ImplicationsofIntellectualCapital Allee2000
ImplicationsofIntellectualCapital Allee2000
ImplicationsofIntellectualCapital Allee2000
http://www.emerald-library.com
The focus on intellectual capital and intangible assets that has emerged in the
last few years is opening up a series of questions and explorations that have
profound implications for heads of companies, those seeking to understand
new business models, shapers of national policies, accounting professionals
and economists. People around the world are engaged in a massive struggle to
reframe business and economics in an environment of global interdependency,
environmental concerns and larger responsibility. Intellectual capital (IC) and
intangibles offer a possible pathway for reconciling business and economic
models with a growing understanding of the web of life and consideration of
how economic activity impacts and is influenced by the potential health and
wellbeing of society and the environment.
However, much of the current intellectual capital conversation is confined
within frameworks and questions that are still very much a part of industrial
age thinking. Some of this is necessary to build the bridges of understanding
that help people shift into new perspectives. However, in the interest of
building bridges we sometimes lose sight of what is really new and exciting.
Michael Boisot (1995) reminds us that, whenever any radical alternative to the
existing symbolic order emerges, one of the ways the existing social system
will try to neutralize it is by making a special effort to incorporate it into
existing schemes. When we frame the IC conversation solely in terms of ROI or
monetary valuation of assets alone, we are not inviting people into new views Journal of Intellectual Capital,
Vol. 1 No. 1, 2000, pp. 17-32.
but colluding with them to simply stretch old thinking just a little bit farther. # MCB University Press, 1469-1930
JIC Rather than opening up new possibilities, much of the conversation around
1,1 intellectual capital and intangibles serves to reinforce existing thinking and
mindsets rather than challenge them or offer viable alternatives.
Holding the tension of genuinely new thinking in the face of large sectors of
the economy that are entrenched around old models is not for the faint of heart.
It requires constant vigilance and courage to continually question the
18 underlying assumptions, notice the potential pitfalls and limitations in our
frameworks, and explore the deeper consequences of the concepts and tools we
are developing. There are many ways the paradoxes and tensions of these new
ideas play out in the way we work with intellectual capital and intangibles.
Some of the most critical areas will be addressed here, but there are many more
that will continue to challenge us.
Variety of emissions targets and goals Diversity and equal opportunity (i.e. percent
of women in senior executive positions)
Planted areas in forestry and toxic
absorption rates Spread of grievance procedures
Screening of suppliers for compliance with Working hours and wages by country
HSE standards distribution
Safety and accident measures Compliance with business principles
(including zero bribes policy)
Table I. Business impact of security incidents
Indicators from Shell Compliance with legal employment age and
Oil Annual Report ban on child labor
1999, People, Plant
and Profits Communications and publications
resources through contributions to the health and sustainability of the The value
environment. evolution
This larger perspective, at first glance, would appear overwhelming to
address in most companies. It would mean analyzing tangible and intangible
value exchanges, including knowledge exchanges across all the domains of
value. Yet, I am finding that people respond positively to this framework at a
fundamental human level. It is not so much a question of whether or not these 23
things are important ± clearly they are. The real question is how will we
address them. Can we bring coherence and integrity to our business models in
the light of the higher values that we hold dear? Can we expand our intangible
value models to integrate the good work that has gone on in view of social
responsibility and sustainable enterprise fields for decades?
Let us first consider what domains a whole systems view of value might
include as delineated in Figure 1 (Allee, 1999). Notice that I have identified the
content of the various value domains without using the term ``capital''. As we
progress in our thinking about intangibles we may find the word ``capital'' more
and more due to the traditional ways we think about capital as something to be
accumulated, controlled and stored. While intangibles are definitely assets that
contribute to our business and economic success at both the company and
country level, they are very different in their nature from capital assets:
SOCIAL
CITIZENSHIP
BUSINESS
RELATIONSHIPS
ENVIRONMENTAL
HEALTH
IDENTITY
VISION
VALUES
INTERNAL
HUMAN STRUCTURES Figure 1.
COMPETENCE
An expanded view of
enterprise value
domains. (Arrows
represent dynamic value
exchanges that are
multi-directional and
extended across all
domains)
JIC . Business relationships: alliances and business relationships with
1,1 customers, strategic partners, suppliers, investors, regulatory bodies
and government groups.
. Internal structures: systems and work processes that leverage
competitiveness, including IT, communication technologies, systems
and software, databases, documents, images, concepts and models of
24 how the business operates, patents, copyrights and other codified
knowledge.
. Human competence: individual capabilities, knowledge, skills,
experience and problem-solving abilities that reside in people.
