Download MBA HRM (Human Resource Management) (Master of Business Administration) 3rd Semester HRM in Knowledge Based Organizations Notes
UNIT ? I
LIFE IN ORGANIZATIONS
People have always been central to organizations, but their strategic importance
is growing in today`s knowledge-based organizations. An organization`s success
increasingly depends on the knowledge, skills, and abilities of employees,
particularly as they help establish a set of core competencies that distinguish an
organization from its competitors. When employees` talents are valuable, rare,
difficult to imitate and organized, an organization can achieve a sustained
competitive advantage through people. Advanced technology has given rise to
reduced number of jobs that require little skill and has increased the number of
jobs that require considerable skill, thus a shift is taking place from touch labour
to knowledge work. This displaces some employees and requires that others be
retrained. In addition, information technology has influenced HRM through
human resources information systems (HRIS) that streamline the processing of
data and make employee information more readily available to managers.
Both proactive and reactive change initiatives require HR managers to work
with line managers and executives to create a vision for the future, establish an
architecture that enables change, and communicate with employees about the
processes of change. In order to contain costs, organizations have been
downsizing, outsourcing and leasing employees, and enhancing productivity.
HR`s role is to maintain the relationship between a company and its employees,
while implementing the changes. The workforce is becoming increasingly
diverse and organizations are doing more to address employee concerns and to
maximize the benefit of different kinds of employees. Demographic changes,
social and cultural differences, and changing attitudes towards work can provide
a rich source of variety for organizations. But to benefit from diversity,
managers need to recognize the potential concerns of employees and make
certain that the exchange between the organization and employees is mutually
beneficial. Through strategic planning, organizations set major objectives, and
develop comprehensive plans to achieve those objectives. Once the strategy is
set, executives must make primary resource allocation decisions, including those
pertaining to structure, processes, and human resources.
Companies such as Domino`s Pizza, Sony, Southwest Airlines, and Wal-Mart
revolutionized their industries by developing skills ? core competencies ? that
others didn`t have. These competencies helped them gain advantage over their
competitors and leverage this advantage by learning faster than others in their
industries. Underlying a firm`s core competencies is a portfolio of employee
skills and human capital. In any given organization, different skill groups can be
classified according to the degree to which they create strategic value and are
unique to the organization. Core knowledge workers. This group of employees
has firm-specific skills that are directly linked to the company`s strategy e.g.,
R&D scientists in a pharmaceutical company, computer scientists in a software
development company. These employees are typically engaged in knowledge
work that involves considerable autonomy and discretion. Companies tend to
make long-term commitments to these employees, investing in their continuous
training and development and perhaps giving them an equity stake in the
organization.
Traditional job-based employees. This group of employees has skills that are
quite valuable to a company, but not unique e.g., sales people in a department
store, truck drivers for a courier service. These employees are employed to
perform a predefined job. As it is quite possible that they could leave to go to
another firm, managers frequently make less investment in training and
development and tend to focus more on paying for short-term performance
achievements. Contract Labour. This group of employees has skills that are of
less strategic value and generally available to all firms e.g., clerical workers,
maintenance workers, staff workers in accounting and human resources.
Individuals in these jobs are increasingly hired from external agencies on a
contract basis, and the scope of their duties tends to be limited. Employment
relationships tend to be transactional, focused on rules and procedures, with very
little investment in development.
Alliance/partners. This group of individuals has skills that are unique, but not
directly related to a company`s core strategy e.g., attorneys, consultants, and
research lab scientists. Although companies perhaps cannot justify their internal
employment, given their tangible link to strategy, these individuals have skills
that are specialized and not readily available to all firms. As a consequence,
companies tend to establish longer-term alliances and partnerships with them
and nurture an ongoing relationship focused on mutual learning. Considerable
investment is made in the exchange of information and knowledge.
An increasingly vital element of strategic planning for organizations that
compete on competencies is determining if people are available, internally or
externally, to execute an organization strategy. Managers have to make tough
decisions about whom to employees internally, whom to contract externally, and
how to manage different types of employees with different skills who contribute
in different ways to the organization. Human resource planning plays an
important role in helping managers weigh the costs and benefits of using one
approach to employment versus another.
Changes in the external environment have a direct impact on the way
organizations are run and people are managed. Environmental Scanning is the
systematic monitoring of the major external forces influencing the organization.
Managers attend to a variety of external issues; however, the following six are
monitored most frequently :
Economic factors, including general and regional conditions.
Competitive trends, including new processes, services, and innovations.
Technological changes, including robotics and office automation.
Political and legislative issues, including laws and administrative rulings.
Social concerns, including child care and educational priorities.
Demographic trends, including age, composition, and literacy.
By scanning the environment for changes that are likely to affect an
organization, managers can anticipate their impact and make adjustments
proactively. In a rapidly changing environment, it is extremely dangerous to be
caught off guard. The labour-force trends illustrate the importance of monitoring
demographic changes as a part of human resource planning. Such changes can
affect the composition and performance of an organization`s workforce.
In addition to scanning the external environment, organizations such as Syntex,
Lotus Development, and Southwest Airlines are careful to also scan their
internal environments. Because these companies view their employee-oriented
cultures as critical to success, they conduct cultural audits to examine the
attitudes and activities of the workforce. Sears has found that positive employee
attitudes on ten essential factors ? including workload and treatment by
superiors ? are directly linked to customer satisfaction and revenue increases.
Cultural audits essentially involve discussions among top-level managers of how
the organization`s culture reveals itself to employees and how it can be
influenced or improved. The cultural audit may include such questions as :
How do employees spend their time?
How do they interact with each other?
Are employees empowered?
What is the predominant leadership style of managers?
How do employees advance within the organization?
By conducting in-depth interviews and making observations over a period of
time, managers are able to learn about the culture of their organization and the
attitudes of its employees. Cultural audits can be used to determine whether
there are different groups, or subcultures, within the organization that have
distinctly different views about the nature of work the quality of managers, and
so on. Any knowledge management strategy designed to improve business
performance must address three components : the work processes or activities
that create and leverage organizational knowledge; a technology infrastructure
to support knowledge capture, transfer, and use; and behavioral norms and
practices (organizational culture) that are essential to effective knowledge use.
Even though the economic incentives are becoming clearer and technological
capabilities now exist to support knowledge-based organizations, pioneers in
knowledge management are finding the behaviours supported by their existing
organizational cultures to be a major barrier to this transformation. In short, the
organizational knowledge and culture are intimately linked, and that
improvements in how a firm creates, transfers, and applies knowledge are rarely
possible without simultaneously altering the culture to support new behaviours.
CONCEPT AND CHARACTERISTICS OF KBOs
The definition of the knowledge-based organization is centered around three
attributes : its principal mission is to acquire, manipulate and deploy information
and knowledge; it strives to be a learning organization in which its members,
both individually and collectively, are continuously enhancing their capacity to
produce results and adapt to changing circumstances; and it is guided by a
commitment to organizational excellence through such pursuits as bench-
marking, best practices and the fostering of collaborative relationships among its
various stakeholders. Knowledge organizations have been characterized as
enterprises in which the key asset is knowledge. Their competitive advantage
comes from having and effectively using knowledge. Examples include the law
office, accounting firm, marketing firm, software company, most of the
government agencies, universities, the military, and significant parts of most of
the manufacturing companies, whether they make cookies or cars.
A knowledge-based organization has four characteristics which can be
summarized in terms of process, place, purpose and perspective. Process refers
to the activities within an organization, some of which are directly involved with
making a product or selling a service and others that are ancillary but no less
important. Place refers to the boundaries of the organization, which for the
purpose of sharing and creating knowledge often go beyond traditional legal
boundaries. Purpose refers to the mission and strategy of the organization ? how
it intends to profitably serve its customers. Perspective refers to the worldview
and culture that influences and constrains the decisions and actions of an
organization. Each of these elements forms a basis for evaluating the degree to
which knowledge is an integral part of the organization and the way it competes.
Executives who understand how the four elements interact will be able to start
changing their companies to take advantage of the vast intellectual assets hidden
bellow the surface.
Process : Knowledge Sharing and Creation
Most organizations are primarily focused on the concrete and observable
activities that make up what they do on a day-to-day basis. A knowledge-based
organization attends to two related processes that underlie these direct processes:
the effective application of existing knowledge and the creation of new
knowledge. The goal is fourfold: to ensure that knowledge from one part of a
company is applied to activities in other parts; to ensure that knowledge is
shared over time so that the company benefits from past experience; to make it
possible for people from various parts of the organization to find each other and
collaborate to create new knowledge; and to provide opportunities and
incentives for experimentation and learning.
Consider how a company whose process for making its main product has been
essentially unchanged for more than 100 years ? Holcim, one of the world`s
largest suppliers of cement ? took on this challenge. The company operates
more than 100 cement-manufacturing facilities, 240 quarries and 600 mixed-
concrete facilities in over 70 countries. Although it functions in a highly
decentralized manner (country managers have the authority to make many
decisions on their own), Holcim realized several years ago that the exchange of
knowledge and expertise is the glue that holds the company together. It now
explicitly regards knowledge as its key resource and learning as its key
capability.
In order to make that view operational, an internal group, Holcim Management
and Consulting (now Holcim Group Support), was reorganized in 1996 to
develop, identify, transfer and apply strategic knowledge among all Holcim`s
entities worldwide. The group reports directly to the executive committee, a
clear indication of its strategic importance. In addition to facilitating interaction
among managers worldwide, Holcim Management and Consulting is itself a
repository of knowledge, expertise and best practices that it shares and reapplies
by consulting to the company`s various units. For example, energy costs are the
most expensive part of cement production, and Holcim Management and
Consulting helped plants improve process efficiency by diffusing knowledge
about how to use cheaper and more efficient fuels. A related problem facing
Holcim has been the need to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, as part of its
strategy to be a responsible corporate citizen promoting worldwide sustainable
development.
Holcim Management and Consulting helps Holcim to document and transfer
new energy-related technologies and manufacturing methods among the
company`s plants worldwide. Company engineers and managers have, therefore,
invested effort in learning more about alterative fuels. For example, Holcim
Switzerland developed the use of waste plastic, used tyres, and dried sewerage
sludge as replacement fuels alongwith the technologies to burn them cleanly. In
addition, the company has enjoyed product innovation (possible even with
cement) as plants experimented with various admixtures to vary and improve the
properties of cement for different local market applications. Even though it
makes a simple, industrial-age product, Holcim is clearly operating as a
knowledge-based organization.
