smart managers focus on organizational learning to ensure operational excellence.
Because of continuing change and improvement in workplace, they cannot be expected to have
mastered the work of subordinates.
7. How are learning and teaching related?
Learning and teaching are two faces for the same coin. In teaching, the focus is on knowledge
transfer from the instructor to the learner. The instructor is supposed to be the expert. The role
is to deliver quality content and to communicate the content with potential. The interaction
should instill serendipity and thinking about better ways of handling problems. Learning should
promote a new way of thinking not just facts. The key is not listening and retaining ideas or
knowledge, but raising questions that might trigger new ways of decision-making or problem
solving.
8. What do work management tasks focus on?
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• Managing knowledge workers
• Searching out, creating, sharing, and using knowledge regularly
• Maintaining work motivation among knowledge workers
• Ensuring readiness to work, especially during an emergency
• Allocating effort and switching control among tasks
• Sharing information and integrating work among knowledge workers
• Hiring or recruiting bright, knowledge-seeking individuals
• Managing collaboration, coordination, and concurrent activities among knowledge workers
9. Explain the main factors that limit the knowledge worker productivity and ways to get
around them.
• Time constraint: time is the enemy of successful knowledge workers. There is always
more work to do. As a result, either quality suffers or completion time lags. Obviously,
such stress can work against ones motivation to contribute.
• Working smarter and harder and accomplishing little: this constrained is often
triggered by limited time, limited staff support, or financial constraints. Management can do
a lot to alleviate this type of productivity problem.
• Knowledge workers doing work that the firm did not hire them to do: the way to get
around this is for the smart manager to explore the specificity of the task or the job, match
the task to the knowledge of the worker, and eliminate nonessentials.
• Work schedule: the manager should be careful in planning work schedules and work
rotation to assure cooperation and successful achievement of the job on schedule.
• Motivation against knowledge work productivity: Knowledge workers
Are not all programmed to follow the ideals proposed by the management. Avoiding task
uncertainty or job complexity can pose productivity problems and affect the productivity of
other knowledge workers. Motivation is also affected in situations where urgency
supercedes motivation. If productivity takes a nosedive, the knowledge worker can always
blame it on the time constraint, lack of adequate input, and the like
10. Briefly list the vocational needs and reinforces of knowledge workers.
a. Achievement
b. Use of their abilities on matters related to problem solving and solutions rather than
problem implementation based on predetermined, mechanistic tasks
c. Authority
d. High pay and prestige
e. The congenial atmosphere
f. Recognition for work done
g. The chance of exercising responsibility
h. The drive to do different things within the job scope from time to time
i. The social status (importance in the eye of the others)
j. Creativity
4. Cite three companies that qualify as learning organizations. What makes them unique?
General electric, Dupont, and IBM are leading learning organizations. There are many others,
which students should be able identify and expound on their respective unique features. The
ones mentioned here are generally known for coming out with creative products and services
on a regular basis.
5. Does a leader’s job include management? If so, why do we need managers?
Leadership is the basis for successful management. As shown above, it is part of management.
It
implies personality, poise, warmth, decisiveness, and trust by others to follow and
comply with
decisions.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 161Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 30
OVERVIEW OF KM SOLUTIONS AND PROCESSES
KM System Justification
It involves answers to the following questions:
• Is existing knowledge going to be lost through retirement, transfer, or departure to other
organizations?
• Is the proposed KM system needed in multiple locations?
• Are experts available and willing to support the building of the proposed KM system?
• Does the concerned problem needs years of proper experience and cognitive reasoning to solve?
• While undergoing knowledge capture, would it be possible for the expert to articulate how the
problem will be solved?
• How critical is the knowledge that is to be captured?
• Are the involved tasks non algorithmic in nature?
• Would it possible to find a champion within the organization?
Challenges in KM Systems Development
• Changing Organizational Culture:
o Involves changing people's attitudes and behaviors.
• Knowledge Evaluation:
o Involves assessing the worth of information.
• Knowledge Processing:
o Involves the identification of techniques to acquire, store, process and distribute
information.
o Sometimes it is necessary to document how certain decisions were reached.
• Knowledge Implementation:
o An organization should commit to change, learn, and innovate.
o It is important to extract meaning from information that may have an impact on specific
missions.
o Lessons learned from feedback can be stored for future to help others facing the similar
problem(s).
• Key Differences
o The systems analyst gathers data and information from the users and the users depend on
analysts for the solution.
o The knowledge developer gathers knowledge from people with known knowledge and the
developer depends on them for the solution.
o The main interface for the systems analyst is associated with novice users who know the
problem but not the solution.
o The main interface for the knowledge developer is associated with the knowledgeable
person who knows the problem and the solution.
• Conventional systems development is primarily sequential, whereas KMSLC is incremental and
interactive.
• In case of conventional systems, testing is usually done towards the end of the cycle (after the
system has been built), whereas in KMSLC, the evolving system is verified and validated from the
beginning of the cycle.
• Systems development and systems management is much more extensive for conventional
information systems than it is for KMSLC.
• The conventional systems life cycle is usually process-driven and documentation-oriented
whereas
KMSLC is result-oriented.
o The conventional systems development does not support tools such as rapid prototyping
since it follows a predefined sequence of steps
o KMSLC can use rapid prototyping incorporating changes on the spot.
Role of Strategic Planning in KM Solutions
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• As a consequence of evaluating the existing infrastructure, the concerned organization
should
develop a strategic plan which should aim at advancing the objectives of the organization with the
proposed KM system in mind.
• Areas to be considered:
o Vision
o Resources
o Culture
Forming a KM team
Forming a KM team usually means
• Identifying the key units, branches, divisions etc. as the key stakeholders in the prospective KM
system.
• Strategically, technically, and organizationally balancing the team size and competency.
Factors impacting team success
• Quality and capability of team members (in terms of personality, experience, and communication
skill).
• Size of the team.
• Complexity of the project.
• Team motivation and leadership
• Promising only what that can be actually delivered.
Capturing Knowledge
• Capturing Knowledge involves extracting, analyzing and interpreting the concerned knowledge
that
a human expert uses to solve a specific problem.
• Explicit knowledge is usually captured in repositories from appropriate documentation, files etc.
• Tacit knowledge is usually captured from experts, and from organization's stored database(s).
• Interviewing is one of the most popular methods used to capture knowledge.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 163Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• Data mining is also useful in terms of using intelligent agents that may analyze the data
warehouse and
come up with new findings.
• In KM systems development, the knowledge developer acquires the necessary heuristic
knowledge
from the experts for building the appropriate knowledge base.
• Knowledge capture and knowledge transfer are often carried out through teams.
• Knowledge capture includes determining feasibility, choosing the appropriate expert, tapping the
expert’s knowledge, retapping knowledge to plug the gaps in the system, and verify/validate the
knowledge base.
The Role of Rapid Prototyping
• In most of the cases, knowledge developers use iterative approach for capturing knowledge.
• Foe example, the knowledge developer may start with a prototype (based on the somehow
limited
knowledge captured from the expert during the first few sessions).
• The following can turn the approach into rapid prototyping:
o Knowledge developer explains the preliminary/fundamental procedure based on
rudimentary knowledge extracted from the expert during the few past sessions.
o The expert reacts by saying certain remarks.
o While the expert watches, the knowledge developer enters the additional knowledge into
the computer-based system (that represents the prototype).
o The knowledge developer again runs the modified prototype and continues adding
additional knowledge as suggested by the expert till the expert is satisfied.
• The spontaneous, and iterative process of building a knowledge base is referred to
as rapid
prototyping.
Expert Selection
The expert must have excellent communication skill to be able to communicate information
understandably and in sufficient detail.
Some common questions that may arise in case of expert selection:
• How to know that the so-called expert is in fact an expert?
• Will he/she stay with the project till its completion?
• What backup would be available in case the expert loses interest or quits?
• How are the knowledge developer going to know what does and what does not lie within the
expert's area of expertise?
The Role of the Knowledge Developer
• The knowledge developer can be considered as the architect of the system.
• He/she identifies the problem domain, captures knowledge, writes/tests the heuristics that
represent knowledge, and co-ordinates the entire project.
• Some necessary attributes of knowledge developer:
o Communication skills.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 164Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
o Knowledge of knowledge capture tools/technology.
o Ability to work in a team with professional/experts.
o Tolerance for ambiguity.
o To be able it think conceptually.
o Ability to frequently interact with the champion, knowledge workers and knower in the
organization.
Designing the KM Blueprint
This phase indicates the beginning of designing the IT infrastructure/ Knowledge Management
infrastructure. The KM Blueprint (KM system design) addresses a number of issues.
• Aiming for system interoperability/scalability with existing IT infrastructure of the organization.
• Finalizing the scope of the proposed KM system.
• Deciding about the necessary system components.
• Developing the key layers of the KM architecture to meet organization's requirements. These
layers
are:
o User interface
o Authentication/security layer
o Collaborative agents and filtering
o Application layer
o Transport internet layer
o Physical layer
o Repositories
Testing the KM System
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 165Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
This phase involves the following two steps:
• Verification Procedure: Ensures that the system is right, i.e., the programs do the task that they
are designed to do.
• Validation Procedure: Ensures that the system is the right system - it meets the user's
expectations, and will be usable on demand.
Implementing the KM System
• After capturing the appropriate knowledge, encoding in the knowledge base, verifying and
validating; the next task of the knowledge developer is to implement the proposed system on a
server.
• Implementation means converting the new KM system into actual operation.
• Conversion is a major step in case of implementation.
• Some other steps are post implementation review and system maintenance.
Quality Assurance
It indicates the development of controls to ensure a quality KM system. The types of errors to look
for:
• Reasoning errors
• Ambiguity
• Incompleteness
• False representation
Post system Evaluation
Key questions to be asked in the post implementation stage:
• How the new system improved the accuracy/timeliness of concerned decision making tasks?
• Has the new system caused organizational changes? If so, how constructive are the changes?
• Has the new system affected the attitudes of the end users? If so, in what way?
• How the new system changed the cost of business operation? How significant has it been?
• In what ways the new system affected the relationships between end users in the organization?
• Do the benefit obtained from the new system justify the cost of investment?
Implications for KM
The managerial factors to be considered:
• The organization must make a commitment to user training/education prior to building the system.
• Top Management should be informed with cost/benefit analysis of the proposed system.
• The knowledge developers and the people with potential to do knowledge engineering should be
properly trained.
• Domain experts must be recognized and rewarded.
• The organization needs to do long-range strategic planning.
Some questions to be addressed by the management regarding systems maintenance:
• Who will be the in charge of maintenance?
• What skills the maintenance specialist needs to have?
• What would be the best way to train the maintenance specialist?
• What incentives should be provided to ensure quality maintenance?
• What types of support/funding will be required?
• What relationship should be established between the maintenance of the KM system and the IT
staff of the organization?
Test Your Understanding
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 166Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
1 Why is it helpful to view the building of a KM system as a life cycle?
It is important to have a life cycle in building knowledge management systems, because the life
cycle provides structure and order to the process. Additionally, the life cycle provides
a
breakdown of the activities into manageable steps, good documentation for possible changes in
the future, coordination of the project for a timely completion, and regular management review
at each phase of the cycle.
2. In what ways do conventional and KM systems’ development life cycles differ? How
are they similar?
There are many differences between the conventional and knowledge management
systems’ development life cycle:
a. A conventional system is sequential (certain steps are carried out in sequence), while the
knowledge
management system life cycle is incremental and interactive
b. In the conventional system, testing generally occurs at the end of programming, while the
knowledge
management development life cycle provides for testing throughout various phases of system
development
as the system evolves
c. The conventional system is process-driven and documentation-oriented, with emphasis on the
flow of
data, while the knowledge management development life cycle is result-oriented
d. The conventional system does not support rapid prototyping or advanced languages, while the
knowledge management development life cycle promotes rapid prototyping and incorporates
changes on
the spot
Along with these differences, however, are many similarities as well:
a. Both cycles begin with a problem and end with a solution.
b. Both cycles require the initial gathering of information (conventional) or knowledge (KMSDLC)
for the process to begin and ending up with a tested system ready for use
c. Both the knowledge developer and the systems analyst need to choose a tool to design the system
3. Successful KM system implementation depends on several factors. Briefly, explain each
factor
a. Level of motivation of the user. Good documentation cannot compensate for low motivation or
poor
attitude toward the system. Promoting motivation and commitment takes time and must be
planned in
advance
b. Computer literacy and technical background of the user. A computer literate user can be easier
to work with than someone who has no background at all. First-time users often require education
and
training before they are able to support development and use of knowledge-based system.
c. Communication skills of the trainer. Selling people on change is sometimes considered more an
art
than a science. Communication skills can make the difference between a user’s acceptance or
rejection of the
installation.
d. Time availability and funding for training. A training program run on a shoestring is usually a
loser. Also, squeezing training time to the bare minimum often results in trainee impatience,
resistance to
learning, or nonuse of the system. Training should be part of the implementation phase offered
around the
schedule of the user.
e. Place of training. The location of training can make a difference. On-site versus off-
site training
continues to be an issue with plusses and minuses for each alternative. Off-site training
is generally
dedicated uninterrupted learning. Its positive benefits include privacy and focus on the
projects. The
feasibility of off-site training depends on distance, location, and funding. In contrast,
on-site training
requires no out-of-town transportation or room and board expenses.
f. Ease and duration of training. This aspect depends on the caliber of the trainer and the attitude
and
motivation of the trainees. “Chemistry” often affects how well all parties work with each other.
Also, the
training period should be reasonable and able to meet measurable goals. A long, drawn-out three-
week
training period does not promote the same excitement and motivation as a one-week session.
g. Ease of access and explanatory facilities of the knowledge management system. Knowledge
management systems should be easy to access and work with. A software package that provides
adequate
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 167Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
explanations is bound to satisfy most users. The explanatory facility of the package promotes ease
of use
and provides convincing evidence of the integrity of the solutions provided by the system
h. Ease of maintenance and system update. At this stage, good documentation and easy-to-
follow
procedures in a module-oriented knowledge management system can make the difference
between easy
maintenance and a “nightmare.” In this case, maintenance implies update, although update is more
often
considered enhancement.
i. Payoff to the organization. A system’s benefit to the organization is usually measured in terms of
cost
reduction, improvement in sales or overall performance, and so on. Measurable
payoff early in the
development life cycle promotes successful implementation.
j. Role of the champion. Solid top management support and a champion pushing for system
adoption can
make a difference between a successful and a lukewarm installation
4. How important are organizational factors in system implementation?
The primary organizational factor is top management commitment to the proposed
knowledge management
system. This is evident by the way it promotes the development effort through adequate funding,
ensuring the
availability of hardware and personnel, and allowing the champion to function within the
development process.
The second organizational factor is user participation in the building process. Doing so
tends to increase
commitment and foster a sense of ownership of the system. Other organizational factors include
organizational
politics and organizational climate. Politics is jockeying for leverage to influence one’s
domain and control
procedures, technology, or the direction of an area of operation. User readiness can also influence
the success of
implementation.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 168Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 31
KM SYSTEMS, SOLUTIONS, AND INFRASTRUCTURE
1. Describe the ways to facilitate KM, along with suitable examples.
KM is facilitated in a number of ways by means of KM solutions. These may be divided into
four broad levels, : (1) KM Processes; (2) KM Systems; (3) KM Mechanisms and Technologies;
and (4) KM infrastructure.
a. KM Processes -- are the broad processes that aid in discovering, capturing, sharing, and
applying knowledge. These include combination, socialization, externalization,
internalization, exchange, directions, and routines.. For example, internalization processes
benefit from simulations or experiments, which enable individuals to learn through
experience, as well as from face-to-face meetings, on-the-job training, and demos.
b. KM Systems -- are the integration of technologies and mechanisms, developed to support
the above four KM processes. KM systems include expert-seeker systems, which help
locate individuals possessing knowledge in a particular area, and rely on a combination of
information technologies and mechanisms for classifying knowledge areas.
c. KM Mechanisms and Technologies -- are used in KM systems, each of which utilize a
combination of multiple mechanisms and multiple technologies, which again in turn could,
under differing circumstances, support multiple KM systems. Examples of KM
mechanisms include on- the- job training and apprenticeship, while examples of KM
technologies include databases and Internet.
d. KM Infrastructure -- reflects the long-term foundation for KM. KM mechanisms and
technologies rely on the KM infrastructure for their success. Examples of KM
infrastructure include the data contained in an organization’s databases and the quality
of the organization’s employees (in terms of their tacit knowledge).