. Social citizenship: the quality and value of relationships enjoyed with
larger society through the exercise of corporate citizenship as a member
of local, regional and global communities. (Note that social citizenship in
this context has long been referred to as social capital in social sciences
literature. However, the term social capital is also starting to be picked
up in the management field where it is used almost synonymously with
definitions of corporate culture, identity or values, which I have included
as a separate category below. It will be interesting to see how the usage
of the term social capital plays out over the next couple of years.)
. Environmental health: the value of one's relationship with the earth and
its resources as understood through calculation of the true costs of
resources consumed by an enterprise or economy and determination of
equitable exchange or contribution to the health and sustainability of
the environment.
. Corporate identity: the value of one's vision, purpose, values, ethical
stance and leadership as it contributes to brand equity and economic
success in business and employee relationships. This category of value
has been most fully appreciated by some of the early practitioners such
as Hubert Saint-Onge. To work this arena of value more deliberately as
well as from a measurement perspective, Hubert turned to the work of
Brian Hall of Values Technology (Hall, 1995) to work with the values
alignment and culture at the Mutual Group (now Clarica).
Based on the work of the influential practitioners noted above and work in
other fields, I have pulled together a few samples of measures that would be
relevant in each of these domains. This is not a definitive list and the actual
emphasis in each of these value domains would be dependent upon corporate
strategy. This is meant only as a broad brush stroke guideline as to what
people might address (Table II).
Redefining value
This expanded view of intellectual capital offers the possibility of actually
redefining value and wealth both at the business level and at the macro-economic
level. As long as we define value only in monetary terms we have not evolved
External Social citizenship Environmental
Measures relationships Human competence Internal structure (external) Corporate identity health
Growth Percent of Percent with higher Ratio employee Growth customer Succession Percent of waste
asset satisfaction education access to base planning products
development Percent of revenue Years' experience technology and Quality/number Leadership training Regulatory
from targeted Percent of ``growth'' data emp applicants Values alignment compliance
industries or projects Speed of employee Number of Percent renewal of
countries Succession ratio customer/supplier innovation used resources
Percent of image orientation channels Local quality of
enhancing Contributions to life where
customers knowledge base operating
Growth alliances
Efficiency of Ratio contacts to Value added per Ratio revenue to Increase positive Speed of decision Desirability as
value contracts expert employee admin support brand recognition making place to work/
conversion Points of sale Ratio non-revenue Contracts per Ratio job offers to Successful hires live
Sales per customer generating employee acceptance Brand recognition Increase ``green''
Percent of people Process cycle times Market penetration Number of job brand recognition
customer orders ROI from Product/service applicants Increase resource
improvement development availability
ideas costs
Utilization Frequency of Knowledge reuse Utilization rate of: Ratio local hires Levels of Resource
customer contact Diffusion of best Admin support Percent of conformance to efficiencies
Percent of repeat practices Hardware community values Percent of zero
customers Competency Software licenses involvement Retention of valued waste projects
utilization Databases Match sales to employees Number of breadth
(profiling) Physical assets demographics or depth
Employee environmental
satisfaction practices
(Continued)
Possible measures for
expanded domains of
The value
evolution
Table II.
value
25
26
1,1
JIC
Table II.
Renewal Customer Percent of Percent compatible Percent of image Frequency of Growth of non-
demographic diversity/women systems enhancing revisiting values renewable
change Time in training Speed of change projects by leadership needed resources
Ratio large to Percent of budget Percent of structure Employee
small learning enhancing involvement
together projects
beyond the hard asset and capital formation thinking of the industrial age. The value
Beneath the question of intellectual capital is a much larger question of ``How is evolution
value really created?'' If we take this question as far as it can go, we begin to see
the underlying social fabric of networks of relationships, a robust and vital
human society engaging in exchanges of all variety and the foundational web
of life and healthy ecosystems that we all depend upon. These underlying
factors are the roots of success, wealth and sustainable economies. 27
When I first studied economics years ago the assumptions made no sense to
me. How could a robust economic model be based only on the limited activities
of humans as they engage in monetary transactions? It seemed to me then, as it
does now, that you cannot define economic success in ways that are
disconnected from the whole of human activities, including those of indigenous
people or those engaged in subsistence agriculture ± all of whom are assumed
to add no economic value or ``worth'' to society. Nor does it make sense to me to
think of the real value of the earth and its resources only in terms of board feet
of lumber, agricultural acreage or mineral extraction. Surely a healthy
ecosystem is of far greater ``value'' than that which can be calculated in terms of
monetary exchange.