Place : Knowledge Boundaries
Knowledge creation and sharing in today`s economy are not bound by the
traditional physical and legal limits of the corporation. Companies are
increasingly realizing that knowledge is often produced and shared as a by-
product of daily interactions with customers, vendors, alliance partners and even
competitors. The knowledge-based organization, then, is a collection of people
and supporting resources that creates and applies knowledge via continued
interaction. Its boundaries are blurred, malleable and dynamic. At some point,
the knowledge-based organization stops worrying about who works for whom
and focuses instead on who needs to work with whom. For example, the field-
service technicians at Buckman Labs, an international specialty chemicals
company, spend more time on the premises of their customers than at Buckman
offices.
Similarly, when Procter & Gamble was creating a new supply chain
management process with Wal-Mart, it sent several of its information
management people to work with their counterparts at Wal-Mart`s headquarters
so that they could mutually learn how to implement their vision of better sales
management via the sharing of information. Holcim built knowledge
communities within its global organization that transcended formal boundaries;
it also made the necessary investments to learn from customers. The knowledge-
based organization recognizes that the dangers of failing to share knowledge
across traditional boundaries outweigh any potential benefits that may come
from hoarding it.
Purpose: Knowledge Strategy
Even a highly effective set of knowledge management processes does not
guarantee that an organization will perform well or better than its competitors.
Only a few years ago Polaroid, for example, had generally effective processes in
place to capture and share knowledge about products, customers, applications,
technologies and the competitive environment. The culture was conducive to
sharing and cooperation, and the company had implemented a reasonably good
information system for supporting virtual collaboration. All in all, it appeared to
be managing knowledge well. The knowledge being created and shared,
however, was entirely focused on analog film and cameras. Polaroid knew little
about digital imaging and this contributed to its eventual bankruptcy.
Companies that succeed over the long term align their knowledge management
processes with their strategy. The knowledge-based organization recognizes that
knowledge is a key strategic resource, and asks what do we need to know to
formulate and execute our desired strategy? What do we know? And what do
our competitors know? The gap between what an organization knows and needs
to know focuses attention internally, just as the strengths and weaknesses
components of a SWOT analysis does. The gap between what it knows and what
its competitors know focuses attention externally on the opportunities and
threats. Companies must seek to close those knowledge gaps, both external and
internal, faster and more effectively than their competitors.
Holcim clearly recognized the strategic nature of its knowledge. Given its
strategy to provide the best quality and most innovative cement-based products
using the most efficient, sustainable and environmentally friendly processes, it
engaged the hearts and minds of its entire organization in managing the
knowledge and learning to support that strategy.
Perspective: The Knowledge Point of View
The knowledge-based organization, regardless of whether its products are
tangible or not, holds a knowledge-oriented image of itself. That is, it takes
knowledge into account in every aspect of its operation and treats every activity
as a potentially knowledge-enhancing act. It uses knowledge and learning as its
primary criteria for evaluating how it organizes, what it makes, where it locates,
who it hires, how it relates to customers, the image it projects, and the nature of
its competition.
Buckman Labs has the knowledge perspective. The company started in 1945
manufacturing chemical microbicides ? products that would kill or control the
growth of microbes in pulp and paper manufacturing and leather treatment. Over
time, however, it realized that its products were becoming commodities and that
to stay competitive it would need to deliver knowledge-based services. To
support that strategy, Buckman implemented processes, technologies, training
and incentives to promote the development, sharing and delivery of knowledge
about how to actually apply microbicidal chemicals to solve customers`
treatment problems.
The company has continually refreshed its strategic knowledge and directs all
activity toward learning as much as possible about its customers. This approach
culminated in the decision to learn more about how to manage the chemistry of
their customers` plants than even its customers knew. In the late 1990s,
Buckman undertook to learn about customers` operations in detail, the
economics of their businesses, and their strategic direction ? a tall order for a
bunch of chemists.
To accomplish this learning, the company first implemented a business-oriented
training program tailored to the specifics of their customers` industries. It then
entered into a learning partnership with a major paper manufacturer. For a fixed
fee, Buckman became the exclusive provider of all chemicals and treatment
services the manufacturer needed. Though sales technicians were formerly
rewarded for selling as much chemical products as possible, now they were
rewarded for minimizing chemical use. They were free to use any product,
regardless of who made it, that created the most efficient and effective customer
operation. In return, Buckman gained exclusive access to the customer and thus
the opportunity to learn more about how to service that segment of the market
than any of its competitors.
Buckman now considers itself to be in the knowledge business : Chemicals are
merely the tangible tip to their knowledge iceberg. Many other companies in
recent years have made a similar transition in perspective by redefining their
fundamental mission from one based on selling traditional products and services
to one based on exploiting knowledge.
If knowledge is a raw resource, who should benefit from it? A close link
between knowledge and power has widely been recognized. For example, the
World Health Organization states that as a knowledge-based organization in an
environment where knowledge has become a raw material, serious consideration
should be given to how such knowledge is managed, disseminated and used.
Integrity and value-based leadership are recurring themes in the case of
knowledge-based organizations. Also relevant in this context is the attention
paid by the organizations to the pursuit of excellence in their work. In the
majority of cases, this involves a commitment to engage in research and
programming which is of a supervisor quality, and addresses the actual needs
and priorities of the target population.
In a May 1997 report prepared for the International Institute for Sustainable
Development, Geoffrey Oldham and Rob McLean suggested that knowledge
activities encompass five distinct dimensions : knowledge creation, knowledge
acquisition, knowledge assimilation, knowledge use, and knowledge
dissemination. Turning to issues related to knowledge creation and acquisition,
the organizations dedicate considerable resources either to the execution of
research, thereby generating new knowledge, or to scoping exercises designed to
identify and gather relevant information generated elsewhere. However, the
means by which they pursue these activities vary considerably from organization
to organization. In a large measure, this variance can be explained by differences
in funding base and mandate.
Knowledge creation is not the only challenge facing the organizations.
Knowledge assimilation, which might also be termed knowledge management,
is arguably of equal importance, since this is what allows one to exploit the
information generated, and ensure that it is accessible when and where it is
needed. For example, International Development Research Center (IDRC) acts
principally as a sponsor of research carried out by outside experts, though it also
engages in a range of information gathering activities. The latter includes the
maintenance of an extensive library collection along with the development of
information systems to document and evaluate center activities, and to preserve
a corporate memory. Deployment and use of new information technology is one
way in which organizations can effectively manage their knowledge base, and
the International Development Research Center in particular has been a world
leader in this area.
Not surprisingly, knowledge creation and acquisition is also a priority for the
World Health Organization. A particularly noteworthy example in this area is its
Evidence and Information for Policy (EIP) Cluster, a programme established in
1998 with a mission to strengthen the scientific and ethical foundations of health
policies and programmes so that they respond better to the needs of populations.
With an emphasis on building effective partnerships, the EIP cluster compiles,
analyses, and disseminates an evidence base on the major dimensions of health
and health systems. Organizational learning is an important dimension of
knowledge assimilation. In short, if an organization is to continue to generate
new knowledge, or put existing knowledge to work, its members must have an
understanding of key issues and be able to relate them to the organization`s
mandate. In the case of United Nations Development Fund for Woman
(UNIFEM), for instance, it prides itself on having put into place a feedback
process of pioneering, learning, information-sharing and advocacy.
Closely related to the issue of knowledge assimilation is knowledge use and
dissemination. While the organizations exploit their knowledge resources in a
wide variety of ways, they can nonetheless be categorized in the following
manner:
Dissemination of knowledge resources (e.g., research reports,
activity or status reports, policy statements) to a general audience
through mass media channels e.g., Internet, wide circulation
publications.
Dissemination of knowledge resources to a limited audience e.g.,
policy makers, politicians and experts through selective channels
e.g., narrow circulation journals, conferences.
Use of knowledge resources for the purposes related to advocacy or
to the development of policies, programs or projects; and
Use of knowledge resources for the purposes related to the
generation of new knowledge.
Dimensions of HRM in KBOs
Conventionally, acquisition, development, motivation and maintenance of
human resources are seen as four major dimensions of human resource
management with quality of work life, productivity and readiness for change as
outputs. In 1983, American Society for Training and Development identified
nine human resource areas, which were considered by them as spokes of the
Human Resource wheel. Each area affected the outputs which were placed in the
center of the wheel. The human resource areas identified by ASTD were :
Training and Development, Organization Development, Organization/Job
Design, Human Resource Planning, Selection and Staffing, Personnel Research
and Information Systems, Compensation/Benefits, Employee Assistance, and
Union/Labour Relations. Although line managers and HR managers need to
work together, their responsibilities are different, as are their competencies and
expertise. The dimensions of human resource management can also be
understand in terms of the major activities for which an HR manager is typically
responsible, such as Advice and Counsel, Service, Policy Formulation and
Implementation, and Employee Advocacy.
1.
Advice and Counsel : The HR manager often serves as an in-house
consultant to supervisors, managers and executives. Given their
knowledge of internal employment issues (policies, labour
agreements, past practices, and the needs of employees) as well as
their awareness of external trends (economic and employment data,
legal issues, and the like), HR managers can be an invaluable
resource for making decisions. As in-house consultants, HR
managers should be concerned with the operating goals of the
managers and supervisors. In turn, these managers must be
convinced that the HR staff is there to assist them in increasing their
productivity rather than to impose obstacles to their goals. This
requires not only the ability on the part of the HR executive to
consider problems from the viewpoint of line managers and
supervisors but also skill in communicating with the managers and
supervisors.
2.
Service : HR managers also engage in a host of service activities,
such as recruiting, selecting, testing, planning and conducting
training programs and hearing employee concerns and complaints.
Technical expertise in these areas is essential for HR managers and
forms the basis of HR program design and implementation.
3.
Policy Formulation and Implementation : HR managers generally
propose and draft new polices or policy revisions to cover recurring
problems or to prevent anticipated problems. Ordinarily, these are
proposed to the senior executives of the organization, who actually
issue the policies. HR managers may monitor performance of line
departments and other staff departments to ensure conformity with
established HR polices, procedures, and practice. Perhaps more
importantly, they are a resource to whom managers can turn for
policy interpretation.