2. Explain the importance of KM mechanisms and KM technologies to KM systems. Give
examples of each.
Both KM mechanisms and KM technologies support KM systems. Their differences however
are explained below:
KM mechanisms are organizational or structural means used to promote KM. They enable KM
systems, and are supported by KM infrastructure. KM mechanisms may or may not utilize
technology. They involve some kind of organizational arrangement or social or structural
means of facilitating KM. Examples of KM Mechanisms include learning by doing, on-the-job
training, learning by observation, and face-to-face meetings. More long-term KM mechanisms
include the hiring of a chief knowledge officer, interdepartmental projects, traditional
hierarchical relationships, organizational policies, standards, initiation, and training process for
new employees, and employee rotation across departments.
KM technologies support KM systems and also benefit from the KM infrastructure, especially
the information technology infrastructure. KM technologies are a vital component of KM
systems. Technologies that support KM include artificial intelligence (AI) technologies
including case-based reasoning systems, electronic discussion groups, computer-based
simulations, databases, decision support systems, enterprise resource planning systems, expert
systems, management information systems, expertise locator systems, video-conferencing, and
information repositories including best practices databases and lessons learned systems.
Examples of the use of KM technologies include World Bank’s use of a combination of video
interviews and hyperlinks to documents and reports to systematically record the knowledge of
employees that are close to retirement. Similarly, at BP, desktop video-conferencing
has
improved communication and enabled many problems at offshore oil fields to be solved
without extensive traveling.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 169Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
3. Briefly explain the four kinds of classifications for KM systems based on the process
supported.
Depending on the KM process most directly supported, KM systems can be classified into four
kinds:
1) Knowledge Discovery Systems support the process of developing new tacit or explicit
knowledge from data and information or from the synthesis of prior knowledge. These
systems support two KM sub processes associated with knowledge discovery:
combination, enabling the discovery of new explicit knowledge, and socialization,
enabling the discovery of new tacit knowledge. Mechanisms and technologies can
support knowledge discovery systems by facilitating combination and/or socialization.
Mechanisms that facilitate combination include collaborative problem solving, joint
decision making, and collaborative creation of documents. Technologies facilitating
combination include knowledge discovery systems, databases, and Web-based access to
data. Repositories of information, best practices, and lessons learned also facilitate
combination. Technologies can also facilitate socialization, but to a smaller extent than
they can facilitate combination.
2) Knowledge Capture Systems support the process of retrieving either explicit or tacit
knowledge that resides within people, artifacts, or organizational entities. These
systems can aid in the capture of knowledge that resides within or outside
organizational boundaries, including within consultants, competitors, customers,
suppliers, and prior employers of the organization’s new employees. Knowledge
capture systems rely on mechanisms and technologies that support externalization and
internalization. KM mechanisms can enable knowledge capture by facilitating
externalization, or internalization.
3) Knowledge Sharing Systems support the process through which explicit or implicit
knowledge is communicated to other individuals. They do so by supporting exchange
and socialization. Discussion groups or chat groups facilitate knowledge sharing by
enabling an individual to explain her knowledge to the rest of the group. In addition,
knowledge-sharing systems also utilize mechanisms and technologies that facilitate
exchange. Some of the mechanisms that facilitate exchange are memos, manuals,
progress reports, letters, and presentations. Technologies facilitating exchange include
groupware and other team collaboration mechanisms, Web-based access to data, and
databases, and repositories of information, including best practice databases, lessons
learned systems, and expertise-locator systems.
4) Knowledge Application Systems support the process through which some individuals
utilize knowledge possessed by other individuals without actually acquiring, or learning,
that knowledge. Mechanisms and technologies support knowledge application systems
by facilitating routines and direction.
4. State the roles of (a) organizational culture and (b) organizational structure for the
development of a good KM infrastructure.
KM infrastructure is the foundation on which KM resides. Organization culture and
organization structure are two of its main components.
Organizational Culture reflects the norms and beliefs that guide the behavior of the
organization’s members. It is an important enabler of KM in organizations. A supporting
organization culture helps motivate employees to understand the importance and benefits from
KM and to find time for it. Getting people to participate in knowledge sharing is considered the
hardest part of KM, and a vital part of implementing KM is in making it a part of the
organization’s culture. A KM enabling culture is one that understands the value of KM
practices, has support for KM at all managerial levels, provides incentives that reward
knowledge sharing, and encourages organizational interaction for the creation and sharing of
knowledge. In contrast, cultures that stress individual performance and hoarding of information
within units encourage limited employee interaction, and lack of an involved top management
creates inhibited knowledge sharing and retention.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 170Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Organizational Structure is another vital aspect on which KM depends on. Several aspects of
organization structure are relevant. First, the hierarchical structure of the organization affects
the people with whom each individual frequently interacts, and to or from whom he is
consequently likely to transfer knowledge. Traditional reporting relationships influence the flow
of data and information, the nature of groups who make decisions together, and consequently
affect the sharing and creation of knowledge. By decentralizing or flattening their organization
structures, companies aim to increase knowledge sharing with a larger group of individuals.
Organization structures can facilitate KM through communities of practice, which is an organic
and self-organized group of individuals who are dispersed geographically or organizationally but
communicate regularly to discuss issues of mutual interest. They provide access to a larger
group of individuals than possible within traditional departmental boundaries. Consequently,
there are more numerous potential helpers, and this increases the probability that at least one of
them will provide useful knowledge. Further, they also provide access to external knowledge
sources.
5. In what way does information technology infrastructure contribute to KM within an
organization?
An organization’s information technology infrastructure greatly contributes to KM. While
organizations could develop specialized IT infrastructure to pursue KM, usually the existing IT
infrastructure, developed to support the organization’s information systems needs, also
facilitates KM.
Information technology infrastructure includes data processing, storage, and communication
technologies and systems. It comprises the entire spectrum of an organization’s information
systems, including transaction processing systems and management information systems. It
includes databases and data warehouses, as well as enterprise resource planning systems.
IT infrastructure provides capabilities in four important aspects: reach, depth, richness, and
aggregation.
Reach pertains to access and connection, and the efficiency of such access. Depth, in contrast,
focuses on the detail and amount of information that can be effectively communicated over a
medium. The richness of a medium is based on its ability to provide multiple cues, quick
feedback, personalize messages, and use natural language to convey subtleties. Finally,
aggregation involves the collection of large volumes of information from multiple sources for
processing.
Knowledge Exercises
1. How would you develop a KM system? What are the possible mechanisms and
technologies you could utilize?
In developing KM systems to support KM processes, I would utilize a variety of KM
mechanisms and technologies.
KM mechanisms involve some kind of organizational arrangement or social or structural means
of facilitating KM. The possible KM mechanisms that could be utilized are learning by doing,
on-the-job training, learning by observation, and face-to-face meetings. More long-term KM
mechanisms include the hiring of a chief knowledge officer, co-operative projects
across
departments, traditional hierarchical relationships, organizational policies, standards, initiation
process for new employees, and employee rotation across department
KM technologies benefit from the KM infrastructure, especially the information technology
infrastructure. Examples of KM technologies are the use of a combination of video interviews
and hyperlinks to documents and reports to systematically record the knowledge of employees
close to retirement, desktop video-conferencing for communication and enabling problem
solving at offshore locations without the need for extensive traveling.
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2. How would you utilize knowledge discovery systems and knowledge capture systems in
an organization that is spread across the globe? Does geographic distance hamper the
utilization of these systems?
In an organization spread across the globe, the use of knowledge discovery systems
and
knowledge capture systems do tend to get hampered to some extent due to
geographic
distances, but due to the increasing use of technology, these problems are getting smaller and
smaller.
Knowledge discovery systems support the process of developing new tacit or explicit
knowledge from data and information or from the synthesis of prior knowledge. Mechanisms
and technologies can support knowledge discovery systems by facilitating combination and/or
socialization.
• Mechanisms that facilitate combination include collaborative problem solving, joint
decision making, and collaborative creation of documents. In a global organization sharing
documents among senior management results in the creation of new explicit knowledge,
resulting in a better understanding of products and a corporate vision. Mechanisms that
facilitate socialization include apprenticeships, employee rotation across areas, conferences,
brainstorming retreats, cooperative projects across departments, and initiation process for
new employees. In a global organization, this could become expensive, however, as it
would involve the physical transfer of employees from one location to another.
• Technologies facilitating combination include knowledge discovery systems, databases, and
Web-based access to data. Repositories of information, best practices and lessons learned
would also facilitate combination in global organizations. Technologies can also facilitate
socialization, but to a smaller extent than they can facilitate combination. Some of the
technologies for facilitating socialization in a global organization include video-
conferencing and electronic support for communities of practice.
Knowledge capture systems support the process of retrieving either explicit or tacit
knowledge that resides within people, artifacts, or organizational entities. Knowledge
capture systems rely on mechanisms and technologies that support externalization and
internalization.
• Mechanisms can enable knowledge capture by facilitating externalization, i.e., the
conversion of tacit knowledge into explicit form, or internalization, i.e., the conversion of
explicit knowledge into tacit form. The development of models or prototypes, and the
articulation of best practices or lessons learned are some examples of mechanisms that
might enable externalization in a global organization. Learning by doing, on-the-job
training, learning by observation, and face-to-face meetings are some of the mechanisms
that might facilitate internalization in a global organization.
• Technologies can also support knowledge capture systems by facilitating externalization
and internalization. Externalization through knowledge engineering is necessary for the
implementation of intelligent technologies such as expert systems, case-based reasoning
systems, and knowledge acquisition systems. Technologies that facilitate internalization
include computer-based training and communication technologies.
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LESSON 32
KNOWLEDGE ARCHITECTURE, INTERNET AND E-WORLD
Knowledge Architecture
• Knowledge architecture can be regarded as a prerequisite to knowledge sharing.
• The infrastructure can be viewed as a combination of people, content, and technology.
• These components are inseparable and interdependent
• Identifying the key units, branches, divisions etc. as the key stakeholders in the prospective KM
system.
• Strategically, technically, and organizationally balancing the team size and competency.
Factors impacting team success:
• Quality and capability of team members (in terms of personality, experience, and communication
skill).
• Size of the team.
• Complexity of the project.
• Team motivation and leadership
• Promising only what that can be actually delivered.
Capturing Knowledge
• Capturing Knowledge involves extracting, analyzing and interpreting the concerned knowledge
that
a human expert uses to solve a specific problem.
• Explicit knowledge is usually captured in repositories from appropriate documentation, files etc.
• Tacit knowledge is usually captured from experts, and from organization's stored database(s).
• Interviewing is one of the most popular methods used to capture knowledge.
• Data mining is also useful in terms of using intelligent agents that may analyze the data
warehouse and
come up with new findings.
• In KM systems development, the knowledge developer acquires the necessary heuristic
knowledge
from the experts for building the appropriate knowledge base.
• Knowledge capture and knowledge transfer are often carried out through teams (refer to Figure
2.4).
• Knowledge capture includes determining feasibility, choosing the appropriate expert, tapping the
experts knowledge, retapping knowledge to plug the gaps in the system, and verify/validate the
knowledge base (refer to Table 3.4 in page 76 of your textbook).
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The Role of Rapid Prototyping
• In most of the cases, knowledge developers use iterative approach for capturing knowledge.
• Foe example, the knowledge developer may start with a prototype (based on the somehow limited
knowledge captured from the expert during the first few sessions).
• The following can turn the approach into rapid prototyping:
o Knowledge developer explains the preliminary/fundamental procedure based on
rudimentary knowledge extracted from the expert during the few past sessions.
o The expert reacts by saying certain remarks.
o While the expert watches, the knowledge developer enters the additional knowledge into
the computer-based system (that represents the prototype).
o The knowledge developer again runs the modified prototype and continues adding
additional knowledge as suggested by the expert till the expert is satisfied.
• The spontaneous, and iterative process of building a knowledge base is referred to as rapid
prototyping.
Expert Selection
The expert must have excellent communication skill to be able to communicate information
understandably and in sufficient detail.
Some common questions that may arise in case of expert selection:
• How to know that the so-called expert is in fact an expert?
• Will he/she stay with the project till its completion?
• What backup would be available in case the expert loses interest or quits?
• How is the knowledge developer going to know what does and what does not lie within the
expert's
area of expertise?
The Role of the Knowledge Developer
• The knowledge developer can be considered as the architect of the system.
• He/she identifies the problem domain, captures knowledge, writes/tests the heuristics that
represent knowledge, and co-ordinates the entire project.
• Some necessary attributes of knowledge developer:
o Communication skills.
o Knowledge of knowledge capture tools/technology.
o Ability to work in a team with professional/experts.
o Tolerance for ambiguity.
o To be able it think conceptually.
o Ability to frequently interact with the champion, knowledge workers and knower in the
organization.
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Designing the KM Blueprint
This phase indicates the beginning of designing the IT infrastructure/ Knowledge Management
infrastructure. The KM Blueprint (KM system design) addresses a number of issues.
• Aiming for system interoperability/scalability with existing IT infrastructure of the organization.
• Finalizing the scope of the proposed KM system.
• Deciding about the necessary system components.
• Developing the key layers of the KM architecture to meet organization's requirements.
These layers are:
o User interface
o Authentication/security layer
o Collaborative agents and filtering
o Application layer
o Transport internet layer
o Physical layer
o Repositories
Testing the KM System
This phase involves the following two steps:
• Verification Procedure: Ensures that the system is right, i.e., the programs do the task that they
are designed to do.
• Validation Procedure: Ensures that the system is the right system - it meets the user's
expectations, and will be usable on demand.
Implementing the KM System
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• After capturing the appropriate knowledge, encoding in the knowledge base, verifying and
validating; the next task of the knowledge developer is to implement the proposed system on a
server.
• Implementation means converting the new KM system into actual operation.
• Conversion is a major step in case of implementation.
• Some other steps are post implementation review and system maintenance.
Quality Assurance
It indicates the development of controls to ensure a quality KM system. The types of errors to look
for:
• Reasoning errors
• Ambiguity
• Incompleteness
• False representation
Training Users
• The level/duration of training depends on the user's knowledge level and the system's attributes.
• Users can range from novices (casual users with very limited knowledge) to experts (users with
prior IT experience and knowledge of latest technology).
• Users can also be classified as tutors (who acquires a working knowledge in order to keep the
system current), pupils (unskilled worker who tries to gain some understanding of the captured
knowledge), or customers (who is interested to know how to use the KM system).
• Training should be geared to the specific user based on capabilities, experience and system
complexity.
• Training can be supported by user manuals, explanatory facilities, and job aids.
Managing Change
Implementation means change, and organizational members usually resist change. The resistors
may
include:
• Experts
• Regular employees (users)
• Troublemakers
• Narrow minded people
Resistance can be seen in the form of following personal reactions:
• Projection, i.e., hostility towards peers.
• Avoidance, i.e., withdrawal from the scene.
• Aggression.
Post system Evaluation
Key questions to be asked in the post implementation stage:
• How the new system improved the accuracy/timeliness of concerned decision making tasks?
• Has the new system caused organizational changes? If so, how constructive are the changes?
• Has the new system affected the attitudes of the end users? If so, in what way?
• How the new system changed the cost of business operation? How significant has it been?
• In what ways the new system affected the relationships between end users in the organization?
• Do the benefit obtained from the new system justify the cost of investment?
Implications for KM
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The managerial factors to be considered:
• The organization must make a commitment to user training/education prior to building the system.
• Top Management should be informed with cost/benefit analysis of the proposed system.
• The knowledge developers and the people with potential to do knowledge engineering should be
properly trained.
• Domain experts must be recognized and rewarded.
• The organization needs to do long-range strategic planning.
Some questions to be addressed by the management regarding systems maintenance:
• Who will be the in charge of maintenance?
• What skills the maintenance specialist needs to have?
• What would be the best way to train the maintenance specialist?
• What incentives should be provided to ensure quality maintenance?
• What types of support/funding will be required?
What relationship should be established between the maintenance of the KM system and the IT
staff of
the organization?
