Managing Knowledge: The Challenge

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Managing Knowledge: The Challenge

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Title: Managing Knowledge: The Challenge


1
Managing Knowledge The Challenge
  • Introduction
  • To survive and compete in the Knowledge
    society, companies must learn to manage their
    intellectual assets.
  • Classical production factors vs. knowledge the
    management of knowledge is in its infancy.
  • This chapter shows why companies increasingly
    accept the challenge of Knowledge Management
    (KM), and what rewards they can expect for doing
    so.

2
A hot topic
  • Companies are urged to make more use of the
    hidden treasure in the minds of their
    employees.
  • Innovative firms set up work groups on KM.
  • Professional organizers advertise workshops and
    conferences on KM, and business consultants offer
    their services.

3
Success of knowledge-intensive companies
  • Many knowledge-intensive companies have achieved
    spectacular success in recent years success
    which is reflected in their stock market
    performance.
  • Examples SAP, Microsoft.

4
Managers Discover Knowledge
  • Moving towards the knowledge society
  • Trends in industry
  • Taking stock of knowledge
  • Indices of knowledge
  • Absence of management tools
  • The first knowledge managers

5
Moving towards the knowledge society
  • The long-predicted information society and
    knowledge economy are now emerging as tangible
    realities.
  • Three-quarters of added value is attributable to
    the possession of specific knowledge. (James
    Brian Quinn, 19921993)
  • A companys intellectual capital is often several
    times that of its material assets. (Charles
    Handy, 1990)

6
Trends in industry
  • The revolution in communications technology
    enhances the importance of knowledge.
  • This trend naturally affects the financial
    success of individual companies, prompting(??)
    more of them to recognize the fundamental
    importance of knowledge as a resource.

7
Taking stock of knowledge
  • Its difficult for managers to produce the
    figures for their companys intellectual assets.
  • One of the first companies to take stock of its
    knowledge was the Swedish Skandia Assurance and
    Financial Services (AFS).
  • In 1993, AFS published the first accounts (??) of
    its intellectual assets, as a supplement to the
    traditional business results.

8
Indices of knowledge
  • To provide a more systematic breakdown (??) of
    non-material assets previously known collectively
    as goodwill.
  • An system of indices is used to enter the
    knowledge and skills of highly trained employees,
    together with other factors such as customer
    relations, the companys market reputation, and
    its information technology.
  • Navigation mechanism provided.

9
Absence of management tools
  • No progress has been made in creating
    professional tools for managing knowledge assets.
  • As a result, organizations often make too little
    use of their intellectual resources. E.g.
    patents, employee skills, competitive strength,
    etc.

10
The first knowledge managers
  • New positions have been created director of
    intellectual capital, director of knowledge,
    knowledge or intellectual assets manager.
  • With different functions to work on strategic
    analyses of competencies, to develop ways of
    indexing knowledge, to create better
    communications infrastructures, to look for more
    efficient ways of managing patent portfolios.

11
The first knowledge managers(Contd)
  • The common factor in their work is that all of
    them are responding to the challenge of an
    increasingly competitive environment.
    (???????????????????????????)
  • Managers need to consider how the growing
    importance of knowledge might affect their own
    companys competitive position(??).
  • They must therefore understand the basic dynamics
    of our knowledge oriented society.

12
The Knowledge Environment Transparent or
Turbulent?
  • Environmental trends
  • Specialization
  • Globalization

13
Environmental trends
  • The knowledge environment has three closely
    related trends the explosive rate at which
    knowledge grows, the extent to which it has
    become fragmented, and its increasing
    globalization.
  • It took more than 300 years for the worldwide
    volume of information to double for the first
    time. Since then, it has doubled virtually every
    five years.

14
Specialization
  • A century ago, an all-round scholar could acquire
    a general understanding of the state of research
    in almost every area of sciences
  • Today, even within one subject, people of
    different specialties may have trouble
    understanding each other.
  • The first two editions of the Encyclopedia
    Britannica were produced by just two scientists
    today, it takes tens of thousands of experts to
    work on each new edition.