4.
Employee Advocacy : One of the enduring roles of HR managers is to
serve as an employee advocate ? listening to the employee`s
concerns and representing their needs to managers. Effective
employee relations provides a support structure when disruptive
changes interfere with normal daily activities.
In the process of managing human resources, increasing attention is being given
to the personal needs of the participants. Increasingly, employees and the public
at large are demanding that employers demonstrate greater social responsibility
in managing their human resources. Complaints that some jobs are devitalizing
the lives and injuring the health of employees are not uncommon. Charges of
discrimination against women, minorities, the physically and mentally disabled,
and the elderly with respect to hiring, training, advancement, and compensation
are being leveled against some employees. Issues such as comparable pay for
comparable work, the high cost of health benefits, day care for children of
employees, and alternative work schedules are concerns that many employers
must address as the workforce grows more diverse. All employers are finding
that privacy and confidentiality of information about employees are serious
matters and deserve the greatest protection that can be provided.
Top management generally recognizes the contributions that the HR program
can make to the organization and thus expects HR managers to assume a broader
role in the overall organizational strategy. In view of this, HR managers need to
acquire a complementary set of competencies. HR professionals need to know
the business of their organization thoroughly. This requires an understanding of
its economic and financial capabilities so that they can join the team of
business managers. It also requires that HR professionals develop skills of
external relations focused on their customers. HR professionals are the
organization`s behavioral science experts. In the areas, such as staffing,
development, appraisal, rewards, team building and communication, HR
professionals should develop competencies that keep them abreast of changes.
HR professionals have to be able to manage change processes so that HR
activities are effectively merged with the business needs of the organization.
This involves interpersonal and problem-solving skills, as well as creativity and
innovativeness.
HR professionals must establish personal credibility in the eyes of their internal
and external customers. Credibility and trust are earned by developing personal
relationships with customers, by demonstrating the values of the firm, by
standing up for one`s own beliefs, and by being fair-minded in dealing with
others. The ability to integrate business, HR and change competencies is
essential. By helping their organizations build a sustained competitive advantage
and by learning to manage many activities well, HR professionals are becoming
full business partners. Forward-looking CEOs make certain that their top HR
executives report directly to them and help them address key issues. At lower
levels in the organization, a rapidly growing number of companies assign HR
representatives to business teams to make certain that HR issues are addressed
on the job and that HR representatives, in turn, are knowledge about business
issues rather than simply focusing on the administrative function.
NEW ROLES AND CHALLENGE FOR HRM IN KBOs
Roles of the HR Function
How is the HR function being affected by the growing importance of knowledge
capital, and why should HR managers be concerned about it. One reason is that
people-related issues are the key to knowledge capital. No organizational
function is better suited to spearhead the maximization of knowledge capital
than the HR function. Cultivating knowledge capital requires concerted action
in all areas of the HR function at once. In the context of this trend, compliance-
oriented practitioners resist change, supporting the old command-and-control
structures of the past, which only frustrate the development of knowledge capital
by creating a work environment that diminishes the value of individual
creativity and motivation. Supporters are passive, doing only what they are told.
Since line managers are not usually as knowledgeable about the formal
processes related to people issues as are HR practitioners, HR practitioners
operating from a supporter role will only continue to do what has been done in
the past.
Performance consultants are analytical, applying skills to specific situations in
which they troubleshoot problems or discover opportunities. They can create
situations that will develop individuals and groups, but their approach is often
too tactical to be felt by the organization on a strategic level. They must be
cognizant of the business issues facing the organization and the capabilities of
people to confront them. This requires more than a tactical approach. HR
leaders are proactive, taking initiative to influence others to achieve competitive
advantage through the human side of the enterprise. HR leaders are thus best
suited to encourage managers and other stakeholders to think about people as
creators of wealth rather than as expenses. HR leaders may also involve top
managers or other key stakeholders in group activities that can help them think
about how the growing importance of knowledge capital affects the HR
function, components of the organization or the organization as a whole, the
causes of those changes, their likely consequences, and HR action plans or
strategies needed to address those changes.
What Business Needs Require Change from the HR Function? To remain
competitive in the future, businesses need to find ways to make the most of
human talent and creativity. While this goal certainly requires flexible and
adaptable HR systems and processes, business trends facing organizations are at
the centre of this HR change endeavour. By understanding these trends, HR
practitioners can develop processes that enrich the knowledge capital of their
organizations.
What Changes are Needed from Each HR Functional Area? It needs to be
examined that how each HR functional area can make an impact on business
operations while dealing with the growing importance of knowledge capital.
Rewards and Recognition: People must be rewarded for cultivating knowledge
that is useful to the organization. That may mean that decision makers will need
to explore such strategies as pay-for-knowledge programs in which individuals,
and groups, are rewarded for cultivating valuable competencies of use to the
organization. In addition, non-pay-related incentives can be used to reward the
attainment and use of knowledge capital, such as promotion, title differentiation,
access to or membership in special teams or task force efforts, and nomination to
attend special development programs.
Employee Relations: Employee communications programs, vital to employee
relations, should be launched to show employees and managers alike what is
meant by knowledge capital, how it applies to them individually, why it is
important to the organization, what happens when knowledge capital is not
cultivated or developed, and how knowledge capital can be developed and
evaluated. Above all, employees must be informed that developing work-related
knowledge is key to the success of the business, and to their career security at a
time when jobs are disappearing. Employees have a self-interested and self-
directed role to play in their own development, and they should be told what that
is ----- and, when necessary, how to take proactive steps to develop themselves
for future career growth inside or outside the organization. Job security can best
be enhanced by profitability and growth. To work toward this security,
employees need information about the business environment, the industry, and
the organization`s finances for informed decision making.
Organizational Effectiveness: Organizations need to launch programs that
encourage learning and knowledge acquisition. By pursuing efforts to create
learning organizations and high-performance workplaces, decision makers can
set the right tone to support continued individual and team growth and
development. Changes in company culture do not occur overnight, so it is
important to establish a track record of experiences in the organization to show
that development and creativity do matter and are considered in pay raises,
promotions, work assignments, and other issues of importance to employees.
Organizational effectiveness is enhanced when people have targets of focus.
What a better target than effectively servicing a customer or beating the
competition? Knowledge attainment centered around such endeavours can
change a corporate culture.
Professional Development: Training and development is a key means by which
to groom individuals for the future. Training is, of course, an individualized
change effort that is designed to narrow gaps between what people know or do
and what they should know or do to be successful. Training has also been
associated more recently with efforts to generate creative solutions to difficult
problems farcing organizations. Training-related activities are likely to lead
organizational efforts to build and maintain competitive knowledge capital. HR
will be responsible for maximizing the productivity of the workforce through
initiatives that build organization community. Well-educated and well-trained
workforce will be deployed, and HR practitioners will be required to function as
consultants, not as police officers. Training can be used to build a sense of
community by facilitating cohesive performance by work teams. It can also be
used to enhance communication by providing information about the reasons to
take action and by articulating approaches to individual development.
Training can be used to show people how to become more self-directed in their
approaches to learning on their own, and to fostering the development of others
in the organization. Training can be used to direct attention to a broad array of
human performance improvement strategies that can be used to develop bench
strength, troubleshoot human performance problems, and seize human
performance improvement opportunities. Money spent on professional
development efforts has increased over the past decades. Yet, expectations by
organizations have changed concerning the return on investments of such
efforts. Professional development providers are thus having to take both an
individual and organizational view of these development efforts.
Resource and Productivity Management: Although defined differently by
various experts, HR planning is often characterized as long-term planning for
the people needed by an organization. It is perhaps the single most important
issue to consider in building knowledge capital. While HR planning has
traditionally been focused on identifying and closing current and projected gaps
in headcount, shortfalls between labour demand and supply, it can also be
focused on identifying and acting to close present or future gaps in talent,
shortfalls between present and future talent demand and supply. One way that
HR can lead the way towards building human capital is to introduce and use a
systematic approach to HR planning in the organization. Too many
organizations many needs from vacancy to vacancy. But with HR planning, an
organization`s decision makers can link corporate core competencies directly to
individual competencies and work to build them over time.
An effective HR planning process can also be useful in conducting strategic
planning for HR, bringing a systematic approach to succession planning,
integrating HR functions horizontally around meeting desired HR needs, and
providing information about current or anticipated overdrafts in human
capital. In order to tap into the knowledge capital of an organization, senior
leaders first need to know where and with whom it resides. This is the job of
HR function ? to track and identify knowledge communities and match them
with the needs of the business. This task must be done for both current and
future knowledge capital requirements. Once the task is accomplished, only
then can the HR function be deployed appropriately within the organization to
address both now and then business issues.
Recruiting and Staffing : Recruiting and selecting people are also central to
building knowledge capital. After all, the individuals chosen by the
organization affect its supply of knowledge capital, the competencies on which
it can draw to meet business objectives. HR practitioners must find ways to
achieve the following:
Recruit and select the right talent to meet pressing organizational needs.
Retain the right talent once it is available
Leverage the talent through appropriate uses of rotations, temporary and
permanent team assignments, transfers, and promotions so that the
organization`s knowledge capital is brought to bear on the most pressing
challenges.
These goals may require focusing on specific universities, competitors, or other
talent pools to attract people with the specific competencies needed to help
address business trends.
Challenges and Opportunities
In an era of globalization and rapid technological change, the prospects for
knowledge-based organizations would appear to be bright. Certainly, Internet
based communications and plummeting information processing costs provide
ample opportunities in such areas as research, networking and information
management. However, by the same taken, the organizations face challenges in
a number of areas.
How can funding affect the vision of a knowledge-based organization? Funding
availability is a case in point. Stability of funding remains a concern. Funding
that pushes institutions from crisis to financial crisis works against the
development of a strategic posture and leads to weaker rather than stronger
institutions.
How do information overload and uncertainty affect the viability of a
knowledge-based organization? With the rapid growth of Internet and computer
processing power, another challenge often facing knowledge-based
organizations is the over-abundance of information, or information of an
uncertain quality.
How does data quality affect the vitality of knowledge-based organizations?