Q. 1 Successful KM system implementation depends on several factors. Briefly, explain
each factor
k. Level of motivation of the user. Good documentation cannot compensate for low
motivation or poor attitude toward the system. Promoting motivation and commitment
takes time and must be planned in advance
l. Computer literacy and technical background of the user. A computer literate user can be
easier to work with than someone who has no background at all. First-time users often
require education and training before they are able to support development and use of
knowledge-based system.
m. Communication skills of the trainer. Selling people on change is sometimes considered
more an art than a science. Communication skills can make the difference between a user’s
acceptance or rejection of the installation.
n. Time availability and funding for training. A training program run on a shoestring is
usually a loser. Also, squeezing training time to the bare minimum often results in trainee
impatience, resistance to learning, or nonuse of the system. Training should be part of the
implementation phase offered around the schedule of the user.
o. Place of training. The location of training can make a difference. On-site versus off-site
training continues to be an issue with plusses and minuses for each alternative. Off-site
training is generally dedicated uninterrupted learning. Its positive benefits include privacy
and focus on the projects. The feasibility of off-site training depends on distance, location,
and funding. In contrast, on-site training requires no out-of-town transportation or room
and board expenses. Yet, it can be interrupted by telephone calls, secretaries, and uninvited
“gawkers.”
p. Ease and duration of training. This aspect depends on the caliber of the trainer and the
attitude and motivation of the trainees. “Chemistry” often affects how well all parties work
with each other. Also, the training period should be reasonable and able to meet
measurable goals. A long, drawn-out three-week training period does not promote the
same excitement and motivation as a one-week session.
q. Ease of access and explanatory facilities of the knowledge management system.
Knowledge management systems should be easy to access and work with. A software
package that provides adequate explanations is bound to satisfy most users. The
explanatory facility of the package promotes ease of use and provides convincing evidence
of the integrity of the solutions provided by the system
r. Ease of maintenance and system update. At this stage, good documentation and easy-to-
follow procedures in a module-oriented knowledge management system can make the
difference between easy maintenance and a “nightmare.” In this case, maintenance implies
update, although update is more often considered enhancement.
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s. Payoff to the organization. A system’s benefit to the organization is usually measured in
terms of cost reduction, improvement in sales or overall performance, and so on.
Measurable payoff early in the development life cycle promotes successful implementation.
t. Role of the champion. Solid top management support and a champion pushing for system
adoption can make a difference between a successful and a lukewarm installation
Q. 2 How important are organizational factors in system implementation?
The primary organizational factor is top management commitment to the proposed knowledge
management system. This is evident by the way it promotes the development effort through
adequate funding, ensuring the availability of hardware and personnel, and allowing
the
champion to function within the development process.
The second organizational factor is user participation in the building process. Doing so tends
to increase commitment and foster a sense of ownership of the system. Other organizational
factors include organizational politics and organizational climate. Politics is jockeying
for
leverage to influence one’s domain and control procedures, technology, or the direction of an
area of operation. User readiness can also influence the success of implementation.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 197Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 37
CAPTURING TACIT KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERT’S EVALUATION
Capturing the Tacit Knowledge
• Knowledge Capture can be defined as the process using which the expert's thoughts and
experiences can be
captured.
• In this case, the knowledge developer collaborates with the expert in order to convert the expertise
into the necessary program code(s).
• Important steps:
o Using appropriate tools for eliciting information.
o Interpreting the elicited information and consequently inferring the experts underlying
knowledge/reasoning process.
o Finally, using the interpretation to construct the necessary rules which can represent the
experts reasoning process
Expert Evaluation
Indicators of expertise:
o The expert commands genuine respect.
o The expert is found to be consulted by people in the organization, when some problem
arises.
o The expert possess self confidence and he/she has a realistic view of the limitations.
o The expert avoids irrelevant information, uses facts and figures.
o The expert is able to explain properly and he/she can customize his/her presentation
according to the level of the audience.
o The expert exhibits his/her depth of the detailed knowledge and his/her quality of
explanation is exceptional.
o The expert is not arrogant regarding his/her personal information.
Expert’s qualifications
o The expert should know when to follow hunches, and when to make exceptions.
o The expert should be able to see the big picture.
o The expert should posses good communication skills.
o The expert should be able to tolerate stress.
o The expert should be able to think creatively.
o The expert should be able to exhibit self-confidence in his/her thought and actions.
o The expert should maintain credibility.
o The expert should operate within a schema-driven/structured orientation.
o The expert should use chunked knowledge.
o The expert should be able to generate enthusiasm as well as motivation.
o The expert should share his/her expertise willingly and without hesitation.
o The expert should emulate an ideal teacher's habits.
• Experts levels of expertise:
o Highly expert persons.
o Moderately expert problem solvers.
o New experts.
• Capturing single vs. multiple experts' tacit knowledge:
o Advantages of working with a single expert:
Ideal for building a simple KM system with only few rules.
Ideal when the problem lies within a restricted domain.
The single expert can facilitate the logistics aspects of coordination arrangements for knowledge
capture.
Problem related/personal conflicts are easier to resolve.
The single expert tends to share more confidentiality.
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o Disadvantages of working with a single expert:
Often, the experts knowledge is found to be not easy to capture.
The single expert usually provides a single line of reasoning.
They are more likely to change meeting schedules.
The knowledge is often found to be dispersed.
o Advantages of working with multiple (team) experts:
Complex problem domains are usually benefited.
Stimulates interaction.
Listening to a multitude of views allows the developer to consider alternative ways of
representing
knowledge.
Formal meetings are sometimes better environment for generating thoughtful contributions.
o Disadvantages of working with multiple (team) experts:
Disagreements can frequently occur.
Coordinating meeting schedules are more complicated.
Harder to retain confidentiality.
Overlapping mental processes of multiple experts can result in a process loss.
Often requires more than one knowledge developer.
Developing Relationship with Experts
• Creating the right impression: The knowledge developer must learn to use psychology, common
sense, technical as well as marketing skills to attract the experts respect and attention.
• Understanding of the expert's style of expression:
• Experts are usually found to use one of the following styles of expression:
o Procedure type: These type of experts are found to be logical, verbal and always procedural.
o Storyteller type: These type of experts are found to be focused on the content of the
domain at the expense of the solution.
o Godfather type: These type of experts are found to be compulsive to take over.
o Salesperson type: These type of experts are found to spend most of the time dancing
around the topic, explaining why his/her solution is the best.
• Preparation for the session:
o Before making the first appointment, the knowledge developer must acquire some
knowledge about the problem and the expert.
o Initial sessions can be most challenging/critical.
o The knowledge developer must build the trust.
o The knowledge developer must be familiar with project terminology d he/she must review
the existing documents.
o The knowledge developer should be able to make a quick rapport with the expert.
• Deciding the location for the session:
o Protocol calls for the expert to decide the location.
o The expert is usually more comfortable in having his/her necessary tools and information
available close to him/her.
o The meeting place should be quiet and free of interruptions.
• Approaching multiple experts:
o Individual approach: The knowledge developer holds sessions with one expert at a time.
o Approach using primary and secondary experts:
The knowledge developer hold sessions with the senior expert early in the knowledge capture
program for the clarification of the plan.
For a detailed probing, he/she may ask for other experts' knowledge.
o Small groups approach:
Experts gather together in one place, discuss the problem domain, and usually provide a pool of
information.
Experts' responses are monitored, and the functionality of each expert is tested against the
expertise
of the others.
This approach requires experience in assessing tapped knowledge, as well as cognition skills.
The knowledge developer must deal with the issue of power and its effect on expert's opinion.
Interviewing as a Tacit Knowledge Capture Tool
• Advantages of using interviewing as a tacit knowledge capture tool:
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 199Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
o It is a flexible tool.
o It is excellent for evaluating the validity of information.
o It is very effective in case of eliciting information regarding complex matters.
o Often people enjoy being interviewed.
• Interviews can range from the highly unstructured type to highly structured type.
o The unstructured types are difficult to conduct, and they are used in the case when the
knowledge developer really needs to explore an issue.
o The structured types are found to be goal-oriented, and they are used in the case when the
knowledge developer needs specific information.
o Structured questions can be of the following types:
Multiple-choice questions.
Dichotomous questions.
Ranking scale questions.
o In semi structured types, the knowledge developer asks predefined questions, but he/she
allows the expert some freedom in expressing his/her answer.
• Guidelines for successful interviewing:
o Setting the stage and establishing rapport.
o Phrasing questions.
o Listening closely/avoiding arguments.
o Evaluating the session outcomes.
• Reliability of the information gathered from experts:
o Some uncontrolled sources of error that can reduce the information's reliability:
o Expert's perceptual slant.
o The failure in expert's part to exactly remember what has happened.
o Fear of unknown in the part of expert.
o Problems with communication.
o Role bias.
• Errors in part of the knowledge developer: validity problems are often caused by the interviewer
effect
(something about the knowledge developer colors the response of the expert). Some of the effects
can be as follows:
o Gender effect
o Age effect
o Race effect
• Problems encountered during interviewing
o Response bias.
o Inconsistency.
o Problem with communication.
o Hostile attitude.
o Standardizing the questions.
o Setting the length of the interview.
• Process of ending the interview:
o The end of the session should be carefully planned.
o One procedure calls for the knowledge developer to halt the questioning a few minutes
before the scheduled ending time, and to summarize the key points of the session.
o This allows the expert to comment a schedule a future session.
o Many verbal/nonverbal cues can be used for ending the interview. (refer to Table 5.2, in
page 148 of your textbook).
• Issues: Many issues may arise during the interview, and to be prepared for the most important
ones,
the knowledge developer can consider the following questions:
o How would it be possible to elicit knowledge from the experts who can not say what they
mean or can not mean what they say.
o How to set up the problem domain.
o How to deal with uncertain reasoning processes.
o How to deal with the situation of difficult relationships with expert(s).
o How to deal with the situation when the expert does not like the knowledge developer for
some reason.
• Rapid Prototyping in interviews:
o Rapid prototyping is an approach to building KM systems, in which knowledge is added
with each knowledge capture session.
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o This is an iterative approach which allows the expert to verify the rules as they are built
during the session.
o This approach can open up communication through its demonstration of the KM system.
o Due to the process of instant feedback and modification, it reduces the risk of failure.
o It allows the knowledge developer to learn each time a change is incorporated in the
prototype.
o This approach is highly interactive.
o The prototype can create user expectations which in turn can become obstacles to further
development effort.
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LESSON 38
KNOWLEDGE ELICITATION: DATA MINING AND KNOWLEDGE CODIFICATION
METHODS
1) what are some of the purposes for doing a data mining or web mining study?
There are two basic purposes: 1) to describe and 2) to predict. Descriptive data mining
is done to try to understand patterns in people of things. For example, purchasing
habits of people during super bowl week, the financial dealings of people suspected of
money laundering, the incidence of lighting in a region with specific geological features
(e.g., a mountain lake). This can serve to explain the behavior of the individuals or
phenomena involved. Predictive data mining, on the other hand, is done to attempt to
predict the behavior of a person or thing by looking at its history. By building a model
of this entity (person, system or thing), one can predict future performance and thereby
better react to future occurrences of the pattern sought to identify. One example is to
build a model of the stock market in order to predict its future performance.
Knowledge Elicitation Methods
On-Site Observation (Action Protocol)
• It is a process which involves observing, recording, and interpreting the expert's problem-solving
process while it takes place.
• The knowledge developer does more listening than talking; avoids giving advice and usually does
not pass his/her own judgment on what is being observed, even if it seems incorrect; and most of
all, does not argue with the expert while the expert is performing the task.
• Compared to the process of interviewing, on-site observation brings the knowledge developer
closer to the actual steps, techniques, and procedures used by the expert.
• One disadvantage is that sometimes some experts to not like the idea of being observed.
• The reaction of other people (in the observation setting) can also be a problem causing distraction.
• Another disadvantage is the accuracy/completeness of the captured knowledge.
Brainstorming
• It is an unstructured approach towards generating ideas about creative solution of a problem
which
involves multiple experts in a session.
• In this case, questions can be raised for clarification, but no evaluations are done at the spot.
• Similarities (that emerge through opinions) are usually grouped together logically and evaluated
by
asking some questions like:
o What benefits are to be gained if a particular idea is followed.
o What specific problems that idea can possibly solve.
o What new problems can arise through this.
The general procedure for conducting a brainstorming session:
o Introducing the session.
o Presenting the problem to the experts.
o Prompting the experts to generate ideas.
o Looking for signs of possible convergence.
• If the experts are unable to agree on a specific solution, they knowledge developer may call for a
vote/consensus.
Electronic Brainstorming
• It is a computer-aided approach for dealing with multiple experts.
• It usually begins with a pre-session plan which identifies objectives and structures the agenda,
which
is then presented to the experts for approval.
• During the session, each expert sits on a PC and get themselves engaged in a predefined approach
towards resolving an issue, and then generates ideas.
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• This allows experts to present their opinions through their PC's without having to wait for their
turn.
• Usually the comments/suggestions are displayed electronically on a large screen without
identifying
the source.
• This approach protects the introvert experts and prevents tagging comments to individuals.
• The benefit includes improved communication, effective discussion regarding sensitive issues,
and
closes the meeting with concise recommendations for necessary action (refer to Figure 5.1 for the
sequence of steps).
• This eventually leads to convergence of ideas and helps to set final specifications.
• The result is usually the joint ownership of the solution.
Nominal Group Technique (NGT)
• This provides an interface between consensus and brainstorming.
• Here the panel of experts becomes a Nominal Group whose meetings are structured in order to
effectively pool individual judgment.
• Idea writing is a structured group approach used for developing ideas as well as exploring their
meaning and the net result is usually a written report.
• NGT is an idea writing technique.
Delphi Method
• It is a survey of experts where a series of questionnaires are used to pool the experts' responses for
solving a specific problem.
• Each experts' contributions are shared with the rest of the experts by using the results from each
questionnaire to construct the next questionnaire.
Concept Mapping
• It is a network of concepts consisting of nodes and links.
• A node represents a concept, and a link represents the relationship between concepts (refer to
Figure 6.5 in page 172 of your textbook).
• Concept mapping is designed to transform new concepts/propositions into the existing cognitive
structures related to knowledge capture.
• It is a structured conceptualization.
• It is an effective way for a group to function without losing their individuality.
• Concept mapping can be done for several reasons:
o To design complex structures.
o To generate ideas.
o To communicate ideas.
o To diagnose misunderstanding.
• Six-step procedure for using a concept map as a tool:
o Preparation.
o Idea generation.
o Statement structuring.
o Representation.
o Interpretation
o Utilization.
• Similar to concept mapping, a semantic net is a collection of nodes linked together to form a net.
o A knowledge developer can graphically represent descriptive/declarative knowledge
through a net.
o Each idea of interest is usually represented by a node linked by lines (called arcs) which
shows relationships between nodes.
o Fundamentally it is a network of concepts and relationships (refer to page 173 of your
textbook for example).
Black boarding
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• In this case, the experts work together to solve a specific problem using the blackboard as their
workspace.
• Each expert gets equal opportunity to contribute to the solution via the blackboard.
• It is assumed that all participants are experts, but they might have acquired their individual
expertise
in situations different from those of the other experts in the group.
• The process of black boarding continues till the solution has been reached.
• Characteristics of blackboard system:
o Diverse approaches to problem-solving.
o Common language for interaction.
o Efficient storage of information
o Flexible representation of information.
o Iterative approach to problem-solving.
o Organized participation.
• Components of blackboard system:
o The Knowledge Source (KS): Each KS is an independent expert observing the status of the
blackboard and trying to contribute a higher level partial solution based on the knowledge
it has and how well such knowledge applies to the current blackboard state.
o The Blackboard : It is a global memory structure, a database, or a repository that can store
all partial solutions and other necessary data that are presently in various stages of
completion.
o A Control Mechanism: It coordinates the pattern and flow of the problem solution.
• The inference engine and the knowledge base are part of the blackboard system.
• This approach is useful in case of situations involving multiple expertise, diverse knowledge
representations, or situations involving uncertain knowledge representation.
Knowledge Capture Systems:
Systems that Preserve and Formalize Knowledge
1. What are the methods for eliciting stories?
Stories may be elicited through anthropological observation, which is using a naïve but
interested interviewer. The interviewer’s naïveté will facilitate the natural volunteering of stories
by the knowledgeable potential storyteller. The interest or curiosity of the interviewer will
increase storytellers’ sense of importance and will result in higher levels of story volunteering.
