Title: Managing Knowledge Assets
1Managing Knowledge Assets
2Agenda
- What are the different ways in which technology
and knowledge can be sourced and leveraged? - What are some key considerations for managing the
most important knowledge assetsthe people who
work at the firm? - What are spin-outs, and what does existing
research tell us about this competitive threat
from within? - How might teams be organized for effective
knowledge and new technology creation?
3Choosing modes of change
Changing competitive environment
Firm capabilities
Resource Gap
Yes
Relevance of Existing Capabilities?
Internal Development
No
No
Resource Markets
Resource Exchange Faces Mkt Failures?
Yes
No
Alliance
Mkt Failures are Extensive?
Acquisition
Yes
4Remember the TWOS Matrix for IBM
5Developing resources(for IBM e-business on
demand)
- Internal Development
- Linking strategy to human resource management
- four in a box cross functional strategies
- Resource Markets
- Disk drives is a commodity, can be safely
divested - Alliances
- Advertising campaign by Ogilvy and Mather
- No significant risk of knowledge leakage
- Partners have distinct roles that are clearly
defined - Acquisitions
- PWC consulting, semi-conductor plant
- Consulting needed to be integrated with other
aspects of business - Risk of important information being leaked
outside the firm
6A road-map
- Internal development
- Weve been talking about it implicitly
- The last two sessions through NPD
- In the sessions for protecting and organizing for
innovation - This mornings session will focus on managing the
most important knowledge assets - The people that work for the company
- Alliances
- Collaborating for innovation
- Experimental simulation
- Please take a moment to check that the website is
working - www.business.uiuc.edu/BA_EEPR
- Acquisitions
- Due diligence in pre and post acquisition stages
- Road maps for success in post acquisition
integration
7What are spinouts, and how pervasive are they?
- Spinouts are firms
- founded by employees that leave the parent firm
- to start up a new venture that competes in the
same industry - Pervasive in many industries where knowledge is
key - Automobile industry
- 41 spinouts of Olds, Caddy, Ford, and GM, some of
whom were themselves spinouts - Disk-drive industry
- 25 of all entrants were spinouts
- Other industries that have been studied include
diagnostic imaging, lasers, legal services
8What are the characteristics of spawned ventures?
- The acorn does not fall far from the oak tree
- Knowledge inheritance from the parent creates
superior technological and market pioneering
knowledge - Better parents beget better spinouts
- Not just contacts and networks
- Ed Baldwin had graduated a class of
engineer-managers who now had the ability to
figure out how to do it alone - Gordon Moore
9Do spawns perform better than other types of
entrants?
- Simple answerYES!!
- Capabilities for success
- Entrepreneurial flexibility
- Inside knowledge of the industry
- Spinouts have both!
- Consistent evidence across multiple industries
that spinout firms outperform other entrants, and
often outclass their own parents
10Why do some firms spawn more than others?
- The Fairchildren
- Every new idea that came along created at least
one new companyGordon Moore
11The Knowledge Spillovers Story
- Firms at the technological frontier are
fountainheads of knowledge - Employees have much to gain working with the best
firms - Exposed to RD knowledge, networks of suppliers
of labor, goods, capital, and customers - Contacts lead to relationship specific
investments - Employees access valuable knowledge at the parent
firm
12Why do some employees become entrepreneurs?
- Selection
- Entrepreneurs are born, not made
- Spillovers
- Exposure to ideas creates entrepreneurial spirit
- Spats
- Disagreements with top management creates
frustration
13So what can a firm do to reduce spinout incidence?
- You cant win them all! But
- Under-exploited knowledge begets spinouts
- Put the knowledge to good use
- Dont create horse-races
- Healthy competition may prove unhealthy in the
long run - Beware the long arm of the law
14Company culture
- Remember the importance of the mission statement?
- Culture is the most tacit resource, and can lead
to sustainable competitive advantage - Create it carefully
- Communicate it early and often
- Be Consistent!
- For creativity to thrive
- Hire the right people
- Establish the right routines
15Fostering Creativity in Teams Size and
Composition
- Team Size
- May range from a few members to hundreds.
- Bigger is not always better large teams create
more administrative costs and communication
problems - Large teams have higher potential for social
loafing. - Functional Composition
- Depends on the task
- If minor changes to existing technologies,
cross-functionality may not be necessary - If major changes are required, cross functional
representation may be essential - Including members from multiple functions of firm
ensures greater coordination between functions. - In 2000, 77 of U.S. firms, 67 of European
firms, and 54 of Japanese firms used
cross-functional teams.