Also relevant in this regard is the issue of data quality. That is to say, for an
organization to remain credible, it must be assured of the accuracy,
comprehensiveness and relevance of the information it is using to implement
projects or formulate policy options. For example, the Australian Indigenous
Health Info Net addresses quality assurance in two main ways. First, they have
documented procedures for all aspects of their day-to-day operations. These
procedures ensure that all materials have been subjected to quality control
checks before being added to their site. To complement their internal
procedures, they have established a network of Health Info Net Consultants,
whose functions include peer review of any substantial academic material to be
added to the site.
How does a knowledge-based organization maintain its visibility? While the
publication of such material on the Internet may be extremely useful to
academics, policy makers and other experts, its relevance is somewhat less
obvious to an individual living in a remote community without access to
adequate shelter, sewerage or health services. Accordingly, knowledge-based
organizations must grapple with the challenge of remaining relevant to their
constituencies at the risk of alienating them and losing their support. On one
hand, good leadership is critical in this regard, both in fostering constructive
relationships with community members, and in focusing organizational energies
in the ways which reflect constituents` concerns. On the other hand, feedback
mechanisms also provide a valuable means of ensuring that organizational
priorities are in harmony with community needs.
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
1.
Can different skill groups be classified in an organization? Discuss
various such groups to highlight the life in organization.
2.
What is environmental scanning? What are the external issues that
are frequently monitored by the managers? Discuss with appropriate
examples?
3.
What is cultural audit? Discuss its importance in a knowledge-based
organization.
4.
Discuss the characteristics of a knowledge-based organization in
terms of process, place, purpose and perspective.
5.
What are the dimensions of Human Resource Management in KBOs?
Discuss in detail.
6.
Discuss the roles of HR function in KBOs.
7.
Discuss the challenges faced by a knowledge-based organization.
Unit ? II
MANAGING KNOWLEDGE FOR ORGANIZATIONAL
EFFECTIVENESS
Process and Methods
Organizations face a number of important competitive challenges such as
adapting to global business, embracing technology, managing change,
responding to customers, developing intellectual capital and containing costs.
With these competitive challenges very important employee concerns, such as
managing diverse workforce, recognizing employee rights, adjusting to new
work attitudes and balancing work and family demands have emerged. Best
organizations go beyond simply balancing these sometimes, competing
demands; they create work environments that blend these concerns to
simultaneously get the most from employees, contribute to their needs, and meet
the short-term and long-term goals of the organization. For organization to be
effective, they need to identify the primary principle that support high
performance work systems. There are four powerful principles :
Shared information
Knowledge development
Performance ? reward linkage
Egalitarianism
These principles have become the building blocks for managers who want to
create high-performance work systems for organizational effectiveness.
The Principle of Shared Information : The principle of shared information is
critical for the success of empowerment and involvement initiatives in an
organization. Traditionally, employees were not given and did not ask for
information about the organization. People were hired to perform narrowly
defined jobs with clearly specified duties. Today organizations are relying on the
expertise and initiative of employees to react quickly to incipient problems and
opportunities without timely and accurate information about the business.
Employees can do little more than simply carry out order and perform their roles
in a relatively perfunctory way. They are unlikely to understand the overall
direction of the business or contribute to organizational success. On the other
hand, when employees are given timely information about business performance
plans and strategies, they are more likely to make good suggestions for
improving the business and to cooperate in major organizational changes. They
are also likely to feel more committed to new courses of action, if they have
input in the decision making. The principle of shared information typifies a shift
in organizations away from the courses of command and control towards
employee commitment. If executives do a good job of communicating with
employees, and create a culture of information sharing, employees are more
likely to work towards the achievement of goals for the organization.
The Principle of Knowledge Development: In today`s scenario number of jobs
requiring little knowledge and skill is declining while the number of jobs
requiring greater knowledge and skill is growing rapidly. As organizations
attempt to compete through people, they must invest in employee development.
This includes both selecting the best and brightest candidates available in the
labour market and providing all employees opportunities to continually hone
their talents. In the contemporary work environment employees need a broad
range of technical, problem solving and interpersonal skills to work either
individually or in teams on cutting-edge projects. Because of the speed of
change, knowledge and skills requirements must also change. Employees must
learn continuously. Stop gap training programs must not be enough. Employees
need to learn real time, on the job, using innovative new approaches to solve
novel problems.
The Principle of Performance ? Reward Linkage: In an organization people
may intentionally or unintentionally pursue outcomes that are beneficial to them
but not necessarily to the organization as a whole. Things tend to go more
smoothly when there is some way to align employee and organizational goals.
When rewards are connected to performance. Employees will naturally pursue
outcomes that are mutually beneficial to themselves and the organization.
Supervisor may not have to constantly watch to make employees do the right
thing. In fact employees may go out of their way above and beyond the call of
duty, to make certain that co-workers are getting the help they need, systems and
processes are functioning efficiently and customers are happy. Connecting
rewards to organizational performance also ensures fairness and tends to focus
on employees in the organization. Equally important, performance based
rewards ensure that employees share in the gains that result from any
performance improvement.
The Principle of Egalitarianism
Status and power differences tend to separate people and magnify whatever
disparities exist between them. The US versus them battles that have
traditionally been there between managers, employees and labour unions have to
be replaced by more cooperative approaches for managing work. More
egalitarian work environments eliminate status and power differences and in the
process, increase collaboration and teamwork. When this happens, productively
can improve if people who once worked in isolation begni to work together.
Moving power downward in organizations that is, empowering employees
frequently requires structural changes. Managers often use employee surveys,
suggestion systems, quality circles, employee involvement groups that work in
parallel with existing organizational structure. In addition work flow can be
redesigned to give employees more control and influence over decision making.
Job enlargement, enrichment and self managing work teams are typical methods
for increasing the power. Employees can influence decisions and make
suggestions for change. With decreasing power distances, employees can
become more involved in their work, their quality of work life is simultaneously
increased and organizational performance is improved. One cannot claim that
there is a fool proof list of best practices that can be implemented by every
organization for every work situation, yet there are clean trends in work design,
HR practices, leadership role and information technologies that can increase
organizational effectiveness.
Work-Flow Design and Teamwork: Total Quality Management (TQM) and
reengineering have driven many organization to redesign their work-flow.
Instead of separating jobs into discrete units, most experts now advise
managers to focus on the key business process that derive customer value
and then create teams that are responsible for those processes. Federal
Express, for example, redesigned its delivery process to give truck drivers
responsibility for scheduling their own routes and for making necessary
changes quickly. Because the drivers had detailed knowledge of customers
and routes, Federal Express managers empowered them to inform existing
customers of new products and service. In doing so, drivers also filled a type
of sales representative role for the company. In addition, FedEx drivers also
worked together as a team to identify bottlenecks and solve problems of
slow delivery. To facilitate this, advanced communications equipment was
installed in the delivery trucks to help teams of drivers balance routes among
those with larger or lighter loads.
Complementary Human Resource Policies and Practices: work redesign,
in itself, does not constitute a high-performance work system. Other
supportive elements of HRM are necessary to achieve high performance.
Several studies suggest that both performance and satisfaction are much
higher when organizations combine their changes in work-flow design with
HR practices that encourage skill development and employee involvement.
By selecting skilled individuals with the ability to learn continuously and
work cooperatively, organizations are likely to make up for the time and
expense they invest in selection. Talented employees come up to speed more
quickly and take less time to develop. Organizations that do not adhere to
this are often seen at the risk of taking wrong people and spending more on
training and/or out placement, severance and recruitment and replacement.
Emphasis on Teamwork : involvement and continuous improvement
requires that employees develop a broader understanding of work processes
performed by others around them rather than rely on first knowing their own
jobs. To accomplish this, organizations increasingly use cross-training, that
is the training of employees in jobs in areas closely related to their own.
Another Important factor is the Compensation Package : Many
organizations experiment with alternative compensation plans. In order to
link pay and performance, high-performance work systems often include
some type of employee incentives. Organizational incentives such as gain
sharing, profit sharing, and employee stock ownership plans focus employee
efforts on outcomes that are beneficial to both themselves and the
organization as a whole. Some organizations also incorporate skill, based
pay plans. By paying employees on the basis of the number of different job
skills they hope to create both a broader skill base among employees and a
more flexible pool of people to rotate among interrelated jobs. Both of these
qualities are beneficial for organizational effectiveness and may justify the
added expense in compensation.
Management Processes and Leadership : With fever layers of management
and a focus on team based organization, the role of managers and
supervisors is substantially different in a environment of knowledge based
organizations. Managers and supervisors are seen more as coaches,
facilitators and integrators of team efforts. Rather than imposing their
demands on employees and closely watching to make certain that the
workers comply, managers share responsibility for decision making with
employees. Typically the team manager is replaced by the term team
leader`. And in growing number of cases leadership is shared among team
members.
In the literature of knowledge management, four components of knowledge
management architecture have been described. The analysis, plans and actions
are usually formulated in terms of the four basic operations of knowledge that
can be found in organizations` development, distribution, consolidation and
combination. The four basic knowledge processes are :
Developing Knowledge : Companies survive by the continuous
deployment of new knowledge based on creative ideas, the analysis of
failures, daily experiences and work in R&D departments. Corporate
memories can support these processes by recording failures and
successes.
Consolidating Knowledge : Knowledge must be safeguarded against loss
due to different cause (e.g., people retiring, documents that cannot be
accessed any more, etc). Consolidation could be supported by, for
instance, corporate memories, knowledge transfer programmes etc. The
knowledge, thus stored, must be available at the right time and place.
Distributing Knowledge : Knowledge must be actively distributed to
those who can make use of it. The turnaround speed of knowledge is
becoming crucial for the competitiveness of companies. To support this
process, corporate memories need a facility for deciding who should be
informed about a particular new piece of knowledge. Actions to improve
knowledge distribution include the installation of help desks and use of
intranets.
Combining Available Knowledge : An organization can only perform at
its best if all available knowledge areas are combined in its new
products. If an organization is unable to combine the knowledge
available, it will miss opportunities and eventually lose market share.
Products and services are increasingly being developed by multi-
disciplinary teams. Corporate memories may facilitate this by making it
easier to access knowledge management system in knowledge based
organization should involve the continuous streamlining of the above
four basic knowledge processes to improve the organization learning
capability.