Using a group that has a common context such as a community of practice to form storytelling
circles is another step towards anecdote elicitation. Other methods useful in storytelling circles
are: fish tales since individuals enjoy enhancing previously shared stories, alternative histories,
shifting characters or context to gain different perspectives on a story, and indirect stories to
foster a feeling of security and privacy. Finally, the use of metaphors to start a story telling
process provides a common context or reference for the group.
2. Describe how concept maps represent knowledge.
Concept maps aim to represent knowledge through concepts or main subjects/ideas that are
represented as text inside of some type of geometric shape, usually a rectangle or circle. The
concepts are patterns or regularities in objects or events. Different concepts are related to each
other and this is represented by connecting two of the geometric shapes containing the related
concepts via a line, which represents a proposition. The propositions are labeled, usually with a
verb phrase or preposition that indicates the nature of the relationship between the two
concepts. The more general concepts appear at the top of the map, with specialization
progressing towards the bottom of the map. Inter-domain relations between concepts can be
represented by a line called a cross-link.
3. What are the organizational situations that context-based reasoning is designed to model and
what are the basic
tenets of context-based reasoning?
CxBR models tactical situations and the operations needed to be performed during special
tactical situations. CxBR is based on the following three tenets:
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1. Tactical situations call for a set of actions and procedures that address the current
situation.
2. Situations are dynamic (subject to change) and a transition to a new situational context
or set of actions may be required to address the new situation.
3. What is likely to happen in a situation is limited by the situation itself.
Knowledge Codification
• Knowledge codification means converting tacit knowledge to explicit knowledge in a usable form
for the organizational members.
• Tacit knowledge (e.g., human expertise) is identified and leveraged through a form that is able to
produce highest return for the business.
• Explicit knowledge is organized, categorized, indexed and accessed.
• The organizing often includes decision trees, decision tables etc.
• Codification must be done in a form/structure which will eventually build the knowledge base.
• The resulting knowledge base supports training and decision making.
o Diagnosis.
o Training/Instruction.
o Interpretation.
o Prediction.
o Planning/Scheduling.
• The knowledge developer should note the following points before initiating knowledge
codification:
o Recorded knowledge is often difficult to access (because it is either fragmented or poorly
organized).
o Diffusion of new knowledge is too slow.
o Knowledge is nor shared, but hoarded (this can involve political implications).
o Often knowledge is not found in the proper form.
o Often knowledge is not available at the correct time when it is needed.
o Often knowledge is not present in the proper location where it should be present.
o Often the knowledge is found to be incomplete.
Modes of Knowledge Conversion
• Conversion from tacit to tacit knowledge produces socialization where knowledge developer
looks
for experience in case of knowledge capture.
• Conversion from tacit to explicit knowledge involves externalizing, explaining or clarifying tacit
knowledge via analogies, models, or metaphors.
• Conversion from explicit to tacit knowledge involves internalizing (or fitting explicit knowledge
to
tacit knowledge.
• Conversion from explicit to explicit knowledge involves combining, categorizing, reorganizing or
sorting different bodies of explicit knowledge to lead to new knowledge.
Codifying Knowledge
• An organization must focus on the following before codification:
o What organizational goals will the codified knowledge serve?
o What knowledge exists in the organization that can address these goals?
o How useful is the existing knowledge for codification?
o How would someone codify knowledge?
• Codifying tacit knowledge (in its entirety) in a knowledge base or repository is often difficult
because it is usually developed and internalized in the minds of the human experts over a long
period of time.
Codification Tools/Procedures
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 205Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Knowledge Maps
• Knowledge maps originated from the belief that people act on things that they understand and
accept.
• It indicates that self-determined change is sustainable.
• Knowledge map is a visual representation of knowledge.
• They can represent explicit/tacit, formal/informal, documented/undocumented, internal/external
knowledge.
• It is not a knowledge repository.
• It is a sort of directory that points towards people, documents, and repositories.
• It may identify strengths to exploit and missing knowledge gaps to fill.
• Knowledge Mapping is very useful when it is required to visualize and explore complex systems.
• Examples of complex systems are ecosystems, the internet, telecommunications systems, and
customer-supplier chains in the stock market.
• Knowledge Mapping is a multi-step process.
• Key can be extracted from database or literature and placed in tabular form as lists of facts.
• These tabled relationships can then be connected in networks to form the required knowledge
maps.
A popular knowledge map used in human resources is a skills planner in which employees are
matched
to jobs. Steps to build the map:
• A structure of the knowledge requirements should be developed.
• Knowledge required of specific jobs must be defined.
• You should rate employee performance by knowledge competency.
• You should link the knowledge map to some training program for career development and job
advancement.
Decision Table
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 206Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• It is another technique used for knowledge codification.
• It consists of some conditions, rules, and actions.
A phone card company sends out monthly invoices to permanent customers and gives them
discount if
payments are made within two weeks. Their discounting policy is as follows:
“If the amount of the order of phone cards is greater than $35, subtract 5% of the order; if the
amount is greater than or
equal to $20 and less than or equal to $35, subtract a 4% discount; if the amount is less than $20, do
not apply any
discount.”
We shall develop a decision table for their discounting decisions, where the condition alternatives
are
`Yes' and `No'.
CONDITIONS AND
ACTIONS
RULES
1234
Paid within 2 weeks
Order>$35
$20<= Order<=$35
Order<$20
Y
Y
N
N
Y
N
Y
N
Y
N
N
Y
N
-
-
-
5% discount
4% discount
No discount
X
X
XX
Example: Decision Table
Decision Tree
• It is also a knowledge codification technique.
• A decision tree is usually a hierarchically arranged semantic network.
• A decision tree for the phone card company discounting policy (as discussed above) is shown
next.
Frames
• A frame is a codification scheme used for organizing knowledge through previous experience.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 207Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• It deals with a combination of declarative and operational knowledge.
• Key elements of frames:
o Slot: A specific object being described/an attribute of an entity.
o Facet: The value of an object/slot.
Production Rules
• They are conditional statements specifying an action to be taken in case a certain condition is true.
• They codify knowledge in the form of premise-action pairs.
• Syntax: IF (premise) THEN (action)
• Example: IF income is `standard' and payment history is `good', THEN `approve home loan'.
• In case of knowledge-based systems, rules are based on heuristics or experimental reasoning.
• Rules can incorporate certain levels of uncertainty.
• A certainty factor is synonymous with a confidence level , which is a subjective quantification of
an
expert's judgment.
• The premise is a Boolean expression that should evaluate to be true for the rule to be applied.
• The action part of the rule is separated from the premise by the keyword THEN.
• The action clause consists of a statement or a series of statements separated by AND's or comma's
and is executed if the premise is true.
In case of knowledge-based systems, planning involves:
• Breaking the entire system into manageable modules.
• Considering partial solutions and liking them through rules and procedures to arrive at a final
solution.
• Deciding on the programming language(s).
• Deciding on the software package(s).
• Testing and validating the system.
• Developing the user interface.
• Promoting clarity, flexibility; making rules clear.
• Reducing unnecessary risk.
Role of inferencing:
• Inferencing implies the process of deriving a conclusion based on statements that only imply that
conclusion.
• An inference engine is a program that manages the inferencing strategies.
• Reasoning is the process of applying knowledge to arrive at the conclusion.
o Reasoning depends on premise as well as on general knowledge.
o People usually draw informative conclusions.
Case-Based Reasoning
• It is reasoning from relevant past cases in a way similar to human's use of past experiences to
arrive
at conclusions.
• Case-based reasoning is a technique that records and documents cases and then searches the
appropriate cases to determine their usefulness in solving new cases presented to the expert.
• The aim is to bring up the most similar historical case that matches the present case.
• Adding new cases and reclassifying the case library usually expands knowledge.
• A case library may require considerable database storage as well as an efficient retrieval system.
Knowledge-Based Agents
• An intelligent agent is a program code which is capable of performing autonomous action in a
timely fashion.
• They can exhibit goal directed behaviour by taking initiative.
• they can be programmed to interact with other agents or humans by using some agent
communication language.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 208Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• In terms of knowledge-based systems, an agent can be programmed to learn from the user
behaviour and deduce future behaviour for assisting the user.
Knowledge Developer's Skill Set
Knowledge Requirements
• Computing technology and operating systems.
• Knowledge repositories and data mining.
• Domain specific knowledge.
• Cognitive psychology.
Skills Requirements
• Interpersonal Communication.
• Ability to articulate the project's rationale.
• Rapid Prototyping skills.
• Attributes related to personality.
• Job roles.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 209Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 39
KNOWLEDGE SHARING AND TRANSFER SYSTEMS
Knowledge Sharing Systems:
Systems that Organize and Distribute Knowledge
1. Describe the crucial requirements for the successful implementation of knowledge-
sharing systems.
a. Collection and systematic organization of information from various sources. Most
organizational business
processes require information and data including CAD drawings, e-mails, electronic documents
such as specifications, and even paper documents. This requisite information may be dispersed
throughout the organization. This first step requires the collection of this information throughout
the organization.
b. Minimization of up-front knowledge engineering. Knowledge-sharing systems must take
advantage of
explicit organizational information and data, such that these systems can be built quickly, generate
returns on investment, and be able to adapt to new requirements. This information and data is
mostly found in databases and documents.
c. Exploiting user feedback for maintenance and evolution. Knowledge-sharing systems should
concentrate on
capturing the knowledge of the organization’s members. This includes options for maintenance
and user feedback so the knowledge can be kept fresh and relevant. Furthermore, knowledge-
sharing systems should be designed to support user’s needs and their business process workflows.
d. Integration into existing environment. Knowledge-sharing systems must be integrated
into an
organization’s information flow, by integrating with the IT tools currently used to perform the
business tasks. Humans, by nature, will tend to avoid efforts to formalize knowledge (ever met a
computer programmer that enjoys commenting her code?). In fact, as a rule of thumb, if the effort
required in formalizing knowledge is too high, it should be left informal, to be described
by
humans, and not attempt to be made explicit. For instance, consider the possibility of capturing the
“how–to” knowledge, of how to ride a bicycle. Clearly an understanding of the laws of physics can
help explain why a person stays on the bicycle while it’s moving, but few of us recall these laws
while we ride. Other than the proverbial “keep your feet on the pedal,” which doesn’t explicate
much about the riding process, most of us learned to ride a bicycle through hours of practice, and
many falls, while we were kids. It would be impractical to try to codify this knowledge and make it
explicit. On the other hand, it might be useful to know who’s a good bicycle rider, in particular if
one is looking to put together a cycling team.
e. Active presentation of relevant information. Finally, the goal of an active knowledge-sharing
system is to
present its users with the required information when and wherever it’s needed. These systems are
envisioned to become intelligent assistants, automatically eliciting and providing knowledge that
may be useful in solving the current task, whenever and wherever it’s needed.
2. Discuss which the different types of knowledge-sharing systems are.
a. Incident report databases: used to disseminate information related to incidents or
malfunctions, for
example, of field equipment (like sensing equipment outages) or software (like bug
reports).
Incident reports typically describe the incident together with explanations of the incident, although
they may not suggest any recommendations.
b. Alert systems: were originally intended to disseminate information about a negative experience
that
has occurred or is expected to occur. However, recent applications also include increasing
exposure
to positive experiences.
c. Best practices databases: describe successful efforts, typically from the reengineering
of business
processes that could be applicable to organizational processes. Best practices differ from lessons
learned in that they capture only successful events, which may not be derived from experience.
d. Lessons learned systems (LLS): the goal of LLS is “to capture and provide lessons that can
benefit
employees who encounter situations that closely resemble a previous experience in a
similar
situation. LLS could be pure repositories of lessons or sometimes intermixed with other sources of
information (e.g., reports).
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 210Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
e. Expertise Locator Systems (ELS): serve the purpose to identify experts in the
organization.
Experts may need to be identified to help solve technical problems or staff project teams, to match
employee competencies with positions within the company, or to perform gap analysis that point to
intellectual capital inadequacies within the organization. The intent of these systems is to catalog
knowledge competencies, including information not typically captured by human resources
systems,
in a way that could later be queried across the organization.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 211Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 40
CORPORATE MEMORY; TYPES OF KNOWLEDGE REPOSITORIES
Briefly define corporate memory and how KM is related to corporate memory.
Corporate memory is the collection of all explicit and tacit knowledge that may or may not be
explicitly
documented, but is specifically referenced. Corporate memory is crucial to the
operation and
competitive advantage of an organization. A focus of KM is the development of mechanisms
and
technologies that prevent corporate memory loss through knowledge sharing
mechanisms,
technologies, and applied systems. Such loss may result from the lack of appropriate technologies
for
the organization and exchange of explicit information and a lack of support for communication.
3. Explain the lessons learned process.
1) Collect the lessons: This task involves collecting the lessons (or content) that will
be
incorporated into the LLS. There are six possible lesson content collection methods:
a) Passive - the most common form of collection. Contributors submit lessons through a
paper or Web-based form.
b) Reactive - where contributors are interviewed by a third party for lessons. The third
party will submit the lesson on behalf of the contributor.
c) After-action collection - where lessons are collected during a mission debriefing, as for
example, in military organizations.
d) Proactive collection - where lessons are automatically collected by an expert system, which
may suggest that a lesson exists based on analysis of a specific content. For example,
an expert system could monitor individual’s e-mail and prompt him/her when it
understands that a lesson is described.
e) Active collection - where a computer-based system may scan documents to identify
lessons in the presence of specific keywords or phrases,
f) Interactive collection – where a computer-based system collaborates with the lesson’s
author to generate clear and relevant lessons.
2) Verify the lessons: Typically a team of domain experts performs the task required by this
component, which requires the verification of lessons for correctness, redundancy, consistency,
and relevance. The verification task is critically important, but sometimes introduces a
significant bottleneck in the inclusion of lessons into the LLS, since it’s a time-consuming
process. Some systems, like for example Xerox’s Eureka LLS, provide a two-staging process.
3) Store the Lesson: This task relates to the representation of the lessons in a computer-
based system. Typical steps in this task include the indexing of lessons, formatting,
and
incorporating into the repository. In terms of the technology required to support this task, LLS
could be based on structured relational or object-oriented databases as well as case libraries
(case-based reasoning) or semi-structured document management systems. LLS can also
incorporate relevant multimedia such as audio and video, which may help illustrate important
lessons.
4) Disseminate the Lesson: This task relates to how the information is shared to promote its
reuse. Six different dissemination methods have been identified:
a) Passive dissemination -- where users look for lessons using a search engine.
b) Active casting – where lessons are transmitted to users that have specified relevant
profiles to that particular lesson.
c) Broadcasting – where lessons are disseminated throughout an organization.
d) Active dissemination – where users are alerted to relevant lessons in the context of their
work (for example by a software help-wizard that alerts a user of related automated
assistance).
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e) Proactive dissemination – where a system anticipates events used to predict when the user
will require the assistance provided by the lesson.
f) Reactive dissemination – when a user launches the LLS in response to a knowledge
need, for example when he launches a Help system in the context of specific software.
5) Apply the Lesson: This task relates to whether the user has the ability to decide how to reuse
the lesson. There are three categories of reuse:
a) Browsable – where the system displays a list of lessons that match the search criteria.
b) Executable – where users might have the option to execute the lesson’s
recommendation (like when the Word processor suggests a specific spelling for a
word).
c) Outcome reuse – when the system prompts users to enter the outcome of reusing a
lesson, in order to assess if the lesson can be replicated.
4. Explain the role that taxonomies play in knowledge-sharing systems.
Taxonomies, also called classification or categorization schemes, are considered to be
knowledge organization systems that serve to group objects together based on a particular
characteristic. Knowledge taxonomies are used to organize knowledge (or competencies)
relevant to the organization. In the case of ELS, the knowledge taxonomy is used to describe
the organization’s critical knowledge areas used to index people's knowledge.
5. Explain the differentiating characteristics of the ELS developed at HP, NSA, and
Microsoft.
