Title: Harvard Business Review ON Knowledge Management Articles 4-6
1Harvard Business ReviewONKnowledge Management
Articles 4-6
- Presented by Laila Haidar
- Undergraduate in Management Information Systems
2Overview
- Teaching Smart People How to Learn
- Chris Argyris (Published May-June 1995)
- Putting Your Companys Whole Brain to Work
- Dorothy Leonard and Susan Straus (Published
July-August 1997) - How to Make Experience Your Companys Best
Teacher - Art Kleiner and George Roth (Published
September-October 1997) - Occurring Themes
- My Critique
- Additional Information
- References
3Teaching Smart People How to Learn
- Human behavior patterns block learning in an
organization - Why well-educated professionals are prone to
these patterns - How companies can improve the ability of their
managers and employees to learn
4Teaching Smart People How to Learn
- Success in the market place increasingly depends
on learning, yet most people dont know how to
learn - Learning Dilemma
- Companies have difficulty addressing this issue
- Some companies are not aware this issue exists.
5Misunderstanding Learning
- Two mistakes made in the effort of becoming a
learning organization - People define learning too narrowly as mere
Problem Solving - The common assumption that getting people to
learn is largely a matter of motivation
Teaching Smart People How to Learn
6Types of Learning
Teaching Smart People How to Learn
7How Professionals Avoid Learning
Teaching Smart People How to Learn
8Behavior Theory
- Espoused Theory How people think they behave
- Theory-in-use How people actually behave
Teaching Smart People How to Learn
9Theory-in-use
- Governing Values of theory-in-use
- To remain in control
- To maximize winning and minimize losing
- To be as rational as possible
The purpose of all these values is to avoid
embarrassment or threat, feeling vulnerable or
incompetent
Teaching Smart People How to Learn
10Defensive Reasoning and the Doom Loop
- Encourages individuals to keep private the
premises, inferences, and conclusions that shape
their behavior and to avoid testing them in a
truly independent, objective fashion - Performance evaluations are tailor-made to push
professionals into the doom loop
Teaching Smart People How to Learn
11Your Fired
Teaching Smart People How to Learn
12Learning How to Reason Productively
- Managers must become aware of their defensive
reasoning and its results otherwise any change
will just be a fad - Change must start at the top
- Connect the program to real business problems
- Learning to reason productively can be emotional,
but the payoff is great
Teaching Smart People How to Learn
13Conclusion
- Effective learning is the product of the way
people reason about their own behavior - Companies need to make the ways managers and
employees reason about their behavior a key focus
of organizational learning and continuous
improvement programs
Teaching Smart People How to Learn
14Putting Your Companies Whole Brain to Work
- Managers can successfully foster innovation using
different approaches of creative abrasion
Productive Process - Different people have different thinking styles
- Rules for working together to discipline the
creative process
15Innovate or Fall Behind
- How managers avoid personal disputes resulting
from the creative process - Comfortable Clone Syndrome Coworkers share
similar interest and training, everyone thinks
alike - Unable to manage employees with a variety of
thinking styles
Putting the Companys Brain to Work
16How we think
- Cognitive Differences
- Varying approaches to perceiving and assimilating
data, making decisions, solving problems, and
relating to other people, these approaches are
preferences - Every one has a preferred habit of thought that
influences how they make decisions and interact
with others
Putting Companys Brain to Work
17Left Brain vs. Right Brain
Analytical Logical Sequential
Intuitive Values-Based Nonlinear
Putting the Companys Brain to Work
18Assessment Tools/ Diagnostic Instruments
- All instruments agree on the following points
- Preferences are neither inherently good nor
inherently bad - Distinguishing preferences emerge early in our
lives, and strongly held ones tend to remain
relatively stable through the years - We can learn to act outside our preferred styles
- Understanding others preferences helps people
communicate and collaborate
Putting the Companys Brain to Work
19Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
I Introvert E Extravert S Sensing N