KNOWLEDGE
KNOWLEDGE
GOALS
ASSESSMENT
KNOWLEDGE
KNOWLEDGE
IDENTIFICATION
RETENTION
KNOWLEDGE
KNOWLEDGE
ACQUISITION
UTILIZATION
KNOWLEDGE
KNOWLEDGE
DEVELOPMENT
DISTRIBUTION
Figure 1. Knowledge Management Framework
Source : Mohan Tanniru and Tom Lauer; Knowledge Audit and Knowledge
Management System; Infovision; New Dehli, Tata Infotech Limited; January
2002; pp 2-3.
Supportive Information Technology : Technologies of various kinds create an
infrastructure for communicating and sharing information vital to business
performance. There are the information needs for business plans and goals, unit
and corporate operating results, incipient problems and opportunities and
competitor`s performance.
Careful planning helps to make certain that the processes fit together and are
linked with the overall strategic goals of the organization. Horizontal fit occurs
when all the internal elements of the work system complement and reinforce one
another. For example, a first rate selection system may be of no use if it is not
working in conjunction with training and development activities. If a new
compensation program reinforces behaviours that are directly opposed to the
goals laid out in performance planning, the two components would be working
at cross-roads. Horizontal fit means testing to make certain that all the HR
practices, work designs, management processes and technologies complement
one another. The synergy achieved through overlapping work and human
resource practices is at the heart of what makes organization system effective.
To achieve vertical fit the work system must support the organization`s goals
and strategies. This has to begin with an analysis and discussion of competitive
challenges, organizational values and the concern of employees and results in a
statement of the strategies being pursued by the organization. Efforts to achieve
vertical fit help focus the design of performance work systems on strategic
priorities. Objectives such as cost containment, quality enhancement, customer
services and speed to market has a direct impact what is expected of employees
and the skills they need to be successful. Words such as involvement, flexibility,
efficiency, problem solving and teamwork are not just buzzwords. They get
translated directly from the strategic requirements of today`s organizations.
However, for all their potential, implementing is not an easy task. The systems
are complex and they require a good deal of close partnering among executives,
like managers, HR professionals, union representatives and employees.
Ironically, it is the very complexity that leads to competitive advantage.
INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL AND LEARNING ORGANIZATION
Intellectual Capital
Driven by changing technology, the increasing globalization of business,
increasing speed in market change, continuing cost containment and increasing
rate and magnitude of change itself, the need for intellectual capital is a key
trend facing businesses. The competitive environment requires that companies
levrage the knowledge and expertise of their employees to create and sustain
competitive advantage. The business world is moving too fast to rely on the
traditional command and control management style. Human creativity and talent
has to be realized to have quantum break through in innovation, productivity,
product and service quality and customer satisfaction.
Intellectual capital means the collective experience of an organization
workforce. It is the sum of information and linking generated by the human
resources in the organization. It includes the collective experience of an
organization workforce called institutional memory (what people remember
about what the organization has done in the past); the current mix of know-how
available to the organization, known as the talent pool (who is available to meet
the organization`s current challenges); and the future prospects of the
organization`s workforce to come up with innovative solutions to problems,
known as creativity (how well people in the organization are positioned to come
up with break through ideas to address past, present or future problems faced by
the organization. According to Peter Drucker (1997) knowledge capital is
important since it is different from all other kinds of resources. It constantly
makes itself obsolete, with the result that today`s advanced knowledge is
tomorrow`s ignorance and knowledge that matters is subject to rapid and abrupt
shifts from pharmacology to genetics in the health care industry for example,
and from PCs to the Internet in the computer industry. There can be little doubt
that knowledge capital, more than financial capital is growing in importance
(Bondreau and Ramstad, 1989). There are three major consequences that stem
from the growing importance of intellectual capital
The need to distinguish between technical and management compliancy
The increasing business and worker mobility
Increasing need for training
Need to Distinguish Between Technical and Management Competency
Successful manager must now possess several capabilities : technical expertise,
understanding of the dynamics shaping the market environment, ability to build
relationships inside and outside the company and ability to identify new
opportunities to enhance the company`s offerings (Vicene and Fulmen, 1996). If
companies hope to rely on knowledge workers to create competitive advantage,
then the decisions those workers make must be consistent with the company`s
values and purpose. Otherwise, these empowered employees will not make
decisions leading to company success. The challenges confronting executives
then, is to communicate the company`s values and purpose underlined. In
addition executives must hire and retain employees who demonstrate the ability
and willingness to act within the company`s values system. Only technical
proficiency is not sufficient to generate a good employee.
Increasing Business and Worker Mobility
Business goes where skills and knowledge are available, the new capitalism.
The decisive factor for industries in the developed world will be the productivity
of knowledge and knowledge workers because organization will be competing
based on knowledge and not on capital or technology. Because knowledge
workers are extremely mobile and the knowledge needs of an organization will
change rapidly, an increasing number of the most valuable people will identify
more with their own knowledge rather than with the organization. Many of these
people will not be employees of the organization but will serve as contractors,
consultants, experts and joint venture partners and the organizations are to be
defined for a specific task, time, place and culture and therefore, management of
knowledge resources will become the most important area of focus and
consequently management will have to extend beyond enterprises.
Increasing Need for Training
Another consequence of the trend toward the growing importance of knowledge
capital is an increasing, incessant need to educate workers. But education in a
business environment that prizes knowledge capital takes on new dimensions
that go beyond what training has meant in the past. Employees at all levels must
be educated to understand the market environment, the company`s strategy, and
their role in influencing the organization`s financial performance. Employee
education and training will become a forum to create broader perspectives and to
give employees a broader perspective in which to operate. The importance of
training in developing knowledge employees is underscored by the dramatic
increases in expenditures linked to all forms of training. In the midst of ever
increasing dynamics, people are required to do more, do it faster and do it with
less-resources. It is imperative for employees at all levels to possess a broad,
general management perspective and the ability to think strategically. Therefore,
companies are using education to derive strategic initiatives. Custom?designed
programming affords tailoring to the needs of the organization. Companies are
increasingly demanding immediate applicability resulting in the growth of
action learning and on the job techniques, any where, anytime asynchronous
distance education and less time away from the job for training and education
while organization understands the need to educate the workforce to enhance
knowledge capital. Many organizations want to ensure that they are getting a
quick nature on training investments.
KNOWLEDGE AND ROLE RELATED ISSUE
The greatest opportunity resulting from the growing importance of knowledge
capital is the possibility that organization can seize competitive advantage by
finding ways to leverage and exploit worker`s knowledge. Those organization
which are best able to collect market intelligence, harness and unleash worker
creativity, translate startingly innovative ideas into valuable product and service
offerings and get these products and services quickly to dynamic market do
definitely succeed. Organizations that cannot meet these challenges and cling to
the bureaucratic, controlling, un-imaginative and (for employees) frustrating
approach of the past will fail and go bankrupt or will be merged with other,
more successful firms.
Today, business Organizations face a number of issues relating to the effective
sourcing, storage and dissemination of knowledge. According to Shermon
(2002), these issues include.
Loss of knowledge as job requirements change rapidly and personnel
move across department. Knowledge moves with such personnel and is
not captured at a control place for future use.
Lack of organizational culture for sharing of knowledge employees are
often reluctant to share information with in the organization Why
should I part with my knowledge? Knowledge gives me power. Clearly,
the mindset of employees need to undergo a significant change towards
knowledge management.
Absence of adequate knowledge systems that capture and store tacit
knowledge residing in the minds of personnel (having technical/scientific
or other expert knowledge. For example, when technical service
personnel do not file reports after field visits, the next team that goes out
for the same work has to start afresh and reinvent the wheel.
Absence of an effective learning organizational culture is another issue.
Many organizations have inadequate filing and database management
system. There is a need to setup common knowledge domains (e.g.,
power point presentations, preliminary questions, training materials,
suggestion scheme inputs, computer programmers, library research
results, patents and relative publications, internal publications etc. This
also includes establishing effective content management and knowledge
delivery systems.
Inadequate to and fro dissemination of knowledge between the
knowledge center and other key stakeholders including manufacturing,
logistics and marketing divisions, institutional customers, academic
institutions, quality standard institutions and equipment builders.
Developing and sharing best practices across various centers an well as
access to external best practices and continuously evaluating and
upgrading best practices.
Searching for knowledge resources, organization need to establish
mechanisms for tapping internal and external resources (including
personal search) and developing communities of practice setting up
technology bulletin boards and identification of experts.
Ragnekar (2001) has identified the following challenge for the implementation
of knowledge management systems in organizations
Motivating employees to search, accept and adopt best industry practices
Developing metrics towards appraising the effectiveness of a knowledge
management programme and measuring its results
Motivating employees to share knowledge
Identifying and representing the organization`s existing knowledge.
Lack of common understanding of the company`s business model and
strategic drivers.
Changing the bureaucratic culture and organization structure.
Learning Orgnaizations
Peter Senge (1990) introduced the notion of the learning organization, which has
become the ideal for companies desiring to compete in the age of knowledge
capital. Senge has defined learning organizations as those whose people
continually expand their capacity to create the results they truly desire, where
new and expansive patterns of thinking are nurtured, where collective aspiration
is set free and where people are continually learning how to learn together. The
organizations that truly excel in the future will be the organizations that discover
how to tap people`s commitment and capacity to learn at all levels in an
organization (Senge, 1990). Learning organizations are typified in several ways.
First, personal mastery forms the spritual foundation of the learning
organization. Individuals become committed to life-long learning, continually
clarifying personal vision and focusing energy. Personal mastery is important to
organizations because of the reciprocal commitment between the organization
and the individual. Second, building shared vision is essential. It is the common
sense to identify and view future that motivates the individuals in the
organization. Third, team learning occurs when the collective results and
learning of the team far exceed what could have been achieved individually.