The following table summarizes the differentiating characteristics for the ELS developed at the
three organizations:
ELS Name CONNEX (HP) KSMS (NSA) SPuD (Microsoft)
Purpose of the
system
To share knowledge,
for consulting and to
search for experts
To staff projects and match
positions with skills
To compile the
knowledge and
competency of each
employee
Self-Assessment Yes Yes, supervisors also
participate in data gathering
No, supervisors rate
employee's
performance
Participation Only those who are
willing to share
Whole personnel Whole personnel in
the IT group
Knowledge
Taxonomy
US Library of Congress
INSPEC Index Own
Department of Labor
(O*NET)
Own
Levels of
Competencies
No Yes Yes
Data
Maintenance
User (nagging) User and Supervisor Supervisor
Company
Culture
Sharing, Open Technology, Expertise Technology, Open
Platform HP-9000 Unix
Sybase Verity
OS/2, VMS, and
Programming Bourne shell
SQL
MS Access
6. Discuss the role that communities of practice play in sharing tacit knowledge.
A community of practice, also known as a knowledge network, is an organic and self-organized
group of individuals who are dispersed geographically or organizationally but communicate
regularly to discuss issues of mutual interest. Communities of practice are supported through
technology that enables interaction and conversations amongst its members.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 213Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Application Exercises
1. Identify examples of knowledge-sharing systems in use in your organization. What are
some of the intelligent technologies that enable those systems?
A consulting organization utilizes several knowledge-sharing systems both for the ability of data
contribution as well as for research initiatives. Some of the knowledge-sharing systems in use
in most consultancies include: best practice databases, lessons learned systems, and expertise
locators. Moreover, additional searchable repositories may exist which facilitate the sharing of
information by market unit (government, financial, products, etc.), description of technologies
implemented at the client, and document type (proposals, design documents, etc.).
All of these knowledge-sharing systems can be easily accessed from a centralized Web portal.
When users request information from the portal via a query, relevant information is retrieved
from the appropriate repository. Some of the information technologies that enable these
systems are ASP, HTML, Visual Basic, and SQL Server. Intelligent technologies include the
functionality provided by the search engine.
2. Design a knowledge-sharing system to support your business needs.
A lessons learned system specific to a client, but not specific to a project would be useful. In
other words, multiple projects should be able to access, retrieve, and enter their lessons learned
experiences. Maintaining lessons specific to a client would ensure a similar context
(or
corporate culture) for all the projects. A lesson learned system will enable current and future
projects to research and/or identify experiences gained during a project’s lifecycle. The system
can contain positive project experiences, issues encountered as well as their respective
resolutions, and finally documentation that may accompany these experiences.
3. Describe the non-technical issues that you will face during the implementation of the
system designed in the previous question.
Users will be expected to access the system when they need to find a similar lesson, as well as
contributing lessons to the system. One of the biggest hurdles will be that employees may be
too busy to either contribute or use the system. In addition, what kind of rewards will be put in
place so that employees find it worthwhile to share their knowledge through the lessons learned
system?
What is a document management system? How does it support knowledge sharing?
Document management systems are composed of two pieces: a repository of
documents and
technology support for classifying, organizing, storing, and retrieving documents. The repository
itself
may be centralized or distributed and access points into the repositories are normally distributed.
Most
document management systems provide a knowledge portal that is a common, yet
customizable,
platform independent interface to distributed repositories. The common interface and support
for
finding information through document classification and organization and support for retrieval
make
finding information and getting information easier for individuals within the organization.
What are the barriers to use of knowledge sharing systems?
A business culture may exist in which an organizational unit considers information from outside the
unit as worthless. Typically this culture discourages knowledge consumers from participating in
the
knowledge market and organizational rewards are tied to creating knowledge (even when
unnecessary)
and not to sharing or knowledge re-use. Additionally, those organizations that separate
knowledge
from the knowledge owners/producers tends to discourage knowledge owners from
volunteering
knowledge to be shared. On the human side, knowledge sharing was anathema to
traditional
hierarchical organizations where knowledge was equated to power hence employees
need to be
properly motivated to engage in knowledge sharing initiatives. Without proper management
support
and motivation to share, knowledge sharing is not likely to occur.
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What are the five specific types of knowledge sharing systems? Give a brief description of how
each is meant to facilitate knowledge sharing.
1. Incident report databases record and disseminate information related to either
incidents or
malfunctions.
2. Alert systems disseminate information regarding either negative or positive experiences.
3. Best practices databases describe successful (winning) efforts, typically regarding business
process
reengineering.
4. Lessons learned systems capture and disseminate lessons that benefit users that encounter similar
situations.
5. Expertise locator systems catalogue knowledge competencies.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 215Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 41
KNOWLEDGE SHARING STRUCTURE AND SERVICES, CULTURE AND
KNOWLEDGE COMMUNITIES
Electronic Tools for Knowledge Management
Identifying, nurturing, and harvesting knowledge is a principal concern in the
Information Age.
Effective use of knowledge-facilitating tools and techniques is critical, and a number of
computational
tools have been developed.
While numerous techniques are available, it remains difficult to analyze or compare the specific
tools. In
part, this is because knowledge management is young discipline. The arena is evolving rapidly as
more
people enter the fray and encounter new problems.
In addition, new technologies support applications that were impossible before.
Moreover, the
multidisciplinary character of knowledge management combines several disciplines, including
business
and management, computer science, cybernetics, and the field is frequently defined so broadly
that
anything can be incorporated. Finally, it is difficult to make sense of the many tools available.
KSS: Knowledge Structure and Services
Two dimensions are central to analyzing and comparing knowledge management tools:
knowledge
structure and knowledge service. These two dimensions can be used to from a matrix in which
specific
knowledge management tools are positioned.
Knowledge Structure
There is a wide range of levels of formalization or structure in the ways knowledge is represented in
knowledge management systems.
The knowledge forms listed in figure below are not discrete, or exhaustive, and other levels could
be
added. Examples of the knowledge forms are:
• Creative knowledge is intrinsically nonformalizable and may not be represent able in
any
formalization.
• Audio and video contain multiple “streams” of knowledge such as music, voices, faces, and
objects.
Humans recognize these features but creating machine recognition is an extremely
complex
undertaking.
• A raw text documents is the formal equivalent of an audio track and is comparable to
natural
language that is also difficult for machines to understand.
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Dimensions of Knowledge Structure.
From top to bottom we increase the formalization and precision of knowledge, while from bottom
to
top we accommodate more informality and ambiguity. Knowledge forms toward the
bottom
increasingly demand knowledge engineering and incremental analysis.
• In contrast, an HTML document with markup tags can display the texts’ structure. Irregularities in
the structure can aid in interpreting the content. For example, “wrappers” convert structural marks
into semantic descriptions and may interpret the HTML markups on a country name to display its
population, as in the pages of the CIA fact book.
• Structured documents using formats like XML or its ancestor, SGML, explicate the
semantics
implicit in HTML markups. For example, instead of deducing that a certain tag such
as
<H1>USA</H1> indicates the “USA” is the name of a country, an XML document could contain
a tag such as <country name>USA</country name> that makes the text an explicit country name.
• XML documents are linear representations of “tuples” of data, the essence of information stored
in
databases. For example, a sequence of tags can contain a <population> tag inside a <country> tag
to indicate a relationship between the country and its population. This facilitates efficient storage
and retrieval of the information, but the tags are invisible to users.
• Categorized information is at roughly the same level as structured information in
databases.
Taxonomies such as the ones we use in biology are examples of categorized information. This kind
of knowledge is used extensively by directory sites such as Yahoo! to provide
taxonomies of
concepts, ideas, or subjects.
• We use the term “formal knowledge” in the mathematical sense. Logical statements
such as
theorems and equations are used in a very rigorous way to make sure all semantics are explicit and
rules are followed. This makes it easy for machines to interpret this kind of knowledge.
The level of structure in the knowledge directly affects the amount of automated processing that can
be
performed because more structured knowledge employs powerful semantics. As a result, it is
much
easier to process the information contents of an XML than an HTML page.
Managing highly unstructured knowledge requires more structured descriptions of the content, just
as
vide indexing employs close-captioned text and HTML pages are index by metatags. Most
knowledge
found on the Web falls near the top of the scale, and it is no coincidence that most
knowledge
management tools concentrate on this range.
In addition, semantics and interpretation of less structured forms of knowledge depend on
contextual
knowledge. Raw text files representing a speech eliminate many of the possible ambiguities in
speech
recognition. In this case, contextual knowledge about the subject, the person, and the person’s voice
are
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 217
Unstructured Knowledge
Knowledge in people’s heads (implicit knowledge)
Audio and Video
Raw text document
HTML text document
Structured textual information (e.g., XML)
Structured information in databases/tuples/etc.
Categorized information (e.g., taxonomies)
Formal knowledge (e.g., logic-based representation)
Structured KnowledgeKnowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
used to “reduce” less structured forms of knowledge to more structured forms. After
the
transformation process, we need less additional contextual knowledge to be able to use the
desired
knowledge.
Knowledge Services
Another useful dimension is the range of services knowledge management tools provide. By
services,
we mean tasks or activities in handling knowledge that can be at least partially automated. While
not all
services are comparable, analysis of the knowledge services provided includes things ranging from
e-
mail to intranets to data mining and customer relationship management. To make sense of
these
disparate services, knowledge services may be divided into three main types: infrastructure
services, core
services, and packaged services build on one another such that packaged services make use of
core
services, which employ infrastructure services. For example, software that provides
core services
depends upon infrastructure services. This relationship is displayed in Figure below.
Each main type of service contains several major or typical services supporting knowledge
management
tools. The lists are not exhaustive, but rather present a collection of typical offerings.
Infrastructure Services
Infrastructure services are usually needed to implement any such knowledge management solution.
Five
basic types of infrastructure services are listed below in Figure.
• Communication services enable electronic communication between users through e-mail,
file
transfer, chats, and similar vehicles.
• Collaboration services allow for groups of people to communicate through online
meetings,
shared whiteboards, and discussion groups, as well as directory services. Buildings
upon
communication services, these tools are also known as groupware, and the best known example is
Lotus Notes.
• Translation services transform knowledge from one file format to another or from one language
to another.
• Workflow management services define workflows and support online execution and control of
workflows. Typical applications allow users to execute and enter the results of subtasks and view
the status of other subtasks. Workflow management services build upon collaboration services.
• Intranets and extranets include other infrastructure services. Intranets are Web-based applications
restricted to specific organization while extranets connect several organizations by providing access
from one organization to another’s content and services. Both intranets and extranets extend or
aggregate other infrastructure services and add additional services such as user
management,
personalization, and configuration.
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Major Types of Services Provided by Knowledge Management Tools
Infrastructure
Services
Packaged
Services
Core
ServicesKnowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
• Intelligent agents are software components that are capable of accomplishing tasks on behalf of a
user. They go beyond “information on demand” and make selected decisions based
on
predetermined environmental scanning methods. They can also summarize relevant data
by
aggregating and performing some synthesizing functions before presenting it to executive decision
makers.
Core services
Core services define knowledge management solutions because they explicitly and
directly access
knowledge repositories. Figure 8.4 shows how these core services are built around core processes
of
creating, organizing, and using a knowledge repository. Different core processes involve
people or
systems with different roles, including knowledge producer, holder, organizer, and user.
Knowledge
producers create knowledge while knowledge holders learn from other sources. Knowledge
organizers
work like librarians and allow producers to add knowledge in an orderly fashion to facilitate
retrieval by
users. Knowledge user’s consumer knowledge to execute tasks and processes of their interest.
Key features of the five core services include the following:
• Knowledge generation services produce knowledge in forms that can be stored in the knowledge
repository. Used by knowledge producers, these tools distill, refine, or simply create new
knowledge
that is then entered into the repository. These tools typically involve some kind of
automated
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Infrastructure Service
Collaboration
Communication
Translation
Workflow
Management
Intranets/ExtranetsKnowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
learning and include data mining techniques and pattern recognition. Collaborative creation of a
document is an example, and commercial versions include Interscape.com.
• Knowledge capture services facilitate addition to repositories. For example, capture tools allow
users to enter new documents and may employ meta-information for indexing purposes. A simple
example is the “document properties” mechanism of Microsoft Word, which contains information
about the document being edited including author, revision number, subject, and date.
• Knowledge organization (indexing) services help knowledge managers arrange items in
a
repository to facilitate retrieval and use. Typical knowledge organization services add to or modify
knowledge about repository indexes, taxonomies, and directories.
• Access management services determine who can access elements of the repository. They control
access to the knowledge repository and are usually based on a directory of users. They may restrict
who has access by permission levels.
• Retrieval services include searching and navigating functions as well as translation, visualization,
and integration. They create value by making knowledge available for specific uses and may
provide
personalization and configuration services.
Packaged Services
Packaged services aggregate lower-level services to solve specific types of problem such as
customer
relationship management. Much knowledge management literature concentrates on these
packaged
services. This focus is attributable to the fact that these types of problems are clearly connected to
end-
user needs. For example, it is easier for a CIO to justify purchase of customer relationship tools
than a
search engine.
The literature concentrates on three classes of packaged services.
• Customer Relationship Management (CRM) service provide information about a company’s
clients in an integrated way. They typically allow internal channels to share and add to the same
central knowledge base. Siebel and People-Soft are leading providers of CRM services. (CRM
is
covered in greater depth in Chapter 9.)
• Business Intelligence services manage knowledge about competitors and partners. They usually
aggregate and provide unified interfaces to information from news agencies, public and private
databases, economics and social information, and the World Wide Web. They also filter
and
classify information into categories.
• Enterprise Information Portals are specialized gateways providing access to internal and external
sources of knowledge. They provide one-stop access, and typical examples include search engines
and My Yahoo! (http://my.yahoo.com).
The Knowledge Structure and Services (KSS) Matrix and the KSS Checklist
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 220
Main Types of Packaged Services in the Market Today
Customer Relationship
Management (CRM)
Business
Intelligence
Enterprise Information
Portal (EIP)Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Different tools provide distinct arrays of services and manage specific types of knowledge. We
visualize
relationships between knowledge management tools in terms of the types of knowledge they handle
and
the types of services they offer. Two diagrams display these relationships: the KSS Matrix and the
KSS
Checklist. These diagrams position the kinds of solutions provided by given products or vendors.
Of
course, more complete analysis could include additional elements such as hardware
and software
platforms, the quality of its customers support, and price.
The KSS Matrix
The KSS Matrix assures that the types of knowledge handled are intimately connected with the core
services provided. Tools may support different sets of services for each type of knowledge.
The KSS Matrix is displayed in Figure below. The horizontal axis recognizes the five core
knowledge
services while the vertical axis displays the eight basic levels of knowledge structure dimension.
One KSS Matrix is used for each tool analyzed. A KSS Matrix is filled by adding small or large
squares
to each of the cells. Filling a cell indicates that the tool provides a specific service that
manipulates
knowledge with a given level of structure. The size of the square filling a cell represents the scope
of the
service offered by the tool. A large square denotes a major offering with a comprehensive
set of
features, while a small square marks a service that is offered in either a restricted scope or
restricted
functionality.
The KSS Checklist
The KSS Checklist recognizes services beyond the core services. A checklist is
employed because
infrastructure and packaged services are independent of the types of knowledge managed. The
KSS
Checklist, as in following figure , lists the five infrastructure services and the three packaged
services.
To the right, we add squares indicating that a service is provided. As with the KSS Matrix, the size
of
the square represents the scope of the service offered, with a large square indicting major offerings
and
small squares representing incomplete or restricted offerings.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 221
Basic KSS Matrix to Analyze and
Compare Different Tool Offerings
Knowledge Structure
Formal Knowledge
Categorized information
Structured information
Structured text
Marked -up text
Raw text
Audio/Video
Implicit knowledge
Generate
Capture
Index/Organize
Manage access
Use/Retrieve
Core
Knowledge Services
Basic KSS Checklist Used to Analyze
and Compare Different Tool Offerings
Communication
Collaboration
Translation
Workflow Management
Intelligent Agents Infrastructure
Services
Enterprise Information Portal
Business Intelligence
Customer Relationship
Management
Packaged
Services
Intranets/ExtranetsKnowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
The KSS Matrix and the KSS Checklist provide quick assessments of each tool and can also be
used to
compare tools quickly. More importantly, the matrix and checklist can be used to evaluate
knowledge
management tools. Filling in the diagrams forces users to explore and analyze tools in detail. At
the
same time, the KSS framework can be used to select tools for specific uses. Specifications
can be
represented as “target” diagrams for ideal offerings to be matched with the capabilities of specific
tools.
Using the KSS Matrix and Checklist to Compare Current Knowledge Management Tools
As examples, this section compares five leading knowledge management tools. We selected tools
that
represent the range of commercial tools and show the status of current practices.
Our analysis concentrates on specific tools and does not represent the set of tools provided by
specific
companies.
The five tools we analyze are Documentum 4i, OpenText LiveLink, Autonomy Knowledge
Server,
Lotus R5, and People Soft Customer Relationship Management.