Intuitive T Think F Feeling P
Perceiving J Judging
Putting the Companys Brain to Work
20Herrmann Brain Dominance Instrument
Putting the Companys Brain to Work
21How We Act
- Understand Yourself
- When you identify your style you will gain
insight of your preferences in thinking and
communication - Your style can repress the very creativity you
seek from you employees - Forget the Golden Rule
- Dont treat people the way you want to be treated
- Tailor the communication to the receiver instead
of the sender - Create Whole-Brained Teams
Putting the Companys Brain to Work
22How We Act Continued
- Look for the Ugly Duckling
- Successful managers spend time getting members of
divers groups acknowledge their differences - Manage the Creative Process
- Set common goals
- Make operation guide lines explicit
- Set up agendas ahead of time
- Depersonalize Conflict
- People who do not understand cognitive
preferences tend to personalize conflict, avoid
it, or both
Putting the Companys Brain to Work
23Caveat Emptor Buyer Beware
- Diagnostic instrument only measure one aspect of
personality preferences in thinking styles and
communication - Preferences tend to be stable but life experience
can affect them - Only trained individuals should administer
diagnostic instruments
Putting the Companys Brain to Work
24Conclusion
- Todays complex products demand integrating
expertise of individuals who do not naturally
understand one another - The intersection of different thought processes
will drive innovation
Putting the Companys Brain to Work
25How to Make Experience Your Company's Best
Teacher
- Discusses a tool called learning history
26Learning History
- A written narrative of a companys recent set of
critical episodes Presented in two columns
Experience is The Best Teacher
27Why Learning History Works
- They Build Trust
- It raises issues people would like to talk about
but have not had the courage to discuses openly - Transfers knowledge from one part of the company
to another - Builds a body of general knowledge about
management
Experience is The Best Teacher
28Conclusion
- Learning history is often commissioned to analyze
one event, but their lessons often supersede it - Experience is the best teacher in both individual
and organizational lives
Experience is The Best Teacher
29Occurring Themes
- Managers and employees must learn to reason
productively - Create a whole brain company
- Experience is the best teacher
30My Critique
Pros
Cons
- The Publications are outdated
- There has not been any experiments done on the
learning history tool - No guarantee that these methods work
- Easy to Read
- Many Examples
31Additional Information
- An Interview with Chris Arygris
- Article about MBTI
- Creating a Learning History
32An Interview with Chris Arygris May 1999
1
Where are organizations now. And where are they
headed with respect to learning? In all
fairness, there are Hr and training people who
understand the difference between single and
double loop learning. They say they havent been
able to concentrate much on double loop learning
and that they didnt they had permission and
enthusiasm from top management.
Additional Information
33Article about MBTI February 2005
2
Additional Information
34Creating a Learning History March 1995
3
- A new philosophy and approach to assessment is
embodied in learning history work. At the
Learning Center, we are very careful in using the
word "assessment." We now write learning
histories. - We include a learning historian as part of the
team. The learning historian's job is to capture
and tell the story. That is the language we use.
It is amazing how this approach resolves a lot of
psychological and emotional problems associated
with assessment. - People don't want to be assessed. They want to
share. They want others to know what they've done
- not in a self-serving fashion, but so others
know what worked, and what didn't work. They want
their story told.
Additional Information
35References
- A chat with Chris Argyris. By Abernathy, Donna
J.. Training Development, May99, Vol. 53 Issue
5, p80, 5p (Using the Universities Academic
Search Premier) - AMA Adds Myers-Briggs Qualification Program To
Portfolio, Will Launch New Conference. Lifelong
Learning Market Report, 2/4/2005, Vol. 10 Issue
3, p1-2, 2p (Using the Universities Academic
Search Premier) - http//scholar.google.com/scholar?hlenlrqcach
eQxhvNSQSV0EJhttps//dspace.mit.edu/retrieve/228
5/SWP-3966-37617962.pdfartkleinergeorgeroth