Title: Lecture 3 Introduction to Knowledge Management
1Lecture 3 Introduction to Knowledge
Management
2Learning Outcomes
- Introduce Knowledge Management concept
- Disentangle some of the ambiguity surrounding
Knowledge Management terminology - Define terminology relevant to KM field
3The Evolution of Knowledge
- Knowledge focus not new - Greek philosophers
Plato, Socrates and Aristole - Hunter-gatherer
- Agricultural Revolution
- Industrial Revolution - Division of Labour Adam
Smith, 1776 - Knowledge Revolution - Process and Knowledge
4Why Focus on Knowledge
- The modern world is swept by change. New
technologies are emerging constantly, new markets
are opening up. There are new competitors but
also great new opportunities. Our success
depends on how well we exploit our most valuable
assets knowledge, skills and creativity. These
are the key to designing high value goods and
services and advanced business practices. They
are at the heart of a modern knowledge driven
economy - Tony Blair, PM
5- The emergence of the Knowledge economy means that
companies can no longer expect the products and
services which made them successful in the past
to keep them viable in the future companies now
require quality, value, service, innovation, and
speed to market for business success these
factors will become more crucial in the future - Davenport Prusak, 1998
6- in an economy where the only certainty is
uncertainty the one source of competitive
advantage is knowledge - Nonaka, 1994
- Knowledge is now the main cost, the main
investment, the main employer and the main
product of the knowledge economy - Skyrme Amidon, 1997
7Why Knowledge Management?
- Most organisations do not manage their knowledge
well - They lose knowledge through downsizing and staff
turnover - They buy in expertise they already possess
- They do not know what they know
8Fad or Fundamental?
- To a growing number of companies, KM is more
than just a buzzword or a sales pitch, it is an
approach to adding or creating value by more
actively leveraging the know-how, experience and
judgment resident within, and in many cases,
outside of an organisation - Ruggles, 1998
9- The central premise behind Knowledge Management
is that all factors that lead to superior
performance - organisational creativity,
operational effectiveness and quality of services
and products - are improved when better knowledge
is made available and used competently - Karl Wiig, Knowledge Research Institute
10The KM Journey
- Knowledge Management is a journey. It is not
new. Managing knowledge has taken place ever
since a cave person passed a tool to their
partner. - Whats different today is that were starting to
develop a language to talk about this fuzzy and
intangible stuff. We need to develop visual
frameworks to help people build this language.
If we can visualize, we can measure and if we can
measure, we can manage - Gordon Petrash, Dow Chemical
11Emergence of Knowledge Management
- 1994 Stewart, Drucker, Romer
- 1995 Nonaka Takeuchi, The Knowledge Creating
Company - 1995 - Leonard-Barton, Wellsprings of Knowledge
- 1995 - Knowledge The Strategic Imperative,
Houston, USA - 1997 Knowledge Inc., Knowledge Management
Review, Journal of Knowledge Management - 1997 Skyrme Amidon, Creating the
Knowledge-based Business
12Why the confusion?!?!
- Difficult to define due to heterogeneous range of
interests, perspectives and issues connected to
the field. - KM has received contributions from Computer
Science (AI, Software Engineering), Business and
Management (BPR, TQM, Continuous Improvement),
Sociology, Psychology, Human Resource Management,
Organisation Behaviour, Accountancy, etc.
13Roots of a knowledge focus
Business transformation
Learning organisation
Innovation
Knowledge
Information Management
Intellectual assets
Knowledge-based systems
14Is not to...