15
Globalization
  • The continuing trend towards a global economy has
    led to globalization of knowledge.
  • All these changes mean that it is now impossible
    to know about all existing products, product
    variants, production technologies, or patterns of
    competitive advantage among countries, even at a
    general level.
  • At the beginning of the 1970s, the USA still
    produced more than 70 of the worlds new
    technologies now, centers of scientific and
    technical excellence are spread around the
    world.India

16
The Knowledge Environment
17
More Knowledge Threat or Opportunity?
  • Intelligent products
  • Sensitivity to environmental conditions
  • Functions of knowledge in service provision
  • Strategic relevance of knowledge
  • Transfer of competencies

18
Intelligent products
  • Innovative companies are finding that they can
    increase the value of products which have
    relatively simple basic functions by making them
    more knowledge-intensive.
  • This may mean enabling a product to adapt itself
    to changing conditions, or to collect and store
    information and apply it for the benefit of the
    user.
  • Examples Credit card (Switzerland)

19
Sensitivity to environmental conditions
  • Other relatively simple examples , Textiles,
    Window glass.
  • More sophisticated applications Goodyear, for
    example, is working on an intelligent tire,
    which registers sinking air pressure via a
    computer chip and triggers a warning signal.

20
Functions of knowledge in service provision
  • There many ways in which the value of a service
    can be increased by adding a knowledge component.
  • Citibank has a system which recognizes atypical
    spending patterns in the use of credit cards,
    thus alerting customers to the possibility of
    loss or misuse.
  • Many hotel chains and travel companies record
    individual preferences.

21
Strategic relevance of knowledge
  • If a company with a well-developed knowledge base
    operates in a knowledge-intensive environment, it
    is possible that its specific competencies will
    develop a dynamic of their own, thus creating new
    strategic opportunities.
  • Massey-Ferguson, the American tractor
    manufacturer, developed a satellite-supported
    system to help optimize harvests. The harvesting
    machine is equipped with a satellite positioning
    system which records the yield of each square
    meter.

22
Transfer of competencies
  • Companies in other industries have also developed
    new areas of business on the basis of existing
    competencies.
  • Airlines, having highly productive booking
    systems, have been able to transfer this
    competence to the hotel trade and the
    entertainment industry.

23
Case Study Kuoni (Swiss Travel agency)
  • Knowledge-intensive services in the business
    travel sector cost analysis using Knows.
  • In the 1990s, providers of business travel
    services specialized rapidly, and the technology
    that they use became more complex. Many business
    trips are international, and there are many ways
    of making bookings and arrangements. This has
    increased the pressure on those employees who are
    responsible for arranging a companys business
    travel they often feel overwhelmed at the
    prospect of organizing it all themselves.

24
Case Study (Contd)
  • When companies seek support from travel agencies,
    they expect high levels of organizational ability
    and technical competence. In addition,
    transparency of costs may be a critical factor,
    because of the growth in company expenditure on
    business trips after salaries and IT, travel is
    often the third major expense category.
  • In view of the vigorous growth of the business
    travel sector, Kuoni decided to transform itself
    from a simple travel agency into a Business
    Travel Information Management Company.

25
Case Study (Contd)
  • It planned to offer its customers the kinds of
    information they need in order to improve their
    management of business travel. success
  • Kuoni now consistently publicizes the
    knowledge-intensive components in its business
    travel services. In its efforts to become the
    trustee of the travel budget, it offers
    customers a comprehensive range of services,
    including special offers (????) and special trips
    to trade fairs (?????), as well as ordinary trips.

26
Case Study (Contd)
  • Kuonis computerized customer files contain all
    data relevant to business travel in the companies
    it serves. For each employee, it can store class
    of travel, car rental category, and personal
    preferences regarding seating or food. This
    system called Knows.
  • Knows helps the customer to monitor business
    travel more efficiently, and also to locate
    opportunity for bulk bookings which carry
    discounts. This additional service helps Kuoni to
    retain all of a customers business in the long
    term.

27
Knowledge Management
  • Any company which accepts the challenge of
    knowledge management must first create a clear
    picture of what it knows and what it does not
    know.
  • It will then be in a position to develop
    strategies based on its competencies.

28
Summary
  • Most companies now operate in an increasingly
    dynamic knowledge environment. Products and
    processes are more knowledge-intensive.
    Forward-looking managers will take appropriate
    action.
  • A companys intellectual assets can be analyzed,
    balanced (??), and managed, but we need other
    approaches and instruments (??) than managing the
    traditional production factors.

29
Summary
  • The present study of knowledge management
    includes an overview of the necessary concepts
    and methods.
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