Fourth, mental models are explicitly articulated and constantly analyzed. Mental
models are deeply ingrained assumptions, generalizations, or ever pictures or
images that influence how we understand the world and how to take action. By
recognizing, scrutinizing and challenge the organization`s view of what can and
cannot be done, management teams can collectively change their view of the
world and engage in institutional learning. Finally, systems thinking integrates
the other four disciplines. By taking a systems view, organizations can focus on
the interrelationships of all functions, activities and individuals in an
organization. Systems thinking is essential for building a whole that exceeds that
sum of its parts to build a system which can capture, utilize and leverage
external information in a way that constantly directs the experiences toward
improving organizational performance. Towards that end, it is essential to
establish the following :
A Sense of Purpose : a clearly articulated, shared view of the future
direction of the organization.
Information Flows : a systematic method to capture and disseminate
knowledge and experience throughout the company to provide real time
information to those who need it.
Decision Processes : Processes for making decisions that question
previous assumptions about the business and encourage those involved
to move beyond the status quo.
Communication : An organizational communication style that
encourages the sharing of knowledge, innovation and calculated risk
taking and catalyzes employees around the common purpose.
Culture : Once barriers to learning have been removed, a culture is
encouraged were each individual continually learns and facilitates the
growth of the organization.
Knowledge capital may not have precisely the same definition in every
organization, every division, every department, every function or every work
unit. The key to understanding knowledge capital is understanding what
makes an organization competitive that is its core competence and the
collective knowledge, talent and marketability of the people working in the
organization. So the definition of knowledge capital varies by the nature of
the business and the collective knowledge, experience and creativity of the
individuals who make the business operate.
Business Strategy
Knowledge Management Strategoy
Culture
Organization
Infrastructure
Intellectual
and
Development
and
Assets
People
Process
Facilities
Figure 2. Knowledge Management Strategy
Source : Angela Abell and Nigel Oxbrow, 1999, People Who Make Knowledge
Management Work.
Action Plans or Strategies for Growing Importance of Knowledge Capital
Prepare for the Realities and Need to Educate the Workforce :
Employees should be shown how each individual`s efforts impacts
corporate success. Employees should also be given tools to support
appropriate decision making and they should be rewarded in ways that
are matched to desired organizational results. According to Peter
Drucker (1992) because of the vastly expanding corpus of knowledge it
is imperative that member learn how to learn.
See People as a Competitive Advantage and Invest : Asset Leadership
should be encouraged at all levels. Leaders must fulfill a role of creating
a learning organization that stimulates and challenges people by
providing strategic directives, encouraging learning and facilitating the
transfer of experience. Leaders can determine that learning takes place
by the questions they ask and by the approaches they use. Leaders must
actively participate in capturing and transferring learning inside the
organization.
Look at Long-term Plans for the Workforce : There has to be a long term
planning for the workforce skills and talents needed by the organization.
Planning for talent is different from planning for production. It requires
careful consideration of the competencies required at each level and in
each function of the organization. It also requires state-of-the art
approaches to succession planning that go beyond the simple
replacement plans of the past or even the talent pools of the present to
build competitive bench strength throughout the organization over the
long term (Rothwell, 1994). That is, in fact, a powerful way for the HR
function to contribute to developing knowledge capital for an
organization (Kelley, 1997).
Support Ways to Deploy Knowledge Assets : Organization`s strategic
planning process should be revamped so that it encourages creativity and
information sharing within and across functions. The strategic planning
process should be used to reexamine the organization acting in a
dynamic environment and create a dialogue with the company`s leaders
and employees so that people are constantly thinking about what they
should do and how it would affect the organization in a changing
environment.
Determine Skills and Competencies of the Workforce (Skills Inventory) :
The focus on identifying and developing leadership as well as technical
competencies should be given. These leadership competency models
clarify how the organizations expects decisions to be made and how
individuals should demonstrate leadership. These models can also be
used during selection and promotional processes to determine what
characteristics and behaviours indicate that an individual is likely to be
successful in any leadership position.
Revisit Matrix Management : By using matrix management,
organizations can avoid the turf battles that can stem from more
traditional
command-and-control
structures.
Moreover,
matrix
management is well suited to application in setting where many
temporary project teams come together and work quickly to address
problems tapping the talent of many specialists. Another benefit of
matrix management is that it gives employees exposure to differing
management styles, which can help to develop them for dealing with the
future challenge they face by seeing the effects of those styles in action.
Develop Teams : Another action to build on the growing importance on
knowledge capital is to develop teams, defined as cohesive groups
assembled to address a problem, manager a process compare steps in a
process, or work to improve productivity. Teams may be temporary or
permanent; they may be formed form individuals doing the same work
(functional teams) or different work (cross-functional teams); they may
be led by one or more people (directed teams) or by team members (self-
directed teams). A key advantage of most teams, however, is that they
help organizations and individuals depart from traditional and
bureaucratic, motions how work is organized, who is responsible for
doing it and how people work together to achieve common goals and
carry out similar activities.
Develop Reward Systems for Sharing Information : Ways should be
developed for rewarding people for sharing information. The balanced
scorecard is one way that organizations have been attempting to do that.
This approach is based on the philosophy that effective measurement is
an integral part of the management process, the balanced score card
provides a framework to translate a company`s strategic objectives into
performance measures. Four critical areas of employee and
organizational performance are measured : financial results, performance
for customers, internal processes and innovation and growth. By using
internal and external measures, these four areas discourage managers and
employees alike from making unfavourable trade-offs among critical
success factors (Kaplan and Norton, 1993). The balanced score card
facilitates rewards for information sharing because it measures success in
each area. Within each area, relevant knowledge that must be shared can
be identified, measured and appropriately rewarded.
Developing Strategies for Building Knowledge Capital Experiences and
Assignments in Succession Planning : Development experiences are
planned to build individual competencies and can be linked to the
competencies required for success of the organization with a strategy.
Peter Drucka (1992) emphasized that are way of educating people is to
view the whole, of course, is through work is cross-functional task
forces. The real challenge lies in the building on experience and leverage
knowledge quickly and widely throughout the organization.
The role of HR function goes well beyond value recognition. For knowledge
capital to add value to organizations, key people should be identified, and made
to transfer the information to others, use it in HR strategic planning processes
and to spark innovation and creativity among the workforce.
Use and leverage
knowledge
To act intelligently for
success and viability
Deploy knowledge
Create new knowledge:
Learn, Innovate and
Research
To improve
processes,
products and
Using prior knowledge
services
and imports
Organize and
Capture and store
transform knowledge
knowledge
To re-use and build
To make it broadly
upon it, and to
available and to
leverage it in other
embed it
ways
Figure 3. The Knowledge Life Cycle
Source : Knowledge Research Institute, Quoted in Business Today, May 7-21,
1999, p. 86.
PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL
Knowledge based organizations have to be adept at engaging their workforce to
achieve goals that benefit the organization as well as the individuals. In a
continuing effort to monitor the pulse of the market place, more organizations
are trying operational yard sticks to the traditional financial gauges. It is a
common view among managers that staff will perform better if they understand
the contribution that their work makes to meeting the written objectives and
goals of the organization. It follows, therefore, that anything that makes this
connection cleaner to employees should enhance performance. This insight
encourages organizations to publish documents that show through the medium
of a programme structure, how all the myriad jobs undertaken contributed to
meeting the organization`s objectives. Feedback is as important as
understanding the significance and contribution of one`s work. Many managers
believe that feedback should be based on measurement (Watson, 1994(a)) and
consequently much of the effort under the heading of performance management
is used to develop system for measuring performance. Most measurement
methods are based on a systems model that attempts to measure the input to an
organization, the uses to which those resources are put and the services and
benefits that arise from that activity. Performance measures only have value, as
information rather than data, if they are constructed as ratio that put one piece of
statistical data into the context of another. There are a number of issues that
arise out of the use of performance measure. For instance, there are four basic
types of processes that may require differing emphasis in the measures
Operational
Developmental
Managerial
Support
Each measure has to have a reasonable standard of performance. The individual
measure must directly support and align with the next higher level of measures
well aligned with the objectives and the ultimate strategic goals. Measures
provide focus, quantify objectives and set standards. Objectives have to be
quantified by developing measures to adequately express each dimension.
Detailed measures are combined and can be summarized on dimensions of
higher level objectives.
Management in partnership with the workforce, must find opportunities for
development, empowerment and performance that meet both organizational and
personal interests and objectives. Management must provide opportunities for all
employees to develop skills, experience and knowledge that can improve their
performance and increase their capabilities. Without developmental knowledge
and experiences, performance will be disappointing. In addition to
developmental opportunities, management must provide opportunities for
employees to demonstrate, practice, perform, learn and improve their
performance and capabilities. Monitor and assess measures provide for both
internal and independent monitoring and assessment. Measure of performance
should be monitored by external groups with interests in the outcomes, or
groups that are at least impartial. For example customers, peer groups, senior
management are likely candidates for monitoring. This is what is called 360?
appraisal.
The intention of 360? appraisal is to give a broader and more objective
assessment of people`s competence, although from another angle these systems
must multiply the biases and distortions of judgement to which all appraisal is
proof. Stewart (1998) pointed out that much assessment procedure in
organizations accepts a logical fallacy that the sum of many subjective
judgements is an objective one. Managers are often willing to accept multi-rate
appraisal within certain constraints. They accept its use for developmental
purposes, but are less willing to see it to be used as a basis for judgement
concerning pay, performance or promotion. Multirater feedback is often only
used when a manager has, in different cases, four, five or eight people reporting
to them. With small numbers it may be difficult to maintain the raters`
anonymity and the judgements made be sweetened to avoid any danger of
reprisals. In a fully 360? system, there is also a problem of the weightage to be
given to the various perspectives; should the views of subordinates have the
same value as those of senior colleagues and how seriously should the
assessment of customers or clients be taken. It can be argued that upward
appraisal (if not the full 360?) is an appropriate balancing of the power relations
between management and non-management staff.
It is essential to measure what you reward and reward what you measure.
Otherwise, no strong motivational effect will be created. If new measures are
needed, or if existing measures need modification, create fix them as soon as
possible. Rewards should take many forms, including money, recognition time
off, empowerment, work selection, advancement and development. And rewards
should celebrate successes, as well as desired behaviours such as collaborating,
experimenting, risk-taking and learning. One interesting aspect is that results
and outcomes are the objectives being managed, not processes. First by
emphasizing outcomes that is product, services and financials, the organization
focuses on meeting customer needs and business needs, not internal functional
or political needs. Second it gives managers of each organizational unit the
flexibility to organize the processes and enabling business system components to
best fit their local needs and personal management style, but holds them
accountable for meeting the outcomes. Third, the work force is primarily
rewarded for results, not for internals. What is most important thing you can and
must do to change the existing culture and mindsets so that they are receptive
supportive and committed to the precepts of the knowledge organization?
