Title: Knowledge Management
1Knowledge Management
- Groff and Jones, Introduction to Knowledge
Management KM in Business, Butterworth-Heinemann
(Elsevier), Burlington, MA, 2003.
21. Introducing KM
- Knowledge is the INFINITE ASSET. Why? (It is the
only asset that increases when it is shared.)
(Leveraging effect.) - Data, Information, and knowledge
- Tacit and explicit knowledge
- Scope creep (ignore!)
3Knowledge
- is the INFINITE ASSET.
- Why?
4Knowledge
- is the INFINITE ASSET.
- Why?
- It is the only asset that increases when it is
shared - Leveraging
5Knowledge Management
- The tools, techniques, and strategies to retain,
analyze, organize, improve, and share business
expertise. - Relate to Best Practices!
6Venn Diagram shows the relationship between
information and knowledge
Figure 1.1, p. 3
7Knowledge
- Tacit knowledge
- Explicit knowledge
8Tacit Knowledge
- Personal knowledge embedded in individual
experience and involving intangible factors such
as personal belief, perspective, and values
9Explicit Knowledge
- Refers to tacit knowledge that has been
documented. - It has been articulated into formal language and
can be much more easily transferred among
individuals.
10- Making tacit knowledge explicit is a key function
of knowledge management
11Knowledge Repository
- Where the knowledge lives
- Groff and Jones call it a knowledge base
12Dialogue
- What types of tacit knowledge do you think would
be valuable to capture in a corporate
(organizational) knowledge base? - What benefits for the company (organization) do
you imagine could be gained from making this
knowledge explicit?
13In-Class Exercise Saving Money
- Describe ways to save money
- Create a list of three money-saving techniques
- Document the exact procedures involved
14In-Class Exercise
- In your opinion, where is knowledge created?
- In your opinion, where is knowledge really stored?
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162. Personal KM
- Introductory story about the Romans
- Steam engine invented
- Julius Caesar never approved it.
17So
- KM needs strong executive support
- Innovation must be allowed to grow within an
organization, or that organization loses its
competitive edge - Freedom to fail is important!
18Learning Objectives
- The presentation of information can either hide
or highlight the truth consider Kerrys and
Bushs Vietnam War service records - Value the path to knowledge as much as the
knowledge itself proper change management is
critical - Know what determines the utility of a network
technology does matter, though not as much as
you might think - Learn the 6 most common tools for personal KM
19Thoughts on KM
- every additional unit of knowledge used
effectively results in a marginal increase in
performance (Malhotra) - All business processes involve creation,
dissemination, renewal, and application of
knowledge toward meeting the goals of the
business - unfortunately, all business processes also
involve the hoarding, distorting, and
dissemination of disinformat5ion to support the
goals of individual employees. - Dont rely on technology
20Technology?
- Successful knowledge transfer involves neither
computers nor documents, but rather interactions
between people. - Thomas H. Davenport, Think Tank The Future of
Knowledge Management, CIO, December 15, 1995.
21Dialogue
- How did Native Americans (Australian Aborigines
in fact, most major religious and cultural
groups, tribes, etc.) exchange knowledge before
their written language? - How was their knowledge transfer tied to their
culture?
22Case Study London Cholera Epidemic of 1854
- pp. 14-15
- Lessons of the story
- (p. 15)
23Goal of a Personal KM Strategy
- To increase your productivity, innovation, and
creative output to outdistance the competition
24The Six Action Elements of Your Info Workflow
Figure 2.2, p. 16
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263. Capture and Corroborate
- Information Overload (Triage)
- Web portals
27Dialogue, p. 33
- How many of the following rumors have you heard?
- Can you pick out the ones that are true? (50)
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294. Organize and Secure
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315. Analyze and Collaborate
- Layers (levels) of abstraction in knowledge
- Humans perceive things differently, based on
their unique abstractions - Five key requirements for successful collaboration
32Abstraction
- Helps us interpret and expand complex data and
information patterns. - Example barter, money, electronic money (whats
next?)