16Diversity of Teams
- Pros
- Diversity in functional backgrounds increases
breadth of knowledge base of team. - Other types of diversity (e.g., organizational
tenure, cultural, gender, age, etc.) can be
beneficial as well. - Provides broader base of contacts within and
beyond firm. - Ensures multiple perspectives are considered.
- Cons
- Diversity can also raise coordination costs.
- Individuals prefer to interact with those they
perceive as similar (homophily) - May be more difficult to reach shared
understanding. - May be lower group cohesion.
- Extended contact can overcome some of these
challenges.
17Roles in Effective Teams
- Project Leader is essential
- Needs to have both sufficient power and ability
to execute - Other primary roles
- Ambassador activities representing team to
others and protecting from interference. - Task coordination activities coordinating teams
activities with other groups. - Scouting activities scanning for ideas and
information that might be useful to the team. - Scouting and ambassador activities more
beneficial early in development cycle task
coordination activities beneficial throughout
life of team.
18One size does not fit all
- One well-known typology of team structure
classifies teams into four types - Functional
- Lightweight
- Heavyweight
- Autonomous
19Functional and lightweight teams
- Functional Teams
- Members report to functional manager
- Temporary, and members may spend less than 10 of
their time on project. - Typically no project manager or dedicated liaison
personnel. - Little opportunity for cross-functional
integration. - Likely to be appropriate for derivative projects.
- Lightweight Teams
- Members still report to functional manager.
- Temporary, and member may spend less than 25 of
their time on project. - Typically have a project manager and dedicated
liaison personnel. - Manager is typically junior or middle management.
- Likely to be appropriate for derivative projects.
20Heavyweight and Autonomous teams
- Heavyweight Teams
- Members are collocated with project manager.
- Manager is typically senior and has significant
authority to command resources and evaluate
members. - Often still temporary, but core team members
often dedicated full-time to project. - Likely to be appropriate for platform projects.
- Autonomous Teams
- Members collocated and dedicated full-time (and
often permanently) to team. - Project manager is typically very senior manager.
- Project manager is given full control over
resources contributed from functional departments
and has exclusive authority over evaluation and
reward of members. - Autonomous teams may have own policies,
procedures and reward systems that may be
different from rest of firm. - Likely to be appropriate for breakthrough and
major platform projects. - Can be difficult to fold back into the
organization
21Team Leadership
- Team leader is responsible for directing teams
activities, maintaining alignment with project
goals, and communicating with senior management. - Team leaders impact team performance more
directly than senior management or champions. - Different team types need different leader types
- Lightweight teams need junior or middle manager.
- Heavyweight and autonomous teams need senior
manager with high status, who are good at
conflict resolution, and capable of influencing
engineering, manufacturing, and marketing
functions.
22Team Administration
- The more explicit the routines, the better
- Many organizations now have heavyweight and
autonomous teams develop a project charter and
contract book. - Project charter encapsulates the projects
mission and provides measurable goals. May also
describe - Who is on team
- Length of time members will be on team
- Percentage of time members spend on team
- Team budget
- Reporting timeline
- Key success criteria
- Contract book defines in detail the basic plan to
achieve goals laid out in charter. It provides a
tool for monitoring and evaluating the teams
performance. Typically provides - Estimates of resources required
- Development time schedule
- Results that will be achieved
- Team members sign contract book helps to
establish commitment and sense of ownership over
project.
23Managing Virtual Teams
- Members may be a great distance from each other,
but are still able to collaborate intensely via
videoconferencing, groupware, email, and internet
chat programs. - Enables people with special skills to be combined
without disruption to their personal lives. - However, may be losses of communication due to
lack of proximity and direct, frequent contact. - Requires members who are comfortable with
technology, have strong interpersonal skills and
work ethic, and can work independently.
24Back to employee entrepreneurship and employee
mobility
- Implicit premise in the spinout literature is
that firms leaving the company are bad for
business - Notion of creative destruction
25Alternative paths creative destruction and
creative construction
26Spillovers in the era of open innovation
- Creative construction questions the model of the
closed, vertically integrated organizational
activities - Creation and appropriation had to occur within
the same organizational boundaries - Spillovers were a necessary cost of doing
business - Strategic management of spillovers leads to
spill-ins - Encourage organizational processes that may
enable such synergies
27Key Takeaways
- Firms can acquire knowledge in multiple ways
including - Internal development
- Alliances
- Acquisitions
- Both for new knowledge creation, and to avoid
creating competition from within, firm culture
needs to be geared towards retention of their
best employees - Team structure needs to conform to the task being
addressed - Issues related to size, cross-functionality,
diversity and structure and distance need to be
examined - Leadership and administration are key aspects of
ensuring success - Recent models have started to emphasize the
possibility of open innovation - strategic management of spillovers and spillins