We who are concerned with value creation at the level of business and
enterprise need to be much more aware of efforts to redefine value, not only in
the world of business but also at the macro-economic level. Growing numbers
of people are increasingly uncomfortable with the logical disconnects between
our business and economic models and what we feel is most important or what
most truly defines wealth and success. This frustration plays out in
corporations as investments in people such as training or job enrichment are
shortchanged by decisions based on quarterly financial profits where such
activities are not viewed as investments but as expenses. At the macro-
economic level, people such as economist Hazel Hendersen (Hendersen, 1996)
have made powerful arguments that national accounts must begin to factor-in
the real economic contributions of the unpaid labor of women, calculate the true
environmental costs of business, and include indicators of quality of life,
society and the environment.
This discounting of the truly unseen wealth of entire countries and
economies was driven home to me on a recent visit to India, a country that is
considered ``poor'' by modern economic accounting methods. What struck me
as I traveled from city to city was not the number of people that fell through the
cracks in that society (as they do in any society) but the hundreds of millions of
people that did not. As I talked with people it became apparent that their first
``economic'' concern was for their web of family and social relationships.
Repeatedly I was asked about my family as people assessed how well I am
``supported'' in my life. It also became clear that many people I talked with view
the USA as a ``poor'' country in terms of family and social fabric. As my
perspective started to shift to see the world through this lens, I began to see the
tremendous wealth of India in its deeply interwoven social fabric that has
genuine economic impact and contributes greatly to the quality of human life.
JIC Yet, in no national accounting standards is social fabric directly explored as a
1,1 form of wealth.
Genuinely new ways of thinking about value also do not surface in the way
we discuss intangible assets in terms of corporations. When every indicator of
success regarding intangibles is driven to a financial measure we close the door
to other ways of thinking about wealth and value. Over almost two decades of
28 supporting performance improvement initiatives in organizations I have
repeatedly seen people trying to jump through the very narrow hoop of
financial impact or ROI in order to justify doing the right thing. The intangibles
perspective offers real hope of surfacing intangible domains of value as wealth
and assets in their own right without having to go to such logical contortions.
Unfortunately, many people are trying to work the intangibles themes using
the same old business logic and are missing the larger value opportunities in
the process. Our definitions of both wealth and value default automatically to
financial measures, assuring that we remain locked in the same ways of
thinking first defined in the capital intensive industrial age.
Redefining value in accordance with the intangibles perspective allows us to
think of value more broadly as a tangible or intangible good or service,
knowledge, or benefit that is desirable or useful to its recipients so that they are
willing to return a fair price or exchange. Each of these three types of value also
acts as currency in its own right. In other words we may exchange knowledge
directly for knowledge. We might also exchange knowledge for tangible goods,
services or money. We could also exchange knowledge for an intangible value
or asset such as customer loyalty, a strategy Sun Microsystems employed by
giving away its Java programming language in order to build a loyal web of
users for Java technology. In the new economy value and currency both begin
to take on many different forms and guises.
Conclusion
IC and intangibles offer a possible pathway for reconciling our business
and economic models in an environment of global interdependencies,
environmental concern and social responsibility. However, the most common
intellectual capital frameworks still operate within a traditional view of the
enterprise that limits the type of business and economic analysis that might be
possible with an expanded view of value. Realizing the larger impact of the IC
and intangibles perspective requires expanding potential value domains to
include:
. business relationships;
. human competence;
. internal structures;
. social citizenship;
. environmental health; and
. corporate identity.
An expanded view of value allows us to begin redefining value at the enterprise
level and reconfiguring our ideas of wealth at the macro-economic level.
Redefining value allows us to understand knowledge and intangible benefits as The value
currencies in their own right, so we can be more deliberate about all types of evolution
value exchange. At the macro-economic level this new thinking allows us to
more fully appreciate intangible assets such as the social fabric of a country
and the real value of healthy ecosystems, as well as beginning to appreciate
indigenous people and subsistence agriculture as being of genuine economic
importance. 31
This larger, more organic view of value requires that we evolve our
approaches into true systems thinking. Our analytical approaches must use
new tools and frameworks that help us better understand interdependencies,
dynamic exchanges, feedback and complexities in our constantly changing
business environment. Systems thinking in regard to value will allow us to
appreciate differences and diversities, rather than being constrained by the
conformity of financial measures alone. The power of intangibles analysis
suggests that we can more fully understand a company or country in all its
uniqueness.
IC and intangibles offer these possibilities but only if we continually move
forward to emphasize the strengths and differences that these perspectives
offer. We must be vigilant in our thinking and continually challenge our own
assumptions, be alert for the shortcomings and limitations in our models and
be willing to experiment with very different ways of looking at the world.
We must also have the courage to ask if we are bringing forward the kind of
ideas that will lead to greater health and wholeness for the planet and her
peoples, or whether we are inadvertently colluding with an existing economic
order whose fundamental logic is at odds with sustainable business practices.
Being on the edge of a new world view brings enormous responsibility to those
who are introducing new thinking. We are creating the future in the work we
are doing. Is it the future we want?
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