|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Announcements
Chapters
Services
Feature Zones
|
AbstractThe knowledge management goal for organizations must lead to leveraging the organizational knowledge for benefits in business. The generic organizational knowledge management provides a basic understanding of the knowledge management philosophy. The scope of implementing this philosophy involves a complete change in the way people, process and technology interact with each other and is influenced by the uniform corporate culture. This white paper proposes ways for maintaining a knowledge repository at different levels ranging form individual to organizational. Further a framework for knowledge management is proposed. The white paper also explains the seven layer structure for knowledge harnessing. IntroductionThe path to reach the skies in business benefits in a business organizational structure that has its roots in organizational knowledge is to manage mindsets. At the first instance, it is the technology-companies which could find this philosophy of management most relevant. Effective product innovation is imperative for the survival, growth and profitability of an organization which associates itself to the core knowledge industry. Speaking of current statistics, a company utilizes only twenty percent of its available knowledge asset. This number shows the average production capacity which is being pooled. This fact brings to light the untapped potential that can fuel the production and drive the profitability in an organization. The current trends in knowledge industry show that over seventy percent dependency is on floating knowledge (knowledge workers) and a small part of production depends on static knowledge (documented information). It is essential that we manage the floating knowledge into repositories which over a period of time grows to become a substantial source of relevant information and expertise. Modern enterprises must adopt a deliberate and systematic approach to managing the drivers of innovation and expertise in order to create and deliver effective services and thus maintain competitive advantage. Knowledge ManagementKnowledge management starts from the level of individuals involved in an innovation, if practiced widely, can improve organizations’ ability to achieve development results. Knowledge management is all about converting the available raw data into understandable information which forms a reusable repository for any future service being offered which anticipates similar kind of experiences. Knowledge management tools only work when individuals see the direct benefits in linking their personal knowledge management systems with organizational knowledge management systems. The knowledge workers must believe that the chores of contributing to an organizational knowledge management program benefits themselves and the communities with which they work. At the individual level, knowledge management involves a range of relatively simple and inexpensive techniques and tools that anyone can use to acquire, create and share knowledge, extend personal networks and collaborate with colleagues without having to rely on the technical or financial resources of the organization. Implemented from the bottom up by one development worker at a time, these techniques can increase productivity and enthusiasm and help to build momentum that can overcome the technological and social barriers to top-down, organization-wide knowledge management initiatives. Personal Knowledge Management SkillsThe most critical in knowledge management is the human factor and not the sophisticated electronic and networking tools. It is the personal knowledge management which drives the knowledge management in an organization. The skills of personal knowledge management include:
These skills demand serious attention in job descriptions, training sessions, performance appraisals and organizational strategic plans. It is required to find creative and practical ways to encourage continuous organizational and personal learning and improve the quality and clarity of information transfer that can be shared and used to improve the organizational skill set. When practiced consciously, knowledge management cultivates learning on how to get relevant information without reading voluminous information. The control over the reception and transfer of information increases the value of a knowledge worker within the organization. It is required that the knowledge workers feel that it is an organizational mandate to develop their own creative approach towards knowledge acquisition and evaluation. Organizational Knowledge Management SkillsOrganizations should support individual knowledge management by consciously looking at knowledge workers' activities and approach to manage their personal knowledge and to leverage that, organizationally. Efficient knowledge management behaviors across the organization and within projects must be encouraged. A review on knowledge management software and networking tools must be done very carefully and a tool which “fits” with people must be selected. The tool should help increase the efficiency at work and help manage the time. An Engineer on deputation will benefit from an on-line knowledge management database that would update him with the current information base. This tool could be on a simple hand-held computing device that can synchronize with a database too. Knowledge management tools go beyond electronic or paper-based data repositories. They include communities of practice through which people create personally meaningful knowledge networks. Organizations need to encourage knowledge workers to take advantage of communities of practice by enabling, encouraging and rewarding them to join professional and special interest groups. I would suggest such communities and discussion forums to be active within the organization's intranet. Through this platform I suggest that organization should have a project management coordinator or knowledge leader or a champion for every project who would be assigned specific knowledge management related goals within projects. Knowledge management within an organization can be strengthened by a variety of methods like orientation training programs, online discussion boards, presentations and seminars which foster knowledge sharing within the organization.
The flow diagram represents how various inputs and actions towards focused organizational goals lead to results. Knowledge management contributes towards streamlining the ideas, problems, projects and deployment in light of organizational goals driving towards productivity. Knowledge Transfer Process
The knowledge in an organization are of two types, tactic knowledge, what I call as floating knowledge, and explicit knowledge, which I refer to as static knowledge. The former is very difficult to capture since it is more of a kind of an expertise that a person gets over a period of time by the virtue of his experience in a particular project. To capture this kind of knowledge calls for mental processes. This can be a transfer between two individuals and not from an individual to a computer or vice versa. This is relatively a difficult process. A human carries his expertise wherever he goes and this cannot be learnt or transferred. This can only be developed over a period of time. To take an analogy, ask a person to define explicitly how to swim, he cannot define it however he can do it.
Knowledge Management Framework for Organizations
For an organizational structure which is divided into departments that handle projects in different domains, which I call as verticals, it would be a valued experiment to maintain Vertical Specific Knowledge Centers. These centers could be headed by a knowledge coordinator or a champion. He would be responsible for synchronizing the information across the entire vertical into a generic vertical specific repository. It would be the responsibility of team leads and project leads to ensure every member of their project not only contributes but also practices using this repository to drive performance at work. To analyze the output of this system it is suggested to have “after action reviews” and “learning analysis”. At a later stretch, when this grows to be a huge repository of relevant information it would be required to have frequent “information audits” to update/ remove obsolete information. Also it would be a driving edge if we segregate the available information repository into profiles, and the process and training team joins with the knowledge coordinator to utilize this information for training the new joiners on a project for a particular kind of job that they would be associated during their term in that project. Implementing the Seven Layer structureAfter a successful implementation of the described framework, the software engineers of the organization would leverage value through knowledge by concentrating on just a few of the layers of “The Seven Layer Structure”:
The challenge is to turn individual knowledge into organizational knowledge and to lock both explicit and tactic knowledge into the organization. Upon implementing this we can formulate a successful knowledge management strategy that will transform individual knowledge into organizational knowledge, thus increasing the value of the business. Knowledge Management v/s Content ManagementKnowledge management and Content management are often interpreted as fruits of the same tree but after knowing so much about KMS, it makes me feel that the essence of this paper would be incomplete without a comparison of between tools for KMS and CMS.
Achieving BenefitsImplementations of knowledge management are successful and found to share the benefits at various levels of implementation.
Knowledge Benefits - These are those derived from more efficient processing of information and knowledge, for example by eliminating duplication of effort or saving valuable time. A study shows that a knowledge repository for a project increases the productivity by eight times. Intermediate Benefits - These are how the knowledge benefits could be translated into benefits that can be expressed in terms of efficiency or effectiveness. A common example is that best practices databases help to eliminate less efficient operations by transferring knowledge from the best practitioners. Organizational Benefits - This class of benefits are those that impact some of the organization's key goals, such as productivity and customer service. ConclusionsInformation and communications technologies are an important ingredient of virtually every successful knowledge management program. An ever wider range of highly effective solutions are coming to market, including a new generation of artificial intelligence solutions, new flavors of document management systems and various collaborative technologies. The successful implementation depends, as always, on giving appropriate focus to the non-technical factors such as human factors, organizational processes and culture, the multi-disciplinary skills of hybrid teams and managers, and the already existing knowledge repository of prior learning - that is well structured, accessible and gives an access to critical expertise! References
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||