Documentum 4i
Documentum 4i
4
is an integrated software suite that serves a large spectrum of services and structures.
It is centered on document management, and its core strengths are in dealing with
documents. It
supports audio/video and taxonomy, as well as some coverage of categorized information. It does
not
support knowledge generation services or formal knowledge, structured information, or
implicit
knowledge. Te services checklist following Figure shows that Documentum 4i is intended to
be an
Enterprise Information Portal tool, and it supports workflow management and collaboration.
Open Text Live Link
Open Text LiveLink5 is also an integrated software suite focused on document management. The
KSS
Matrix below shows that it provides a core set of services to handle document
management and
structured information from databases. The services checklist shows that Live Link is an
Enterprise
Information Portal tool and that it supports translation and collaboration, including discussion
groups
and group scheduling.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 222
KSS Matrix and Checklist for
Documentum 4i
Communication
Translation
Collaboration
Intranet/Extranet
Workflow Management
Infrastructure
Services
Enterprise Information
Portal
Business Intelligence
Customer Relationship
Management
Packaged
Services
Knowledge Structure
Formal Knowledge
Categorized information
Structured information
Structured text
Marked -up text
Raw text
Audio/Video
Implicit knowledge
Generate
Capture
Index/Organize
Manage access
Use/Retrieve
Core
Knowledge Services Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Autonomy Knowledge Server
Autonomy KnowledgeServer
6
is yet another software suite for content management. In addition, it
provides sophisticated services for classifying material based on the content of documents. It is
unique
in that it covers formal knowledge. We can see that Knowledge Server’s use of learning
algorithms
facilities some knowledge generation services. Note in following that it also has some translation
and
collaboration services but does not incorporate workflow management.
Lotus Notes R5
Lotus Notes R5 is virtually synonymous with groupware. This characterizes both it s strengths
and
weaknesses because R5 handles only unstructured types of knowledge. It supports implicit
knowledge
through use of detailed descriptions of people’s information and skills. Lotus R5 does not attempt
to be
a packaged service as defined here, because it focuses exclusively on collaboration.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 223
KSS Matrix and Checklist for Open
Text LiveLink
Communication
Translation
Collaboration
Intranet/Extranet
Workflow Management
Infrastructure
Services
Enterprise Information
Portal
Business Intelligence
Customer Relationship
Management
Packaged
Services
Knowledge Structure
Formal Knowledge
Categorized information
Structured information
Structured text
Marked -up text
Raw text
Audio/Video
Implicit knowledge
Generate
Capture
Index/Organize
Manage access
Use/Retrieve
Core
Knowledge Services
KSS Matrix and Checklist for Autonomy
Knowledge Server
Communication
Translation
Collaboration
Intranet/Extranet
Workflow Management
Infrastructure
Services
Enterprise Information
Portal
Business Intelligence
Customer Relationship
Management
Packaged
Services
Knowledge Structure
Formal Knowledge
Categorized information
Structured information
Structured text
Marked -up text
Raw text
Audio/Video
Implicit knowledge
Generate
Capture
Index/Organize
Manage access
Use/Retrieve
Core
Knowledge Services Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
PeopleSoft Customer Relationship Management
PeopleSoft Customer Relationship Managements is typical vertical solution software that
specializes in
customer relationship management. People Soft acquired the product when it purchased Vantive,
and
its “vertical” bias determines the way it provides services all geared toward specific needs
o CRM
processes. While PeopleSoft CRM supports structured information, it only handles information
about
customers. This specialization makes it a good choice for CRM, but a poor choice
for general
knowledge management problems. (See figure 8.12.)
Conclusion
Modern-day alchemy is about turning information into knowledge. Whereas ancient alchemists
aimed to
turn lead into gold, today’s alchemists are turning information into knowledge. The
combination of
knowledge management tools with databases and knowledge in the minds of employees is
fostering
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 224
KSS Matrix and Checklist for Lotus
Notes R5
Communication
Translation
Collaboration
Intranet/Extranet
Workflow Management
Infrastructure
Services
Enterprise Information
Portal
Business Intelligence
Customer Relationship
Management
Packaged
Services
Knowledge Structure
Formal Knowledge
Categorized information
Structured information
Structured text
Marked -up text
Raw text
Audio/Video
Implicit knowledge
Generate
Capture
Index/Organize
Manage access
Use/Retrieve
Core
Knowledge Services
KSS Matrix and Checklist for
PeopleSoft CRM
Communication
Translation
Collaboration
Intranet/Extranet
Workflow Management
Infrastructure
Services
Enterprise Information
Portal
Business Intelligence
Customer Relationship
Management
Packaged
Services
Knowledge Structure
Formal Knowledge
Categorized information
Structured information
Structured text
Marked -up text
Raw text
Audio/Video
Implicit knowledge
Generate
Capture
Index/Organize
Manage access
Use/Retrieve
Core
Knowledge Services Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
knowledge groups, knowledge enterprises, and knowledge industries. These tools are a key
component
in unleashing the value of knowledge management processes.
The KSS framework provides a convenient way to characterize knowledge management
tools by
defining the types of knowledge they can handle and the types of services they provide to
support
knowledge management processes.
The KSS Matrix and the KSS Checklist help visualize the coverage of specific tools and are,
therefore, a
convenient way to quickly compare and distinguish different tools offerings. They can be
used to
evaluate specific needs and match them to the services provided by available tools.
Further, they
separate different types of knowledge management tools and avoid comparing apples to oranges.
Services are key elements in understanding knowledge management tools, but complete
evaluations
should include other aspects. Users should specify the benefits they want to obtain and
take into
account hardware, software, and budget constraints. Also, more complex tools may require
expensive
and time-consuming installation and configuration processes.
Above all, electronic tools provide necessary “horsepower” and number-crunching ability to deal
with
the daunting complexity of real-world situations. As tempting as it is to rush to broad, Platonic
theories
of what knowledge is and what it does, we may be better served by pursuing and empirical course.
The
processing path of electronic knowledge events. Electronic tools are needed to cope
with the
bewildering number and variety of events and to yield results consistent with the
perceptual and
cognitive powers of the human mind. In short, electronic tools assess difficult problems and give
us
simple answers, but we must exercise caution in creating capable tools and in demanding answers
that
are simple rather than simplistic.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 225Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 42
KNOWLEDGE APPLICATION SYSTEMS AND CRM
1. Design a knowledge application system to support your business needs. Describe the type
of system and the foundation technologies that you would use to develop such system.
A knowledge-application system that can support one organization’s business needs would be a
case-
based knowledge application for the software support teams (up to 4 tiers) to address issues with
the
software platforms they support. Many organizations currently use a tool to control and track
issues
and requests made by internal and external users. For example, one of those tools allows for storage
of
the ticket history and has reporting features to generate metrics about our support teams. These
metrics
allow users to determine many of their issues and/or request have occurred in the past, but the
support
teams are not using the history of tickets to ensure a rapid resolution of issues. In other words, the
tracking tool objective is to track issues, and does not have the mechanisms in place to aid
in the
solutions of them.
In order to design a case based application one could apply the Case Method Cycle:
• System development process: develop an application that will store the cases and allows retrieving
them based on similar historic cases, and shows the process to resolve the issue or request. The
system would needs to be integrated with current tracking tool as well as with business request
tools
to allow for proper retrieval of updated information
• Case library development: collect the case library information from current case
history from
Remedy repository and develop the mechanisms to maintain it.
• System operation process: define the installation, implementation and support of the
knowledge
application system, following the standard development processes.
• Database mining: analyze the collected case information, to assist in the process of inferring the
relationship between cases and define the resolution process.
• Management process: to ensure organizational support to the project
• Knowledge transfer: to ensure users maintain and add cases to the case library
To develop the cases one would follow these sub-processes:
• Case collection: determine the cases for each application supported by the support teams.
This
process can be aided through the experience of the support personnel as well as with the history
information stored in the remedy system.
• Attribute-value extraction: to organize the support case library by identifying the
attributes or
characteristics of each case. Determine relationships between cases to allow for similar
cases
searching features. It is important in this phase to take into consideration the interdependencies that
exist between the different applications supported (an issue in application A can result in added
issues to application B) and resolution for each case. Also includes mapping the hierarchy into the
database.
• Feedback: ensure that the personnel that maintain the system has the necessary feedback to ensure
the quality of the information provided. This is especially important since the quality of the cases
and process of resolution will minimize the time a ticket or request is open.
The technologies that would be used to develop this system include databases, Web-based
technologies,
search engines, and a case-based reasoning engine.
2. Design the system architecture for the system described above.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 226Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
3. Identify three recent examples in the literature of knowledge application systems.
The vehicle manufacturing division of Daimler Chrysler, chose a case-based approach to develop
a
diagnosing system. Diagnostic problems in the field, such as trucks running hot or school buses that
vibrate, require a troubleshooting routine, but it was difficult to connect the symptom with a
particular
solution. After all, most of Freightliner's vehicles are customized and have different histories,
making
exact matches to service problems been impossible. "We determined that case-based reasoning
gave us
the chance to deal with things that were not so concrete," says Carlo Nardini, director of
technical
support. For discrete problems such as electrical wiring, a model-based reasoning system might
have
been useful, but with so many indeterminate variables, a case-based approach offered the
greatest
flexibility for the technician in the service bay. Problems for which there are no finite descriptions
or
definitions demand case-based reasoning technology. Case-based reasoning also makes it possible
to
incorporate much less structured data so experiences in the field can be easily absorbed. For
example, a
rough-ride problem in a truck with a similar but not matching transmission and
engine type is
connected to a previous instance using case-based reasoning. Using a Web-based interface,
Freightliner
offers its system to dealers and franchisees, as well as third-party operators such as FedEx Corp.
The
software accepts legacy information from Freightliner's call center and engineering group, giving
users
an already rich resource. http://www.acknosoft.com/customers/freightliner.htm,
Faced with the problems of losing two key support staff, Andy King, joint Managing
Director of
Shuttleworth Business Systems, decided that his business would yield long-term
benefits from
implementing a knowledge application system solution. “My vision was to give our customers the
ability
to answer their own questions by accessing the technical knowledge base, so it made sense to
upgrade
our help desk at the same time. Hence we were looking for a state-of-the-art help desk solution that
was
closely integrated with the best knowledge management technology. We needed a knowledge base
that
would learn, be easy to use, and be accessible to internal staff and customers via
the Web.”
Shuttleworth implemented a help desk system first, which enabled Andy to gain an
in-depth
understanding of his support team’s operations and workload. For example, now the causes of
the
problems that people call in with – some of which originate in other departments, such as
sales,
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 227Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
development or training – can be identified and eliminates at the source.
http://www.vision4.co.uk/indexf.htm.
General Electric developed an application called ICARUS: Design and Deployment of a Case-
Based Reasoning
System for Locomotive Diagnostics. GE uses CBR for several applications. As is so often the case,
many large
companies use CBR. This application involved analyzing fault logs from locomotives to predict
and
preempt serious faults. Previously, they had tried a rule-based system but it was too hard to
maintain. It
took around four person years to get to the system to a stage where they realized it wouldn't work.
The
CBR system (as is so often the case) used a simple approach, costing around $250,000 and 14
person-
months to build. The system solves 75% of the known faults across 600 locomotives, and
estimated
saving are in the order of $5 million per year. http://www.crd.ge.com/cooltechnologies
Knowledge Communities
In his book of 1998 - Communities of Practice - Etienne Wenger defines these communities as
social units of
learning even in the context of much larger systems forming constellations of interrelated
communities of
practice. However, the subtitle of the book - Learning, meaning and identity -shows that Wenger is
most
interested in the dimension of the community which comprises identity, belonging and boundaries.
In a
subsequent article entitled ‘Communities of practice and social learning systems’, Wenger (2000:
229) is
even more explicit when he writes that communities of practice are the social
containers of the
competences that make up a social learning system. Three elements define competence:
• the sense of joint enterprise: to be competent is to understand the enterprise well enough to
be able to contribute to it;
• mutuality: to be competent is to be able to engage with the community and to be trusted as a
partner in these interactions;
• a shared repertoire of communal resources: language, routines, sensibilities, tools, stories, etc.
To
be competent is to have access to this repertoire and to be able to use it appropriately.
In a community of practice, knowing involves two components: the competence that the
community has
established over time, and the subjective experience of the world as a member. Wenger
distinguishes
among different forms of participation according to three modes of belonging:
• engagement: doing things together - the way in which we engage with each other shapes our
experience of who we are;
• imagination: constructing an image of ourselves, of our communities - these images of the world
are essential for our sense of self and for our interpretation of our participation in the social
world;
• alignment: making sure that our local activities are sufficiently aligned with other processes so
that they can be effective beyond our own engagement. Alignment has to do with coordinating
perspectives, interpretations and actions.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 228Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 43
ROLE OF COMMUNITIES IN LEARNING AND PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
Knowledge Communities
Teams interact with wider knowledge networks. Their members will frequently be
members of
communities of practice that span the organization. George Por describes communities as
‘connecting
islands of knowledge into self-organizing, knowledge sharing networks’. While some communities
focus
on a particular profession or discipline, the most powerful communities are customer or
problem
focused. They transcend disciplines and bring in different perspectives. They exchange, develop
and
apply knowledge. Just as a knowledge team is more cohesive than a work group, a
knowledge
community is a more cohesive cluster within a diffuse knowledge network. Following table
highlights
the essential differences between groups, teams, networks and communities.
Knowledge communities contrasted with other groups
Work group Team Knowledge
Network (Col)
Knowledge
community (CoP)
Typical size 3-30 5-8 30-300 15-150
Membership Recruited for job Recruited for
team fit
Self-selecting Self-selecting
Focus Tasks Output Knowledge
exchange
Applied
Knowledge
Goals Explicit, given Mutually agreed Imprecise or
implicit
Evolving and
purposeful
Boundaries Precise Permeable Fluid Mutually adjusting
Note: Col = community of interest; CoP = community of practice
The main difference compared to a team in that the membership is self-selecting. Like a self-
managed
team they cannot be strongly directed or over directed. In fact the best management style for an in-
house knowledge community is hands-off, but providing a climate in which they thrive.
Communities
are more social than structural. Etienne Wenger (an originator of communities of practices), and
Bill
Snyder list the following stage of community development.
1. Latent: there is potential for such a community within the organization.
2. Coalescent: members come together and recognize their collective potential.
3. Active: engaged in developing a practice.
4. Legitimized: recognized as a valuable entity.
5. Strategic: central to the success of an organization.
6. Transformational: capable of redefining its environment.
7. In Diaspora: dispersed but still alive as a force.
8. Member able: no longer very relevant, but still remembered as part of member’s identities.
Compared to a knowledge team, the size of community means that it loses some of the
cohesiveness
and commitment. However, good communities retain as many characteristics of effective
knowledge
teams as possible, including a shared sense of purpose, intensive external networking,
effective
knowledge management and trust. Many communities embody such considerations into their
guiding
principles. The two most important parameters are a high flow of communications and
passionate
community leaders. In the virtual environment this role is performed by a person
known as the
conference host or moderator.
Virtual moderation for knowledge development
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 229Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
The role of a conference moderator is to stimulate virtual discussion and to guide the
community
forwards in its thinking and knowledge development. A good moderator has enthusiasm for
their
subject and likes networking. For most, moderating is not their primary job, but an important added
daily activity. They activate knowledge development by:
• Setting up conferences – admitting members, assigning privileges etc.
• Defining the scope and agenda for discussion – posing key questions.
• Defining the ground rules, e.g. no personal insults, no advertising.
• Keeping conversations developing – stimulating discussion, revisiting earlier topics.
• Summarizing – periodically reviewing progress and key contributions and maintaining a coherent
structure.
• Cross-linking – connecting different conversational threads; this cross-fertilization often sparks
new
ideas and momentum.
• Managing inappropriate contributions or behavior – defusing arguments (more of this is
done
behind the scenes with private emails or telephone conversations).
• Engaging people in conversation – actively seeking contributions from those they know
have
something worthwhile to contribute; visibly acknowledging good contributions.
Good conference leaders will identify important and challenging tasks that will benefit
the whole
community and keeps the knowledge following, e.g. preparation of a best practice
guidebook, a
resources database, etc.
Sustaining communities
Those organizations that encourage communities as an integral part of corporate knowledge
programs
will gain significant benefits. Good knowledge communities will be thought leaders,
generating new
product ideas and aggregating the collective thinking of a talented group of individuals to tackle
difficult
problems. They will significantly increase an organization’s knowledge capital.
