Title: Knowledge Management An Action Research Project
1Knowledge ManagementAn Action Research Project
- Prof Hanifa Shah
- Professor of Information Systems
- Faculty of Computing, Engineering Technology
- Staffordshire University
2Introduction
- Research took place in a major UK FMCG (Fast
Moving Consumer Goods) manufacturer and
distributor - Makes and distributes FMCG branded goods
- Several brands in the 20 top-selling grocery
brands in the UK - Holds major UK franchises
- FCMG selected as
- Little reported KM work applied to manufacturing
firms in UK - KM software was already being introduced in this
company - The FMCG organisation was already quite
knowledgeable about the domain and its
technologies - What was missing was an understanding of what
knowledge was in their own context and what was
required of the KM technologies - Implications for IS planning and development
strategy needed to be understood
3FMCG KM Study Action Research Approach
- My research showed that many organisations were
having knowledge management technologies sold
to them without a proper understanding of what KM
meant for them - The KM project was formulated by me as a response
to an actual problem that had the potential to be
addressed by academic ideas that needed to be
made available for practical use. - Key aspect of the KM project was this processing
of academic theory and terminology into ideas and
language that was appropriate to the business
world - The work was conducted as an Action Research
project which included a series of meetings,
proposals, workshops and interviews involving a
wide range of personnel at the FMCG organisation
including a number of senior managers
4Action Research
- Combines in-depth theoretical ideas and learning
with practical benefits and change for the
organisation - Action research characteristics
- Researchers are actively involved and collaborate
on the project - Researchers and practitioners intend to bring
about change and improvements - A conceptual framework for the research
- Susman Evereds1 form of action research
involves - Problem analysis
- Planning of activities to address the problems
- Executing the activities
- Evaluation of the work (reflection on what has
been achieved) - Capturing the learning
- The learning leads to a further, improved action
and reflection cycle
1Susman, G I and Evered, R D (1978), An
assessment of the scientific merits of Action
Research, Administrative Science Quarterly,
23pp582-603
5An Action Research based model for
University-Industry collaboration
Incubating Virtual Enterprise Networks in
Yorkshire An Action Research Approach Loh et
al., http//portal.cetim.org/file/1/62/103_Loeh_Bo
oth_Faughy_Katzy_Thompson.pdf
6Explicit vs tacit knowledge
- Explicit knowledge can be precisely and formally
articulated - Codified in organisational procedures, policies,
manuals and programs - Tacit knowledge
- Non-articulated and cannot be manifested as rules
- Subconsciously understood and applied, difficult
to articulate, developed from experience, beliefs
, perspectives values - Exists in domain experts skills, minds of
employees, in established but uncodified
organisational practices - FMCG Study
- To understand
- and elicit as much of the tacit knowledge as
possible - To facilitate change
- To foster a knowledge management culture
- To develop KM academic ideas
7FMCG Key elements of research
- Agree project context
- Define knowledge for the project context
- Identify knowledge sequences
- Prioritise with senior managers
- Determine impact on IS development
- Recommend plan of action
8Agreeing context and definition
- Before agreeing a definition need to understand
context - After various discussions the context was agreed
as - Management of Brand X across marketing and sales
functions for one year - Numerous definitions of knowledge in the
literature - Many refer to the importance of the human element
in creating, defining and understanding knowledge - Definition of knowledge recognised as being
- Multi-faceted
- Variable over time
- Variable according to context
- Shareable, reflectable if articulated
- Increased in relevance by engaging users in
defining knowledge for their context - In practice this can be done by a facilitated
workshop
9KM definition for FMCG study
- Context
- Management of Brand X across marketing and sales
functions for one year - Definition - Knowledge in the above context is
- The integration and reuse of ideas, experience ,
skills, intuition and lessons learned that
influences our problem solving, decision making
and the way we work to continually create
tangible outcomes of brand value and business
worth
10Knowledge Sequence
11Identify Knowledge Triggers/Requirements
- This elicitation is facilitated by questions of
the form - What knowledge does the organisation need?
- What knowledge does it need to use better?
- What are the triggers for subsequent knowledge
activities? - Employees are asked to prioritise the top five
knowledge requirements - These top 5 are then considered further
12 Identify Knowledge Resources
- For each knowledge sequence in its order of
priority- what are the knowledge resources that
need to be manipulated? - The employees are asked to consider a number of
aspects of the organisation - Purpose, strategy, culture, structure, knowledge
contained in computer systems, employee
knowledge, knowledge contained in other forms eg
books, reports
13Identify Knowledge Manipulation Activities
- For each knowledge sequence what are the
knowledge manipulation activities that need to be
carried out? - HOW produced By WHOM
- WHAT produces artifact
- HOW used by WHOM WHEN
- The manipulation activity areas that need to be
considered are - Acquisition
- Selection
- Generation
- Internalisation
- Externalisation
- Other
14 Identify Management Influences
- What are the management influences that would
facilitate the knowledge manipulation activities? - Leadership
- Effective management of knowledge resources
knowledge manipulation skills - Creation of conditions conducive to sharing
relevant knowledge - Coordination
- Scheduling knowledge flows and activities
- Alignment with strategy
- Development of integrated reward incentive
systems that encourage knowledge dissemination - Control
- Managing the provision of knowledge resources
(quantity, quality, security, constraints) - Measurement
- Assessing and evaluation knowledge Resources,
manipulation skills and activities and the
results of KM
15- Identify Environmental Influences
- What environmental influences constrain or
facilitate the knowledge manipulation activities? - Areas to facilitate elicitation are
- GEPSE (Government, Economic, Political, Social,
and Economical) - Markets
- Competitors
- Suppliers
- Customers
- Other
16FMCG Study Knowledge Target
- Improve awareness of potentially useful
information/knowledge - Finding relevant databases and data in databases
- Finding relevant work people have done
- How other employees can help others do their jobs
- Data that brand managers have that could be used
to help channel marketing (eg create better sales
presentations)
17Improve awareness of potentially useful
information/knowledge
18Implications for IS development Strategy
- Better Identify analytical capabilities of
employees providing improved training in using
the databases and provide better introduction to
roles of current staff - Improve induction programme
- Integrate systems so retailer and accounts
systems data is consistent and finance provide
marketing and sales with the same set of figures - Successful integration across the organisation of
the KM system being piloted
19KM - Learning
- Facilitation of
- Contextual definition of knowledge
- Articulation of knowledge requirements
- Prioritisation of knowledge requirements
- Summary of Knowledge ResourcesPeople, Computer
Systems, knowledge in soft form etc - Understanding of knowledge manipulation
activities - IS development strategy
- Identify problems
- Focused investment
20Collaborative research with industry - Learning
- University-industry collaboration of this nature
requires very careful negotiation of exactly what
is involved - Expectations for both sides must be discussed and
a realistic set agreed - Project contact points in both organisations must
be agreed - Suitable context for study
- Eg department, group of employees related to a
project, a group of heads of departments - Sample of employees that are representative of
the diversity and balance of the chosen context - Suitable decision maker(s) at senior level
- Cooperation of participant employees for period
of study - Awareness of the project and its purpose must be
cascaded down the organisational structure - Practical support in terms of scheduling various
interviews and workshops