Motivate everyone by providing equal opportunities and development, as well as
just appraisal and rewards.
Management must measure and reward the performance, behavours and
attitudes that are needed and desired. It is essential to measure what you reward
and reward what you measure. Kaplan and Norton`s Balanced Scorecard
approach both measures and rewards. This approach is then combined with core
values of providing good values to the customer, servicing the customer, high
performance, leading with expertise, innovation and sharing and cooperating.
Therefore following should be rewarded :
Customer satisfaction
High performance
Personal knowledge and expertise
Team work and sharing of expertise and knowledge
Creating new and extending existing knowledge and expertise
Using and applying the knowledge and expertise in the knowledge
repository
Proactive problem solving and problem prevention
The balance score and approach has following basic measurement dimensions:
1.
Customer
Value (Product, Service, Price)
Satisfaction
2.
Financial
Expenses
Income
Net Earnings
Net Worth
3.
Process
Quality
Time
Cost
Capacity
Flexibility/Adaptability
4.
Workforce (added by many organizations)
Development
Empowerment
Motivation
Collaboration, Sharing, Team Work
5.
Learning
Core Capability
Expertise
Knowledge
Innovation
CONCLUSION
The knowledge based organizations will have to use integrated approach in
doing business. Through the use of employee knowledge profits, they will
assemble to best internal, multidisciplinary teams to handle their business
transactions and client engagements. They will tap into their knowledge
repositions and global case bases to learn how similar assignments were handled
and solved. They will use their company intranets and knowledge management
exchange tools to access, store and retrieve important information, knowledge
and heuristics relating to their situation or business activity. Expert systems also
will play a major role in providing an active advisory component to the
organization`s knowledge repositories and corporate memory. Integrated
performance support systems supported by knowledge repositories can turn out
to be the break through concepts needed to implement this integrated approach.
Organizations need to cure their corporate amnesia in order to maintain their
competitive edge. Organizations will continue to merge, reengineer, downsize,
and flatten. As a result, a turnover of employees will be created which could
result in a brain drai effect. To overcome this potential problem, knowledge
repositories must be created, and maintained to capture the expertise before
people leave. To cope up with these trends, future organizations may well need
to be more focused and specialized in their business strategies, relying on
alliances and partnerships to produce products and deliver services that would
have been previously performed internally. According to Robert Dunham of
Enterprise Design, the power of incorporating action into our interpretation of
knowledge is that it puts the focus on the actions to be produced, not just on
understanding or information that requires another step to get to action.
Understanding and information are still aspects of knowledge, but they are no
longer the end product.
Organizations need to be proactive, and put knowledge into action. Their actions
should produce value for customers. The only thing that gives an organization a
competitive edge, the only thing that is sustainable is what it knows, how it uses
what it knows and how fast it can know something new. This knowledge
advantage will be a major competitive advantage for the organization in years to
come.
According to Brook Manville, Director of Knowledge Management at
McKinsey and Company, and Nathaniel Foote, McKinsey`s Director of
Knowledge and Practice Development.
Knowledge ? based strategies begin with strategy, not knowledge. A
company has to know the kind of value if intends to provide and to whom.
Only then it can think of its knowledge resources in ways that make a
difference.
Knowledge-based strategies aren`t strategies unless you can link them to
traditional measures of performance. If knowledge can`t be connected to
measurable improvement in performance, including improvements on the
bottom line then the knowledge revolution will be short lived.
Executing a knowledge-based strategy is not about managing knowledge,
it is about nurturing people with knowledge. Also, people will not
willingly share it with coworkers if their workplace culture does not
support learning, cooperation and openness.
Organizations leverage knowledge through net works of people who
collaborate.
People networks leverage knowledge, through organization pull rather than
centralized information push.
Above all organizations need to continue developing their organizational
intelligence. Organizational intelligence is an organization`s capability to
process, interpret, encode, manipulate and access information in a purposeful
goal directed manner so that it can increase its adaptive potential in the
environment in which it operates (Glynn, 1996).
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
1.
What is organizational effectiveness? How can high performance
work systems improve organizational effectiveness?
2.
Discuss the various principles underlying high performance work
systems.
3.
Discuss the various components of knowledge management
architecture. How can they contribute to the organizational
effectiveness?
4.
What is intellectual capital? Discuss its growing importance in
changing business scenario.
5.
What is performance appraisal. How can it be made effective in a
KBO.
6.
Discuss various strategies used for the growing importance of
knowledge management.
7.
Discuss various issues relating to the knowledge management in
organizations.
SUGGESTED READINGS
1.
Drucker, P. (1992). Managing For the Future : The 1990s and
Beyond. New York : Dutton.
2.
Drucker, P. (1995). Managing in a Time of Great Change. New York :
Dutton.
3.
Kellay, B. (1997). King Makers. Human Resource Executive, 11(2).
4.
Rothewell, W. J. (1994). Effective Succession Planning : Ensuring
Leadership Continuity and Building Talent From Within. New York
: AMACOM.
5.
Rothwell, Willian J.; Prescott Robert K. and Taylor, Masia, W. (2005).
Strategic Human Resource Leader. Mumbai : Jaico.
6.
Kaplan, R. and Norton, D. (1993). Putting the Balance Score Card to
Work. Harvard Business Review.
7.
Glynn, M.A. (1996). Innovative Genies : A Framework for Relating
Individual and Organizational Intelligences to Innovation. Academy of
Management Review, 21(4).
8.
Liebowitz, Jay and Beckman, Tom (1998). Knowledge Organizations
What Every Manager Should Know. New York : St. Lucie Press.
Unit III
KNOWING WHAT THERE IS TO KNOW
The world is changing fast and the world of business is changing faster. In the
new millennium, business corporations will have to deal with entirely new
challenges to meet customer demands, move from competition to collaborative
reconfiguration, dovetail supplier and subcontractor processes to the corporate
goals and empower employees to be able to meet and surpass customer
expectations.
The challenge of meeting higher customer expectations is not something that has
emerged suddenly. This evolution has been happening over the last 30 years,
accelerated in this last decade because of rapid expectation pulls, like the impact
of the information explosion and entry of global brands into all international
markets. This revolution has been further fortified by the push of new
technologies like pervasive Computing and the Internet, which have allowed the
promise of Net-Centric Computing to extend into the work and life styles of the
next generation of prospective buyers in the world`s new economics.
In the relentless competitive search for new business, the customer today
is seen by breathless marketers as a fickle and mercenary shopper, who respects
no brand, has no loyalty and demands higher value for money with every
transaction. They also expect new products and services to be available every
day. This has brought in the concept of the market facing enterprise, where
every process and activity within the organization is pointed towards increasing
customer value. Business process re-engineering, which was once seen as a
euphemism for downsizing, has taken its rightful place as a tool for simplifying
customer interaction with the organization. Information Technology has begun
to pervade all activities within and beyond the physical boundaries of the firm
and the focus of Total Quality Management initiatives and benchmarking
initiatives have all become oriented to the stated and implied needs of
customers.
This has resulted in changes in the expectations and profile of employees
too, who have to become customer rather than task focused, exhibit high
capabilities in the use of technology to maximize their own productivity and
significantly cut down learning times for any new task or role.
New paradigms are also emerging in the organization`s relationship with
its suppliers and subcontractors. They are now seen as key partners in the new
virtual corporation, providing the ability for the entire supply chain to be fine
tuned towards changing market needs.
Take the case of the transnational European Insurance Corporation. In
early 1998, it realized that its profit margins were being eroded by two factors.
First, the inability to command the right price for its services, because of
inadequate knowledge of customer expectations and competitive scenarios; and
second, repeated failure of attempts to train new employees well enough and fast
enough to respond to customer needs for information and new services. This
corporation, like many others in the service delivery business today is faced with
three key challenges.
1. How to change its method of attracting customers and servicing their
needs in the new world of Internet and Electronic Commerce.
2. How to transform its processes and implement Information
Technology Enablement to build the market facing enterprise.
3. How to re-engineer the mindsets of its employees and enable
individual and corporate learning to happen in an institutionalized
manner.
The challenges themselves are not new and in an organization with a
long and successful history of delivering customer services all over the world,
there is no doubt that enough capability exists to address each challenge with the
collective wisdom of generations of managers and leaders, and emerge
successful. But in this statement of the solution lie the problems that face,
schools, universities many organizations and even governments. These are the
problems of identifying the sources of knowledge that exist within the
organization. These are issues of finding the correct method of sharing and
disseminating knowledge across the enterprise and to transform the customer
satisfaction capabilities of each and every member of the organization through
timely availability and use of the collective knowledge base.
This is the dilemma that has moved the concept of knowledge from the
conceptual third stage in a continuum of data-information-knowledge-wisdom
into an addressable and important component of an organization`s customer
satisfaction arsenal. The realization that knowledge can be sourced, stored,
disseminated and used has today spawned multiple research projects, led to the
development of a number of tools, become part of the agenda of over ninety
percent of the global corporations and has even taken knowledge management
to the very peak of the present day Information Technology Hype Cycle. The
nascent state-of-the-art and science of KM can be gauged from the fact that less
than half a dozen enlightening books exist on the subject today ? we hope this
book will add to that body of knowledge. But the interest in the subject is
evident from the scramble of consultants building knowledge management
practices, the gaggle of information technology tools and products that are being
rechristened as knowledge management, and of course the numbers of
information management strategists and researchers of the 1980`s and early
1990`s who now claim to have over a decade of expertise in knowledge
management as their claim to fame.
UNDERSTANDING THE IMPORTANCE OF KNOWLEDGE
Before delving into the esoteric and still fuzzy art and science of
knowledge management, let us understand the term knowledge itself in an
organizational context. The difference between the ordinary and the
extraordinary handling of any task, process or interaction ? between employees,
with customers or with any other stakeholder of the firm ? has always been the
explicit and tacit usage of knowledge by the person guiding the transaction.