33Abstraction
- The process of taking away or removing
characteristics from something in order to reduce
it to a set of essential characteristics - The process of abstraction relies on setting a
goal, defining a data representation, identifying
relevant features, and categorization
34Abstraction Research Issue
- When contributing knowledge, what level of
abstraction is appropriate? - Should multiple levels be stored in a knowledge
repository? - The level of understanding (training) of the
intended recipient may vary
35Five Requirements for Successful Collaboration
- Dialogue
- Trust
- Common goals
- Empathy
- Openness
- Teamwork, common lenses, common frames
36Critical Collaboration Skills
- Effective and well-formatted communications
- Effective listening active listening
- Effective strategies for conflict resolution
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386. Storytelling and Knowledge Transfer
- Stories exist in all organizations and are an
integral part of defining what that organization
is and what it means to work for it. Dave
Snowden, Director of IBMs Institute for
Knowledge Management - It seems that the easiest way to get people to
document their knowledge is to videotape them
talking about what they know as was done through
the cases in Gorelick, Milton, and April,
Performance Through Learning, Butterworth-Heineman
n (Elsevier), Burlington, MA, 2004. Observation
by Jay E. Aronson, 2004.
39Learning Objectives
- See what makes explicit knowledge easier to
capture and share but less valuable than tacit
knowledge major problem at consulting firms in
the mid to late 1990s - Learn to use stories to illustrate extremely
complicated concepts in brief, memorable, and
easily repeated ways - Make your communications more convincing,
contextual, and compelling through storytelling - See why well-crafted stories are self-propagating
40Storytelling
- Narrative thinking
- Narrative decision making
- Beach (book published by Sage)
- Courtroom juries and judges have relied on
storytelling for millennia
41Storytelling The ancient art of KM
- Words convey the mental treasures of one period
to the generations that follow and laden with
this, their precious freight, they sail safely
across gulfs of time in which empires have
suffered shipwreck and the languages of common
life have sunk into oblivion (Anonymous)
42Key Advantages of Storytelling
- People tend to hear stories in a receptive mode
rather than in a defensive mode - Abstract arguments are often combative in nature
- Stories are usually more memorable than other
forms of communication - Stories focus on what instinctively matters to
people - Stories are not so bound by logic they thrive on
conflict, surprises, and change - Stories can unleash a spirit of heroism
- Stories help workers frame their work in loftier
and more significant terms
43Strong Uses for Storytelling
- Promoting organizational change
- Delivering communications
- Capturing tacit knowledge
- Transferring tacit knowledge
- Spurring innovation
- Building community
44Two Main Story Types
- Business fables Fictitious narrations
- Business anecdotes True narrations
- Both intentions to reveal some useful value,
idea, or precept
45The Heros Journey Archetype
- Homer The Iliad, The Odyssey
- (Listen to Mark Grahams Classic Greek on Open
Houses Second City CD) - Troubadours
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477. Systems Thinking
488. Harnessing Metcalfes Law Utility Nodes 2
- Skip
- But I like the Just for Fun on p. 95.
- Example 16 O in a P
- What does it mean?
- 16 ounces in a pound
499. 3D Communication
- Skip
- But Cute Dialogue on p. 111 (story) You are
driving alone in your car on a wild, stormy
night. You pass by a bus stop, and you see three
people waiting for the bus
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5110. Building in Knowledge Exchange
- Must be built directly
- into the organizational
- culture with strong
- executive support,
- employee buy in, and definite, measurable payoffs
- Change management must be managed properly and
well
52Knowledge Exchange Channels
- Case Study The Sad Tale of the Vasa
- (Noone would/could tell the king about the
problem) - Similar problem at Greyhound with its reservation
system
53Cross-Selling (CRM)
- Applebees
- Hard Rock Café
- CRM Customer Relationship (Resource) Management
great new type of KM manage your customers
well - Markets as conversation points touch points
54Maximize Knowledge Exchange
- (Now, we can use technology Web)
- Increase collaboration along the supply chain,
among team members, etc. - Communities of Practice (CoP) self-organizing
groups - Social events
- Get rid of walls get rid of elevators Chrysler,
Auburn Hills, MI - Create better environments of knowledge exchange
55Chrysler HeadquartersAuburn Hills, MI
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5711. Developing KM Strategies
- Knowledge is embedded in people, and knowledge
creation occurs in the process of social
interaction (Karl Erik Sveiby) - There is better academic material on KM
strategies - There are some interesting ideas here, though
58Learning Objectives
- EVERY project should be considered a KM project
- The four key tools that support organizational
effectiveness - The three most common approaches to developing
organizational KM strategies - Develop an interest in using metacognitive
strategies to improve learning - Understand that thinking styles are situational
and open to improvement
59Effective knowledge management
- Benefits from a strategic approach, detailed
planning, and comprehensive support structures. - Does not necessarily require a massive budget, a
complete infrastructure change, an army of
consultants, and a new software vendor
60Every corporate project touches on one or more of
- Coordination Harmonious interaction throughout
the organization - Communication Facilitating the exchange of
information - Learning Guiding and supporting the development
of effective behaviors - Memory Storing, organizing, and recalling
information
61KM Strategy
- Top Down
- Bottom Up
- Middle-Up-Down
62Organizational Knowledge
Figure 11.2, p. 132
63How Fear Stalls Many KM Initiatives
Figure 11.3, p. 132
64The Four Areas of Knowledge Conversion(Nonakas
SECI Model)
Figure 11.4, p. 133
65Thinking About ThinkingBlooms Taxonomy
Figure 11.5, p. 135
66Metacognition
67Inquiry Modes
- Skip unless there is time
- Churchman and Miroff How do people gather and
process information? - Five basic types.