A potential threat to communities is that the very focus on knowledge management introduces a
degree
of formalization that could, if not dealt with sensitively, stifle them. How can organization
minimize this
risk?
• Provide facilities that make it easy for these communities to meet and exchange: web space,
internal
newsgroups, mail lists; as well as physical meeting places where tacit knowledge conversion can
take
place.
• Offer facilitation to help them improve current processes – too often communities bogged down in
the content, not stepping back and seeing the effectiveness of their ongoing processes, e.g. when
enrolling new members.
• Provide connection information – help others who share their interests apply to join, help them
publicize their existence to the outside world, e.g. via community directories.
• Encourage note taking methods for meetings – have community members synthesize ‘knowledge
nuggets’, that can be recalled and shared with those not at the meeting.
• Synthesize and edit email discussions – create ‘knowledge editor’ roles, people who respect their
norms and values – some communities may want to remain small and intimate, and
restrict
membership.
Communities need a supportive organizational environment. An easy way to kill a community is
to
discourage people from spending time at it, or even, as some managers have tried, to suppress this
‘non-
essential work’. Reward systems and culture must support community participation. Endorsement,
not
enforcement, is the watchword. The whole ethos of a successful community is based much more
on
knowledge ecology rather than a knowledge management emphasis. A good example of
knowledge
ecology in action is that of the Knowledge Ecology Fair.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 230Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
In the Open space Circle forty-two discussion items were created, which covered topics as varied
as
organizational intelligence in family-owned businesses, knowledge artifacts and communities of
practice
in health care settings. As a result of discussion at the fair, new initiatives have evolved, such as
KEN
(Knowledge Ecology Network) and the Knowledge Ecology University.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 231
The Knowledge Ecology Fair
Knowledge Ecology Fair 1998 was an on-line event that attracted over 300 virtual attendees and ran
for three weeks. The World Wide Web provided an entry point for the various activities of the
conference:
• Keynote presentation – given by knowledge leaders such as Leif Edison of Skandia, Karl Erik
Sveiby, and Bipin Junnarkar of Monsanto.
• Workshops – led by subject experts, including Verna Allee on ‘Knowledge and self
organization’, Etienne Wenger ‘Learning Communities: the ecology of knowing’, Arian Ward
on futurizing and Michael Rey on creativity.
• Discussion groups such as workplace communities.
• Community Café – more informal discussion e.g. on shared interests, on books we love.
• The Open Space Circle – ‘an open space for participant generated discussions; get first hand
experience facilitating a learning conversation . . . . explore questions of most interest to
you’.Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 44
LEARNING ORGANIZATION
Knowledge is not something that people possess in their heads, but rather, something that people
do together.
(Gergen, 1991)
To play the violin - ‘it is necessary to possess certain habits, skills, knowledge, and talent, and to be
in the
mood to play, and (as the old joke goes) to have a violin. But violin playing is neither the habits,
skills,
knowledge, and so on, nor the mood, nor (the notion believers in “material culture” apparently
embrace)
the violin’. Violin playing is an easily recognizable practice; it is more troublesome to
recognize ‘an
organizational practice’ or to detect how and when ‘knowing in practice’ occurs.
Conventional wisdom
Our society is dominated by a view of learning, education and training as an endeavour of
‘knowledge
delivery’ based on a notion of learning as a process of information delivery from a knowledgeable
source
(either a teacher or a text book) to a target lacking that information . From this perspective,
learning
amounts essentially to the acquisition of the body of data, facts and practical wisdom accumulated
by all the
generations that have preceded us. This knowledge is ‘out there’, stored in some form of memory
(usually
books), and the main effort of the learner is to acquire it and to store it in the proper compartment of
his/her mind for future use or reference as needed.
To a certain extent, when learning is viewed in this way it may be equated to eating or to
banking:
knowledge is food for the mind, and the learner seeks to find the right or necessary sort of food and
to
ingest or consume it. Teaching and learning consist in the transfer of the ‘gold’ to the pupils’
heads.
Learning therefore takes place mainly during our early development, as we move through
schooling,
instruction and training. People usually receive their training at the end of their educational careers,
so that
it is considered a specific and goal-oriented form of instruction which provides newcomers with
the
knowledge they require to perform their roles appropriately in some organization. Training
may be
acquired later, if for some reason (e.g., updating existing knowledge or preparing for a job change
or a
new assignment), new learning becomes necessary. Generally speaking, in such cases training takes
the
form of a supplementary dose of instruction and schooling.
Although this familiar conception of learning may seem quite reasonable, it is a highly
reductive
account of both how people learn in general and of how people learn in organizations, for at least
two
reasons.
In the first place, it suggests that learning is separate from - and to some extent opposed to - any
other
activity. According to the traditional view, not only do we learn solely in certain periods of our
lives, but also
our learning is restricted to specific occasions, such as when we take a class, or read a book, or
watch an
instructional video. However, this is an inaccurate description of how matters stand.
Study and
instruction ‘per se’ are indeed important, but learning is also deeply rooted in other everyday
activities and
experiences as well. Most of the relevant know how that distinguishes an expert from a novice is
acquired
on a day-to-day basis by acting and reflecting, i.e., by thinking about what we are doing and why,
and
talking about it with others (Schön, 1983).
In the second place, the view of learning as a totally individual activity, like ingesting
food, can be
misleading. Learning is much more than, and very different from, finding and
acquiring items of
organizational knowledge. As much in everyday life as in work organizations, people and groups
create
knowledge by negotiating the meaning of words, actions, situations and material artefacts.
They all
participate in and contribute to a world which is socially and culturally structured and
constantly
reconstituted by the activities of all those who belong to it. Cognitive and practical activity can thus
be
pursued only within this world, and through this social and cultural networking. Knowledge is not
what
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 232Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
resides in a person’s head or in books or in data banks. To know is to be capable of participating
with
the requisite competence in the complex web of relationships among people, material
artefacts and
activities (Gherardi, 2001b). On this definition it follows that learning is always a practical
accomplishment
‘knowledge is something people do together’ and it is done in every mundane activity, in
organizations
when people work together and in academic fields like organization studies, even if we make
distinctions
between lay, practical and theoretical knowledge. But also the practices of science - like any other
social
process - are intrinsically reflexive, and they are practices situated in specific contexts of
power/knowledge.
Situated practices are both pre-reflexive (depending on unstated assumptions and shared knowledge
for
the mutual achievement of sense) and reflexively constitutive of the situated members’ contexts
from
which they arise. The term ‘organizational learning’ not only acquires meaning from the context in
which it
appears but it also reflexively creates that context.
The institutionalization of the field: the birth of the learning organization
The field of OL has developed and been institutionalized as ‘problem driven’, as the
production of
instrumental knowledge. But the knowledge thus produced sets the conditions for research
to
shift to ‘mystery-driven’ learning (Gherardi, 1999) which - in Derrida’s (1967) terms - is
supplementary to
cognitive reflexivity. An episode (Gherardi, 1999) is paradigmatic of what happens in the
community of
scholars that studies organizational learning:
I was at an international conference on Organizational Learning and had taken part in discussion
of a
paper presented by a colleague from a university in a developing country which
empirically tested
whether the most successful firms in her country were, or were not, learning
organizations.
Unfortunately, her data showed a low correlation between being an economically successful firm
and
being a learning organization, and she was puzzled by her findings.
This episode is paradigmatic of the social process of ‘manufacturing knowledge’: a heuristic
concept - OL -
acquires legitimacy in the scientific community, it spreads through the community of
consultants and
practitioners, it produces the ‘characteristics’ that distinguish the phenomenon (and thus
proves its
existence), and it coins the label ‘learning organization’. This label travels though
time and space
(Czarniawska and Sèvon, 1996) and is appropriated by some organizations, which incorporate it
into their
identities. At this point a social phenomenon has been produced: a realist assumption replaces a
heuristic
device, and learning is defined a ‘real’ phenomenon which takes place ‘out there’ in organizations
and can
be measured, compared and validated. There ‘really’ exist learning organizations in the world -
organizations
which are presumably different from non-learning ones - and as corporate actors they
learn by
themselves,
2
either from each other or by being immersed in ecology of learning. The touchstone with
which to determine whether, how and in what circumstances learning has been produced is the
concept of
change. Organizational change is the outcome of a more or less rational procedure of the production
of
knowledge and its practical application. If this does not come about, something ‘has gone wrong’
and
dysfunctional learning has taken place.
This episode gives cause for much thought, but I shall examine only the aspect that concerns the
social
process internal to a community of scholars which - around 20 years ago - marked out an area of
study by
means of a metaphorical operation: that is, by juxtaposing the concept of learning
with that of
organization. A new area of study requires resources of legitimation (Astley, 1985; Whitley, 1984)
not
only internally to the restricted occupational community of academics or consultants but also to
firms
and to society in general. This process of mobilizing credibility creates cultural artefacts -
books,
conferences, university courses - as well as new identities: learning organizations (LO)
are born.
Companies with outstanding reputations - Shell, Mercedes Benz, Isvor Fiat - baptize themselves
LOs
and devote enormous resources to creating a ‘corporate’ identity that is recognizable,
recognized and
trustworthy in the eyes of its members and of society at large.
This social process of the creation of a new subjectivity for the firm and of the legitimation of new
expert
knowledge singles out a series of distinctive features of the LO4
and of OL which, in their turn, find
coherence within a normative model. It is often a short step from description to prescription in
organizational studies, even more so if historical memory is lost.
The existence of the LO has become ‘natural’ because it has been institutionalized, and institutions
give
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 233Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
identity. Therefore the features of the LO have become attributes of the being of a category of
firms. Mary
Douglas (1986: 83-6) argues that institutions are founded on an analogy with nature. The
naturalization of
social classifications protects the institution when it is still at the stage of fragile convention: by
being
naturalized, it becomes part of the order of the universe and is therefore ready to function as a basis
for
argument. And this is when organization scholars - of the second generation, or forgetful, or
subordinate to
those who produce ‘knowledge’, or decentralized or marginal with respect to them - arm
themselves with
questionnaires, measuring scales and other scientific tools and set off to verify these distinctive
features.
This account is simplistic and crude. It does not claim to be ‘true’; it merely serves to highlight
some of
the turning points that have made the languages of Babel no longer mutually intelligible. A
scientific
community can therefore be identified as forming around the concept of LO, around realist
ontology,
around a positivist epistemology, around a prescriptive intent, and around continued research into
applied
rationality. It should be borne in mind, in fact, that the term OL was first used in decision-
making
theory (Cyert and March, 1963), which subsequently developed the notion of learning as
adaptation.
We may for the moment assume that the distinction between LO and OL is based on the
dichotomy
between prescriptive and descriptive research, as proposed by Tsang (1997: 73) for example. But,
in my
view, the issue is not the fact that some (academics) ‘fail to generate useful implications for
practitioners’
and the others ‘seldom follow rigorous research methodologies’, therefore there is a need ‘to
integrate the
two streams of research’. This too is rhetoric of scientific writing which urges the search for a
universal
language. Consequently, in my opinion, it is not a matter of producing ‘constructs
[that] can be
operationalized in empirical research’ (ibid. p. 78) or of producing ‘empirical evidence’ (ibid. p. 77)
when
the contrast is between a realist ontology - which assumes learning as an empirical phenomenon -
and a
constructionist one. These are problems of knowledge that concern a realist ontology,
but if
organizational learning is a ‘live metaphor’ (Tzoukas, 1991), a metaphorical operation performed
by the
researcher (Gherardi, 1995b) - that is, a means to represent the organization as if it were a system
that
learns - then the problem of knowledge is not to establish what constitutes ‘effective learning’ but
to
determine the amount of further knowledge yielded by the metaphor proposed.
Therefore the interest of knowledge (Habermas, 1971) shifts from the question ‘how does an
organization
learn or should learn?’ to the question ‘if we depict an organization as a system which learns, are
we able
to see something new and to see something that we already know differently?’ The former question
mainly concerns explanation of OL, while the latter more closely relates to understanding
(Verstehen) of
it (Weber, 1922).At this crossroads in the social sciences, the former community goes in
quest of the
founding myth of objectivity, while the latter pursues the myth of adequacy (Ricolfi, 1997: 38).
Ricolfi writes
‘explanation and understanding, positivism and hermeneutics, the primacy of method and the
primacy of
the subject-matter, are antitheses that were born together with the social sciences, and they have
persisted
because they represent different but functionally equivalent answers to the need for identity of the
social
sciences themselves’. From this latter perspective we may therefore enquire as to the ‘goodness’ of
the
models of knowledge produced when a scientific community is socially constructed around a topic.
Organizational learning as a disciplinary discourse
The literature on LO has been suspected of colluding with the ‘ruling courts’ which
govern
organizations (Coopey, 1995) and of employing ideologically a discourse of democracy and
liberation
(Snell and Chak, 1998). Easterby-Smith (1997: 1086) defines the literature on LO as having ‘an
action
orientation’, and being ‘geared toward creating an ideal type, an organization in which learning is
maximized’.
But it would be naive to create and represent a distinction between OL as a heuristic view and LO
as a
realistic one, when both converge on the same social practice which legitimizes the managerial
techniques
based on their claims of scientific knowledge. They share the same bias and both contribute
to the
institutionalization of the field as a disciplinary discourse and to its superseding through the process
of
constant reinterpretation of the previous interpretation known as ‘institutional reflexivity’.
We may therefore view the manufacturing of a body of knowledge - a discipline - under the labels
‘OL’
and ‘LO’ as a situated practice in a community of organizations, in a community of practitioners,
in a
community of academics, in a society. We may explore that practice as a ‘disciplinary discourse’
which
sustains forms of normative behaviour, supports knowledge claims and provides
resources for
normalization.
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From a Foucauldian perspective, discourses are systems of thought which are contingent upon
material
practices and which inform those practices through particular power techniques. Much of
nineteenth-
century social science (social welfare, administration, statistics) was almost wholly shaped by the
‘disciplinary
gaze’ (Foucault, 1977) of surveillance. In organization studies, for example, the personnel function,
under
the guidance of ‘human relations’, had a similar tutelary role (Hardy and Clegg, 1996), and
‘organizational
learning’ is now following suit.
Foucault’s concept of discipline has been usefully applied in post-modern analysis of
power/knowledge
relations (Alvesson, 1993, 1994; Deetz, 1996; Townley, 1993) in the area of knowledge firms or in
the
construction of the subjectivity of knowledge workers. Also the exploitative ethos of many
organizational
learning discourses has been under-lined by postmodern scholars (Boje, 1994) and other critical
scholars
(Huysman, 1999). I do not wish to pursue this line of analysis further; rather, I shall
restrict my
treatment to illustration of a set of premises implicit in OL and LO theorization in order to highlight
how they sustain a disciplinary discourse which disciplines concrete behaviours:
1. OL is always ameliorative and disinterested.
Learning is regarded as always positive, in the spirit of ‘the more, the better’. OL as a discourse
implicitly
assumes an ameliorative vision in which learning is incremental and knowledge is a cumulative
product
which undergoes constant development (Miner and Mezias, 1996). The alleged universality,
neutrality and
transparency of knowledge presume that humankind is its beneficiary, thereby neglecting the
role of
power in structuring organizational knowledge. What is deemed worth learning has already been
selected:
only those in power learn the right things.
2. OL is intentional.
If learning resembles a process of appropriation and capitalization of something external, or of a
known
product, then also the ways in which it is appropriated/produced can be specified and
normatively
sustained. OL may be embodied in SOPs (standard operating procedures), which are periodically
overhauled
and updated (Kieser, Beck and Taino, 2001). It may thus be envisaged as ‘the one best way of
learning’.
3. OL is an extorted result.
The LO requires of work groups that they ‘learn’ and transfer the knowledge thus
acquired to
organizational structures, and that learning leads to an improvement in performance. The use of
power in
transferring knowledge is silenced and OL is conceived as grounded on free transfer, on
transparency,
on voluntariness and on the chain of authority, rather than residing in the murky depths of
micro-
conflictuality, micro-negotiation and the systematic and more or less deliberate
distortion/extortion of
knowledge.
4. OL presumes change but not its understanding.
Learning proposes a change in the behaviour - actual or potential - of individuals or groups, or
perhaps
a cognitive change. It does not necessarily require individuals to understand the logic that has led
to a
change in SOPs (Child and Markoczy, 1993).This amounts to saying that if some change is
manifest, then a
learning process has taken place, but also that change does not require any learning.