- The idea is not to give the right answer, but
to create a framework for people and
organisations to start the process of finding
their own questions and answers to understand
how they learn, how they share and how they use
their knowledge - Cope, 1998
15Elements of Knowledge
16Knowledge Hierarchy
- Wisdom
- Knowledge
- Information
- Data
17Data
- Data is a set of discrete, objective facts about
events that are usually stored in some form of
information technology system - Davenport Prusak, 1998
- Data is raw. It simply exists and has no
significance beyond its existence. It can exist
in any form, usable or not. It does not have
meaning of itself - Bellinger et al., 2000
18Information
- Information is data with meaning
- Davenport Prusak, 1998
- Information is data that has been given meaning
by way of relational connection - Bellinger et al., 2000
- Information is data that are processed to be
useful provides answers to who, what,
where and when questions - Ackoff, 1998
19Knowledge
- Knowledge is justified, true belief
Plato - Knowledge is power Francis Bacon
- Knowledge is a fluid mix of framed experience,
values, contextual information, and expert
insight that provides a framework for evaluating
and incorporating new experiences and
information. It originates and is applied in the
mind of knowers. In organizations, it often
becomes embedded not only in documents and
repositories but also in organizational routines,
processes, practices and norms - Davenport Prusak, 1998
20Dimensions of Knowledge
- Tacit Knowledge
- Tacit knowledge is personal knowledge in the
form of skills, know-how experience, intuition,
insights, feelings and beliefs - Davenport Prusak, 1998
- tacit knowledge cannot be put into words we
know more than we can tell - Polanyi, 1966
21Dimensions of Knowledge (2)
- Explicit Knowledge
- Explicit Knowledge is knowledge contained in
oral or written language intended for consumption
or access by others. It is knowledge that has
been formulated and formalised, and is typically
found in books, documents, manuals, formulae,
presentations, lectures, etc. - Davenport Prusak, 1998
22Wisdom
- Wisdom is knowledge with insight. The
combination of experience and knowledge with the
ability to apply them - The Antidote, 1998
- the ability to use knowledge sound judgement
- English Dictionary, 1999
23Definitions of Knowledge Management
- Knowledge Management is knowledge creation,
which is followed by knowledge interpretation,
knowledge dissemination and use, and knowledge
retention and refinement - De Jarnett, 1996
- Knowledge Management is the process of
critically managing knowledge to meet existing
needs, to identify and exploit existing and
acquired knowledge assets and to develop new
opportunities - Quintas et al., 1997
24- Knowledge Management caters to the critical
issues of organisation adaption, survival and
competence in face of increasingly discontinuous
change. Essentially, it embodies organisational
processes that seek synergistic combination of
data and information processing capacity of
information technologies, and the creative and
innovative capacity of human beings - Malholtra, 1997
25- Knowledge Management is the process of creating
new mindsets, models, skills and technologies
that capture, organise and employ information,
experience and knowledge application, to gain
collective expertise across the organisation,
which in turn facilitates competitive advantage - Moffett, 2000
26Knowledge Management Models
- 3 broad categories of KM models
- Knowledge Category Models
- Social Constructionist Model
- Intellectual Capital Models
27Knowledge Category Models
28Knowledge Category Models
29Knowledge Category Models
Figure No 3 - Knowledge Category Model (Boisot,
1998)
30Intellectual Capital Models
Figure No 5 Intellectual Capital Model of KM
(Chase, 1997)
31Social Constructionist Models
Figure No 6 - Knowledge Management Model
Demerest, (1997)
32Social Constructionist Models
Figure No 7 - Modified Version of Demerests
Knowledge Management Model (McAdam and McCreedy,
1998)
33MeCTIP Model (Moffett, 2001)
External
Internal
Process
P3
Orgnal Climate
Technical
P1
P4
Macro Environment
P5
P6
Internal Technical Climate
Informational
P2
P7
P8
Personal
Organisation Environment
P9
34Components of Model
- Macro-Environment - economic, technical, social
agents of change. These include globalisation,
technological development, Partnerships and
Alliances, Customer-focused markets, rise of
e-economy - Organisational Climate - structure, strategy,
goals, culture, employee emancipation, reward
systems, change management business improvement
initiatives - Internal Technical Climate - technological
infrastructure, response to technical change
35Components of Model 2
- Technical - system standardisation, capability,
technical usability, technological tools for KM - Informational - information fatique, infofamine,
infoglut, knowledge silos, power-bases,
information auditing - Personal - knowledge roles, skills, trust,
motivation, empowerment, self-reflection,
learning networks, communities of practice,
dialogue, collaboration, innovation
36Task
- 1 page summary
- What is Knowledge Management?
- Include at least 5 academic references