- Use the Inquiry Mode Questionnaire (InQ) InQ
Educational Materials, Inc., www.inq-hpa.com
68Thinking Styles
- Key behavioral cues
- Situational, not functional
- Everyone can expand and improve
69Five Thinking Styles
- Realists
- Analysts
- Idealists
- Synthesists
- Pragmatists
70Realists
- Inductive and task-oriented
- Rely on facts and expert opinion
- Prefer data to theory
- Mental models derived chiefly from observation,
expert opinion and their own experience - Style is empirical
- Best for well-defined problem situations for
which there is strong consensual position on the
nature of the problem - Very practical at handling resources and excels
at setting near-term objectives
71Figure 11.6
72Analysts
- See the world as structured, organized and
predictable - Believe that their should be one well-planned
method for doing anything - Style is prescriptive and method-oriented,
operating with models and formulas - Typically prefer data to theories
- When in doubt, gather more data
- Best for well-structured problems where explicit
problem-solving formulas exist
73Figure 11.7
74Idealists
- Welcome a broad range of views
- Experience reality as the whole into which new
data are assimilated, based on similarities to
things they already know. - Style is assimilative, receptive, and
need-oriented, assigning equal value to both data
and theory - Often listen to intuition rather than just
relying on the facts - Shun conflict and are always trying to be
accommodating - Better at handling situations that are value-laden
75Figure 11.8
76Synthesists
- Focus their thinking on ideas and find
connections among things that other people see as
having little or no relationship - Style is challenging, speculative, integrative,
and process-oriented - Ask what if and why not, and regard data to be
meaningless without interpretation - Skilled at handling controversial issues without
discouraging debate and creativity
77Figure 11.9
78Pragmatists
- See the world as constantly changing and largely
unpredictable, requiring a flexible, whatever
works approach to problem solving - Style is adaptive, incremental, and
payoff-oriented - Not ones for great long-range plans and tend to
be short-range, practical thinkers - Tend to employ a piecemeal approach to life
- Well-suited for solving complex issues, but
somewhat difficult to identify
79Figure 11.10
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8112. The Ethics of KM
- Knowledge management is an ongoing evolutionary
process. Once its part of your business model,
it will always be part of your business model
David Keller, Marketing VP at Zoneworx Inc. - Organizations can use storytelling to give
examples of ways that people are demonstrating
positive results while operating within ethical
boundaries - Case Study 5 Monkeys in a Cage, p. 150
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8313. Metrics and Taming Wicked Problems
- Some problems are so complex that you have to be
highly intelligent and well informed just to be
undecided about them Laurence J. Peter - Cognitive Mapping / Banxia Software Corp., Fran
Ackermann
84KM Metrics
85Taming the Wicked Problem
- Five Taming Technique that dont work (also see
Chapter 2 of Turban and Aronson, DSSIS, 6th ed.) - Redefine the problem
- Declare victory
- Rig the metrics
- Stay in your foxhole
- Go shopping (for software, etc.)
86Case Study Taming a Wicked ERP Problem
- Also Hersheys Chocolate ERP case
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8814. Careers in KM
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90END OF PPT PRESENTATION
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