The problem thus arises of how the empirical evidence can be collected to demonstrate
the
relationship between change and learning.
Learning, writes Rorty (1989), is a term often part of a final vocabulary: it is a value in itself which
cannot
be further questioned. It is associated with improvement in performance, the rapid correction of
errors and
a fast reaction to environmental changes. The positive connotation associated with the word induces
the a
priori assumption of what needs to be empirically demonstrated. Learning, as the founding myth of
the
scientific community of OL scholars, obscures the myopia of learning from experience (Levinthal
and
March, 1993).
In short, we have described the theoretical construction of OL and LO as a discourse of
disciplining
when it is reselected as a managerial technique which contains a bias towards systematic and
purposeful
learning, a bias towards improvement, and a normative bias. These biases are composed of a
specific
structuring of power/knowledge which sustains them and perpetuates them as a discourse of
power.
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 235Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
This is even more evident when we consider the literature on knowledge management.
1.4 The reification of knowledge in the knowledge management literature
A quantitative bibliographical survey (Scarbrough, Swan and Preston, 1998) shows that since 1997
the term
‘knowledge management’ has supplanted ‘organizational learning’, and that the interest of the
scientific
community has switched from questions concerning the appropriation of knowledge by individuals
and
organizations to ones concerning the techniques and technologies of knowledge
management. The
academic disciplines now predominant in the organizational learning debate are not
psychological but
economic, and a new alliance has arisen between the economics of knowledge and
information
technology which now monopolizes the term ‘knowledge management’ (KM).
The concepts of ‘knowledge work’ and ‘knowledge worker’ were first introduced by Peter
Drucker (1939), who set them in contrast to those of manual work and service work. Brief
inspection
of the relation between knowledge and wealth creation between the eighteenth and twentieth
centuries
reveals a series of epochal changes: first, knowledge was applied to artefacts, processes and
products
through technologies, patents and tacit knowledge; then it was applied to human labour
through the
scientific analysis of work; and finally knowledge was applied to knowledge itself, thus
constituting
knowledge work. Based on this new type of work is the endeavour to manage knowledge as if
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 236Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
LESSON 45
THE FUTURE OF KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
What makes a KM initiative successful?
What are the strategic and operational things one must do?
How do you value knowledge assets?
What role does culture, both national and organizational, play?
What is the future of KM?
The following golden nuggets, derived from the KM research, are only the beginning of this
quest:
• KM requires the integration and balancing of leadership, organization, learning and
technology in an enterprise-wide setting.
• KM must not only recognize requirements and conditions for success, but also
support the desired benefits and expectations of the enterprise.
• Streamlined organizational structure, with strong cultures, has a higher chance of KM
success.
• An atmosphere/culture of trust is necessary to sharing knowledge.
• National culture affects the values and practices of every organization in Knowledge
Management implementation, especially at the lower levels.
• KM technologies contribute to organizational growth only if the flow and con text of
knowledge are supported.
• KM technologies are useful in managing and leveraging intellectual capital, but the size of the
organization is a major variant.
• Successful KM technology implementation requires an organizational culture that promotes
a blend of product and people orientation.
• KM success factors are dominated by management ones, such as culture, process, and
organization, with technology as the least important.
• KM criteria for success should include both soft and hard measures if top leadership is to
support KM initiatives.
• Knowledge assets are strategic, and must be accounted for and valued accordingly.
Managers concerned with implementing knowledge management in their organizations today face
a
number of challenges in developing sound methods for this still emerging area of management
practice.
Both the growing literature on knowledge management and the advice offered by various
knowledge
management consultants; however, seem to advocate forms of knowledge management practice
that
often appear incomplete, inconsistent and even contradictory.
Tacit knowledge versus explicit knowledge approaches
Even a casual review of the many articles and consulting recommendations on knowledge
management
practice today soon reveals a plethora of recommended processes and techniques. Unfortunately -
especially for the many managers looking to researchers and consultants for insights
to guide
development of sound knowledge management practices - many of these recommendations
seem
unconnected to each other, and in the worst cases many seem to be quite at odds with each other.
Close analysis of these recommendations, however, usually reveals that the many ideas for practice
being advanced today can be grouped into one of two fundamentally different views of knowledge
itself
and of the resulting possibilities for managing knowledge in organizations. These two
views are
characterized here as the ‘tacit knowledge’ approach and the ‘explicit knowledge’ approach.
Working from the premise that knowledge is inherently personal and will largely remain tacit; the
tacit
knowledge approach typically holds that the dissemination of knowledge in an organization can
best
be accomplished by the transfer of people as ‘knowledge carriers’ from one part of an organization
to
another. Further, this view holds that learning in an organization occurs when individuals
come
together under circumstances that encourage them to share their ideas and (it is hoped) to develop
new
insights together that will lead to the creation of new knowledge.
Basic beliefs in tacit versus explicit knowledge management approaches
Tacit knowledge approach
Knowledge is personal in nature and very difficult
to extract from people.
Knowledge must be transferred by moving people
within or between organizations.
Learning must be encouraged by bringing the right
people together under the right circumstances.
Explicit knowledge approach
Knowledge can be articulated and codified to create
explicit know-ledge assets.
Knowledge can be disseminated (using information
technologies) in the form of documents, drawings,
best practices, etc.
Learning can be designed to remedy knowledge
deficiencies through structured, managed, scientific
processes.
To make wider use of the tacit knowledge of individuals, managers are urged to identify the
knowledge
possessed by various individuals in an organization and then to arrange the kinds of interactions
between
knowledgeable individuals that will help the organization perform its current tasks, transfer
knowledge
from one part of the organization to another, and/or create new knowledge that may be useful to the
organization.
Most managers of organizations today do not know what specific kinds of knowledge the
individuals in
their organization know. This common state of affairs is reflected in the lament usually
attributed
to executives of Hewlett-Packard in the 1980s: ‘If we only knew what we know, we could
conquer
the world.’ As firms become larger, more knowledge-intensive, and more globally dispersed, the
need
for their managers to ‘know what we know’ is becoming acute. Thus a common initiative within the
tacit knowledge approach is usually some effort to improve understanding of who knows about
what in an organization - an effort that is sometimes described as an effort to create ‘know-who’
forms
of knowledge. An example of such an effort is the creation within Philips, the global
electronics
company, of a ‘yellow pages’ listing experts with different kinds of knowledge within Philips’
many
business units. Today on the Philips intranet one can type in the key words for a specific
knowledge
domain - say, for example, knowledge about the design of optical pickup units for
CD/DVD
players and recorders - and the yellow pages will retrieve a listing of the people
within Philips
worldwide who have stated that they have such knowledge. Contact information is also provided
for
each person listed, so that anyone in Philips who wants to know more about that kind of knowledge
can
get in touch with listed individuals.
An example of the tacit knowledge approach to transferring knowledge within a global organization
is
provided by Toyota. When Toyota wants to transfer knowledge of its production system to new
employees in a new assembly factory, such as the factory recently opened in Valenciennes, France,
it
typically selects a core group of two to three hundred new employees and sends them for
several
months’ training and work on the assembly line in one of Toyota’s existing factories. After
several
months of studying the production system and working alongside experienced Toyota
assembly-line
workers, the new workers are sent back to the new factory site. These repatriated
workers are
accompanied by one or two hundred long-term, highly experienced Toyota workers, who will then
work
alongside all the new employees in the new factory to assure that knowledge of Toyota’s finely
tuned
production process is fully implanted in the new factory.
Toyota’s use of Quality Circles also provides an example of the tacit knowledge
approach to
creating new knowledge. At the end of each work week, groups of Toyota production workers
spend
one to two hours analyzing the performance of their part of the production system to identify actual
or
potential problems in quality or productivity. Each group proposes ‘countermeasures’ to
correct
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 238Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
identified problems, and discusses the results of countermeasures taken during the week to address
problems identified the week before. Through personal interactions in such Quality Circle
group
settings, Toyota employees share their ideas for improvement, devise steps to test
new ideas for
improvement, and assess the results of their tests.
This knowledge management practice, which is repeated weekly as an integral part of
the Toyota
production system, progressively identifies, eliminates and even prevents errors. As
improvements
developed by Quality Circles are accumulated over many years, Toyota’s production system has
become
one of the highest-quality production processes in the world (Spear and Bowen 1999).
The explicit knowledge approach
In contrast to the views held by the tacit knowledge approach, the explicit knowledge approach
holds
that knowledge is something that can be explained by individuals - even though some effort and
even
some forms of assistance may sometimes be required to help individuals articulate what they know.
As a
result, the explicit knowledge approach assumes that the useful knowledge of
individuals in an
organization can be articulated and made explicit.
Working from this premise, the explicit knowledge approach also believes that formal
organizational
processes can be used to help individuals articulate the knowledge they have to create knowledge
assets.
This approach also holds that explicit knowledge assets can then be disseminated within an
organization
through documents, drawings, standard operating procedures, manuals of best practice, and the
like.
Information systems are usually seen as playing a central role in facilitating the
dissemination of
explicit knowledge assets over company intranets or between organizations via the Internet.
Usually accompanying the views that knowledge can be made explicit and managed explicitly is
the belief
that new knowledge can be created through a structured, managed, scientific learning
process.
Experiments and other forms of structured learning processes can be designed to remedy
important
knowledge deficiencies, or market transactions or strategic partnering may be used to obtain
specific
forms of needed knowledge or to improve an organization’s existing knowledge assets.
The recommendations for knowledge management practice usually proposed by researchers
and
consultants working within the explicit knowledge approach focus on initiating and
sustaining
organizational processes for generating, articulating, categorizing and systematically leveraging
explicit
knowledge assets. Some examples of knowledge management practice in this mode help to
illustrate this
approach.
In the 1990s, Motorola was the global leader in the market for pagers. To maintain this
leadership
position, Motorola introduced new generations of pager designs every 12-15 months. Each new
pager
generation was designed to offer more advanced features and options for customization
than the
preceding generation.
3
In addition, a new factory with higher-speed, more flexible assembly lines was
designed and built to produce each new generation of pager. To sustain this high rate of product and
process development, Motorola formed teams of product and factory designers to design each
new
generation of pager and factory. At the beginning of their project, each new team of
designers
received a manual of design methods and techniques from the team that had developed the previous
generation of pager and factory. The new team would then have three deliverables at the end of
their
project: (1) an improved and more configurable next-generation pager design, (2) the design of a
more
efficient and flexible assembly line for the factory that would produce the new pager, and (3) an
improved design manual that incorporated the design knowledge provided to the team in the
manual it
received - plus the new and improved design methods that the team had developed to meet the
product
and production goals for its project. This manual would then be passed on to the next design team
given
the task of developing the next generation of pager and its factory. In this way, Motorola sought to
make explicit and capture the knowledge developed by its engineers during each project
and to
systematically leverage that knowledge in launching the work of the next project team.
In addition to its tacit knowledge management practice of moving new employees around to
transfer
knowledge of its production system, Toyota also follows a highly disciplined explicit
knowledge
management practice of documenting the tasks that each team of workers and each individual
worker
is asked to perform on its assembly lines. These documents provide a detailed description of how
each
task is to be performed, how long each task should take, the sequence of steps to be followed
in
performing each task, and the steps to be taken by each worker in checking his or her own work
(Spear
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 239Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
and Bowen 1999). When improvements are suggested by solving problems on the assembly line as
they
occur or in the weekly Quality Circle meetings of Toyota’s teams of assembly-line workers,
those
suggestions are evaluated by Toyota’s production engineers and then formally incorporated in
revised
task description documents.
In addition to developing well-defined and documented process descriptions for routine,
repetitive
production tasks, some organizations have also created explicit knowledge management approaches
to
support more creative tasks such as developing new products. In the Chrysler unit of
DaimlerChrysler
Corporation, for example, several ‘platform teams’ of 300-600 development engineers
have
responsibility for creating the next-generation platforms4
on which Chrysler’s future automobiles will be
based. Each platform team is free to actively explore and evaluate alternative design solutions for
the
many different technical aspects of their vehicle platform. However, each platform team is also
required
to place the design solution it has selected for each aspect of their vehicle platform in a
‘Book of
Knowledge’ on Chrysler’s intranet. This catalogue of developed design solutions is then made
available
to all plat-form teams to consult in their development processes, so that good design
solutions
developed by one platform team can also be located and used by other platform teams.
Other firms have taken this explicit knowledge management approach to managing
knowledge in
product development processes even further. For example, GE Fanuc Automation, one of the
world’s
leading industrial automation firms, develops design methodologies that are applied in the design of
new kinds of components for their factory automation systems. In effect, instead of leaving it up to
each engineer in the firm to devise a design solution for each new component needed, GE Fanuc’s
engineers work together to create detailed design methodologies for each type of component the
firm uses. These design methodologies are then encoded in software and computerized so that the
design of new component variations can be automated.
Desired performance parameters for each new component variation are entered into the
automated
design program, and GE Fanuc’s computer system automatically generates a design solution for
the
component. In this way, GE Fanuc tries to make explicit and capture the design knowledge
of its
engineers and then to systematically re-use that knowledge by automating most new component
design
tasks.
Advantages and disadvantages of tacit versus explicit knowledge approaches
Like most alternative approaches to managing, each of the two knowledge management
approaches
we have discussed has advantages and disadvantages.
Advantages and disadvantages of the tacit knowledge approach
One of the main advantages of the tacit knowledge approach is that it is a relatively easy and
inexpensive
way to begin managing knowledge. The essential first step is relatively simple - identify
what each
individual in the organization believes is the specific kind of knowledge he or she possesses.
Managers
Advantages and disadvantages of tacit versus explicit knowledge management approach
© Copyright Virtual University of Pakistan 240Knowledge Management –MGMT-630 VU
Tacit knowledge approach
Advantages:
Relatively easy and inexpensive to begin.
Employees may respond well to recognition of the
(claimed)
knowledge.
Likely to create interest in further knowledge
management processes.
Important knowledge kept in tacit form may be less
likely to ‘leak’ to competitors.
Disadvantages:
Individuals may not have the knowledge they claim
to have.
Knowledge profiles of individuals need frequent
updating.
Ability to transfer knowledge constrained to
moving people, which is costly and limits the reach
and speed of knowledge dissemination within the
organization.
An organization may lose key knowledge if key
people leave.
Explicit knowledge approach
Advantages:
Articulated knowledge (explicit knowledge assets)
may be moved instantaneously anytime anywhere
by information technologies.
Codified knowledge may be pro-actively
disseminated to people who can use specific forms
of Knowledge.
Knowledge that has been made explicit can be
discussed, debated and improved.
Making knowledge explicit makes it possible to
discover knowledge deficiencies in the organization.
Disadvantages:
Considerable time and effort may be required to
help people articulate their knowledge.
Employment relationship with key knowledge
workers may have to be redefined to motivate
knowledge
articulation.
Expert committees must be formed to evaluate
explicit knowledge assets.
Application of explicit knowledge throughout an
organization must be assured by adoption of best
practices.
Handbook on the knowledge economy
can then use this knowledge to assign individuals to key tasks or to compose teams with appropriate
sets of knowledge to carry out a project, to improve performance in current processes, or to try to
create new knowledge in the organization. As Philips did with its intranet-based
‘yellow pages,’
managers may also elect to create an open database listing the knowledge claimed by individuals in
the
organization to facilitate knowledge sharing between individuals.
A tacit knowledge approach may also lead to improvements in employee satisfaction and
motivation
when an organization ‘officially’ recognizes and makes visible in the organization the kinds of
knowledge
that individual workers claim to have. In addition, the tacit knowledge approach is likely to avoid
some of
the practical and motivational difficulties that may be encountered in trying to secure the
cooperation
of individuals in making their knowledge explicit (discussed below).
A further advantage often claimed for tacit knowledge management approaches derives from
the
view that making knowledge explicit increases the risk that knowledge will be ‘leaked’
from an
organization, so that leaving knowledge in tacit form also helps to protect a firm’s
proprietary
knowledge from diffusing to competing organizations. (The potential disadvantages of
leaving
knowledge in tacit form are summarized below.)
Most seriously, leaving knowledge tacit in the heads of key individuals creates a
risk that the
organization may lose that knowledge if any of those individuals becomes incapacitated,
leaves the
organization, or - in the worst case - is recruited by competitors.