Knowledge Management Jessica Fields (MBA 634 - Winter 2007)
Original
text on freequality.org
Original text on freequality.org
Simply,
knowledge management (KM) is the process of maintaining and using company
information[1]
and integrating knowledge workers’ experience.
Knowledge Management is tied to Knowledge Work, the work that involves
the development and transmission of knowledge and information and implies a
greater amount of ambiguity, searching, researching, and learning in the job
environment[2]. Overall, KM strategies allow firms to handle
more clients and projects by saving time and reducing both research and
communication costs.
According
to Kulkarni, Ravindran, and Freeze, “KM can be viewed as the process by
which organizations leverage and extract value from their intellectual or
knowledge assets. . . . Knowledge
is embedded and flows through multiple entities within a firm, including
individuals with domain expertise, specific best known methods, or lessons
learned from similar experiences, documents, routines, systems, and methods.”[3]
Integrate
KM into Daily Life
One
approach to KM claims that “the key to success is to bake specialized knowledge
into the jobs of highly skilled workers – to make knowledge so readily
accessible that it can’t be avoided.”[4]
This is done by using the technology
used by knowledge workers as part of their daily life. The goal is to eliminate extra effort,
motivation and time spent on KM activities.
Embedding
KM activities into daily tasks is easiest for low skill workers and complexity
increases as job complexity increases. There are several keys to success,
beyond the right technology, for embedding knowledge into daily tasks.
1.
Support from the
Best and Brightest
2.
An Expert and
Up-to-Date Knowledge Base
3.
Prioritized
Processes and Knowledge Domains
4.
Final Decisions
by the Experts
5.
A Culture of
Measurement
6.
The Right
Information and IT People[5]
KM Strategy: Codification or Personalization
Another
approach to KM starts first with determining which KM strategy best fits with
the firm’s overall strategy. There are
two basic choices: codification (people-to-documents) and personalization
(people-to-people).
Codification
strategy “provides high-quality, reliable, and fast information-systems,
implementation by reusing codified knowledge.”[6] Codification typically includes databases of
information, previous reports and presentations, all of which have disguised
customer information. The knowledge
workers’ experiences and knowledge are stored in documents, either in hard copy
or electronic soft copy. The knowledge
is not connected to a specific person and reused for multiple projects. This idea of reuse economies is critical to
codification strategy and its role in creating large revenues.
Personalization
strategy “provides creative, analytically rigorous advice on high-level
strategic problems by channeling individual experience.”[7] Knowledge workers use each other as resources
through brainstorming sessions, networking, one-on-one conversations and team
projects, where the focus is on individual knowledge and experience. This method is particularly useful when
information cannot be codified and stored electronically. Because of the customized solution generated
by personalization strategy firms can charge higher prices and sustain higher
profit margins.
The
best results are achieved when a firm focuses on one strategy; however, a
secondary strategy can be employed to support the primary, but with less
emphasis. There are a few simple issues
to consider when determining which strategy to choose.
1.
Do you offer
standardized (codification) or customized products (personalization)?
2.
Do you have a
mature (codification) or innovative product (personalization)?
3.
Do your people
rely on explicit (codification) or tacit knowledge (personalization) to solve
problems?
4.
Which primary
strategy best fits the firm’s competitive business strategy? The answers to
these questions must be clear or picking a KM strategy could cause more damage
than good.
a.
What value do
customers expect from the firm?
b.
How does company
knowledge add value for the customer?
c.
Why do customers
buy the firms products/services?
5.
What is the ratio
of primary strategy to secondary strategy?
(80/20 rule)
6.
Remember to
coordinate KM with HR and IT.[8]
7.
Remember that it
can be hard to calculate the return on KM investments. Anecdotal evidence could be the best measure
of KM success.[9]
Applied
KM Strategies Examples
Partners
HealthCare uses the embedded-knowledge approach to KM. They developed integrated information systems
to help eliminate human error. For
example, the order-entry system is linked to the clinical database and the
patient’s records so that if a doctor recommends a medication the system checks
the databases to see if the patient has any history of allergic reaction and,
if so, what reaction.
Consulting
firms employ either codification or personalization strategies as the primary
KM strategy. Ernst & Young, like
Anderson Consulting, is a consulting firm that uses a codification
strategy. An Ernst & Young partner
in the Los Angeles office was bidding on a project for an industry he was unfamiliar
with. He used the firm’s electronic KM
database to research how other teams had handled similar manufacturing
projects. By reusing other teams’
research, the partner was able to not only win the bid but also close the sale
in half the normal time.
Personalization
strategies are employed at McKinsey & Company and Bain & Company. These companies hire a different type of
employees. They look for MBA graduates
who can be innovative when using their analytic and critical thinking skills to
solve distinct business problems for distinct clients.
Knowledge
Management References
[1] Foster, S.
Thomas. Managing
Quality: Integrating the Supply Chain (3rd Edition). Upper Saddle, New Jersey: Pearson, Prentice Hall, 2007, p.
164.
[2] Foster, p. 338.
[3] A Knowledge Management Success Model: Theoretical
Development and Empirical Validation. Kulkarni,
Uday R.; Ravindran, Sury; Freeze, Ronald. Journal of Management Information
Systems, Winter06/07, Vol. 23 Issue 3, p.310.
[4] Just-in-Time Delivery Comes to
Knowledge Management. Davenport,
Thomas H., Glaser, John, Harvard Business Review, July 2002, Vol. 80, Issue 7,
p.108
[5]
Just-in-Time Delivery Comes to Knowledge Management, p.110-111.
[6] What’s Your Strategy for Managing
Knowledge? Hansen, Morten T., Nohria,
Nitin, Tierney, Thomas, Harvard Business Review, March/April 1999, Vol. 77,
Issue 2
[7] What’s Your Strategy for Managing
Knowledge? p.109.
[8]
The list to this point is from What’s Your Strategy for Managing Knowledge?
[9] What's Your Return on Knowledge? Cohen, Don, Harvard Business Review, December 2006, Vol.
84, Issue 12








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