This knowledge has often been confused with information and sometimes with
wisdom because of the somewhat blurred boundaries that exist between the
three. While we shall analyse these differences in detail in a later chapter, it is
important to understand that information is nothing but the result of the
processing of large amounts of data that are created during the regular
operations of any organization. This information in the form of Management
Information Systems, Decision Support Systems or just through the picking up
of a telephone, is available to all who are authorized to access it. When the
component of experience in handling similar situations is added, including the
ability to use images, text and transactional intelligence for taking more enriched
decisions, true knowledge is brought to bear on every transaction. The
continuous practice of the art of using knowledge can add to the collective
capability of the individual, a workgroup and a function and can eventually
become the collective wisdom of the organization.
The application of knowledge and the practice of knowledge
management as a precise science can create wonderful results in any
organizational context. The work of every employee can become richer through
access to Best Practices at any stage of a business process or customer project,
the suppliers and subcontractors to the organization can become part of a close
working group where early involvement is possible in all the business thinking,
particularly in the highly competitive business situations. Customers can be
delighted with every transaction, becoming richer and more productive. Thus,
the transition form being an aorganizatin that is invwardly focused to becoming
a true market facing enterprise can be achieved. Most important, in the current
environment of value addition measurement at all a levels, and shareholder
value creation, the conscious capture, storage and archiving of knowledge can
lead to the creation of invaluable intellectual property that has both practical and
long term strategic value for the organization.
Managing knowledge is becoming a business imperative for those
corporations who want to protect their present market share, build future
opportunity share and stay ahead of competition. Knowledge will also be the
key driver for those firms who are keen to innovate and change the rules of the
game. It is no secret that many consumer electronics firms already have two or
three future models ready even as they are introducing today`s model into the
marketplace. This ability to create the future rather than try to predict it
accurately has often been the result of knowledge about the present and future
customer needs that preempt the customer`s own ability to visualize the future.
And in large organizations, this is best done not by seeking external help, but by
using the explicit and tacit knowledge of the entire employee and partner
community. To quote the CEO of Hewlett Packard, one of the world`s most
successful corporations, Successful companies of the 21st century will be those
who do the best job of capturing, storing, and leveraging what their employees
know.
In business corporations, effective and timely usage of knowledge can
also result in the reduction of cycle time and assist in the business process re-
engineering and organizational delayering process.
The ability to enable academics, students, bureaucrats or citizens to
quickly identify and resolve problems will be the key to successfully managed
institutions and E-Governance in the new millennium. The benefits of applying
knowledge are truly universal and are imperative for success in the new
millennium.
THE TECHNOLOGY PUSH FOR KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
The concept of knowledge itself is not new, because theneed and
importance of knowledge has been the basis for the development of various
cultures, philosophies and religions. What has really made it possible for people
and even organizatins today to even contemplate harnessing knowledge energies
for better management has been the rapid evolution in technology that we have
seen over the last decades.
The role of technology, particularly information technology in defining
and reviatalizing corporate strategy has evolved over the last forty years or so.
In the 1960s and 70s, computers were confined to glass cabins and sometimes
as departmental number crunches. Information strategy was always seen as
something that would come in after the corporate strategy had been defined. It
was only with the introduction of the personal computer in the early 1980s and
the subsequent spread of the networking phenomenon that changed the role of
information technology from being a passive consequence of corporate strategy
to a pre-requisite to the development of strategy.
The pull factors exerted on the corporation by its external environment
are compounded by the push given by rapid advances in information technology,
particularly in the area of intro-organization and inter-organization
communications.
This push, largely driven by the rapid proliferation of the Internet and the
usage of associated Internet technologies within corporations in the form of
intranets and extranets has resulted in the emergence new paradigms of business.
A case in point is amazon.com, the virtual bookstore that has caught the fancy of
shoppers and stock market analysts alike and zoomed to a revenue run rate of a
billion dollars and a market capitalization many times that, this company has
proved that the traditional model of business is slowly but surely giving way to
new methods of planning and developing business opportunities that will change
the face of marketing strategy in the new millennium.
Other significant players are also beginning to generate significant
revenues in the other three segments. FedEx, Cisco and Intel are reporting
multi-billion dollar business-to-business transactions. Another popular internet
startup, eBay, has brought the concept of the Virtual Auction to the consumer-
to-consumer space. Pioneers like priceline.com are turning the entire marketing
paradigm on its head. It has made consumer-to-business transactions the new
way of booking airline tickets, hotel rooms and soon, every form of service
where the customer is keen to name his price rather than ask for discounts. All
these phenomena are changing the every organizations deal with customers and
even customer expectations from organizations.
While E-Commerce is one visible usage of the Internet phenomenon,
another internal innovation that is happening in many business corporations
worldwide is that of knowledge management. The ability that the Internet
provides to seamlessly integrate the business processes of organizations with
activities spread all over the globe is encouraging organizations to look at
knowledge capture, archival, dissemination and usage as the logical method of
improving customer response through institutionalized and technology-enabled
processes. Through the deployment of data and knowledge capture, storage and
mining tools on knowledge networks, the objective seems to be to capture every
form of explicit and tacit information and knowledge and build ongoing
corporate learning.
The Corporate Portal is the logical culmination of technological
advances in the areas of knowledge archival and dissemination, the internet,
intranets and extranets and managerial innovations in the areas of shared
learning and corporate experience building. In its early deployment in many
organizations, the corporate portal is nothing more than a customized computing
front-end for each and every employee in an organization which permits a
customized user interface with the large storehouse of data, information and
knowledge that exists in departmental, corporate and industry databases and data
warehouses. It combines many evolutions like the electronic mail, GroupWare
computing capabilities, personalized information retrieval and collaborative
working with the new science of knowledge networks which enables the
conversion, storage and on-tap availability of erstwhile tacit knowledge in
explicit and accessible formats.
The early beginnings of the corporate portal actually happened in the
business to consumer space. This caught the fascination of consumers and the
global investor community alike, sending many Internet stocks into stratospheric
levels. Front runners like Yahoo were the early pioneers in moving from
generic portals, which provided a launching apad for surfers and information
seekers alike, to customized individual access points like My Yahoo, one of
today`s most popular personalized internet services. The reason why more and
more consumers find this concept fascinating is that it avoids the clutter of
searching through multiple web sites for information, education and
entertainment, that is most commonly accessed by creating a template for
capturing only those information elements from the internet that one is actually
interested in. This is enabling the concept of the customized newspaper,
selecting scanning of high interest web sites and pull-based access of
information on new products and services. In the consumer segment, the
personal portal is already sounding alarm bells for traditional marketers who
have been used to traditional push forms of advertising and product promotion.
The formation of virtual communities consisting of groups of internet users with
similar interests across countries and continents is being accelerated by this new
portal concept.
The corporate portal will go one step further in integrating the work style
of every individual into the information strategy of the organization. With the
current trend in the US and Europe towards telecommuting and hot desking, an
employee can start working anywhere in the world by sitting at a computer in
any airport or hotel or business center or even at home and getting his individual
working environment conjured up in seconds to enable him to commerce work.
With many of the world`s leading technology firms including Microsoft, Oracle
and IBM as well as some of the most innovative Silicon Valley startups putting
billions of dollars of investment monies into new tools and technologies for Net-
centric hardware, software and communications capabilities, the next few years
may change the entire paradigm of the business corporation.
FROM ART TO SCIENCE : KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
A knowledge management initiative is best taken up if an organization
finds value in building an institutional memory or a comprehensive knowledge
base for the firm to enable better application, sharing and managing of
knowledge across the various entities within and outside the organization.
Let us revisit the case of the European Insurance Corporation that was
mentioned earlier in this chapter. The size of the knowledge challenge can be
estimated by the parameters of its operation ? a network of nearly two million
customers with over tow thousand new enrolments every week. Call center
operators are inundated with nearly 10,000 calls every day ranging from simple
policy queries to membership changes and a host of unexpected demands for
information from pleasant as well as irate customers. With an annual volume of
over 30,000 insurance claims and payouts in excess of a million-and ?a-half
pounds, any improvement in the efficiency of the operation could have a
significant impact on the customer satisfaction levels as well as the overall
profitability of the enterprise.
Compounding the problem for the organization was the fact that one of
the toughest categories of people to hire, train and retain in the call center
employee. With call centers becoming one of the most popular customer
servicing mechanisms across Europe and the USA, attrition level of employees
is very high with the result that the company was spending enormous time and
effort on training and retraining its employees on an ongoing basis.
The European Corporation set for itself one major objectives as its
knowledge management initiative-to achieve a five percent improvement in
claims processing accuracy with a resultant ten percent improvement in overall
profitability, which would be possible since both underpayment and
overpayment of claims was resulting in major cash losses through waste on one
hand and expensive law suits on the other. Three strategies became the focus
for achieving these goals.
Get new employees trained on all aspects of Call Center operation in the
shortest possible time with new technologies applied for pre-requisite,
skills and reinforcement/remedial learning. This would eliminate the
need for expensive and time-consuming classroom based training of new
recruits and refresher training for existing employees.
Have knowledge available on tap about company policies, frequently
asked questions and explicit and tacit customer knowledge.
Improve quality of customer response as well as capability to process
customer claims efficiently and accurately on an ongoing basis.
The eventual outcome for the knowledge management initiative had
been defined in clear business terms and the strategies clearly defined before the
technologists were put on the job. Very often, knowledge management
initiatives fail simply because the reasons for embarking on the project are not
clear and the critical strategic issues are not identified. Today, this company is
on the verge of achieving its objectives of just-in-time training, claims
processing accuracy and customer satisfaction and will soon see a knowledge
workstation with a customized enterprise knowledge portal on the worktable of
every knowledge worker.
But it takes a lot to get there and the organization will have to grapple
with a range of technological and behavioural challenges before it sees full
success. Many of these are presented and analyzed in detail in subsequent parts
of this book.
Knowledge management has enabled many organizations of worldwide
repute to comprehensively change their approach and service delivery
capability, both towards their internal employee community and towards
external stakeholders. Many large European and American banks are focusing
on the task of building and institutionalizing organizational memory.
Knowledge is being built about vital processes and practices. Models are being
developed to describe tasks, processes and customer relationship functions that
employees are engaged in with detailed objectives and best practices that are
oriented towards achieving them.
Chase Manhattan Bank has developed a comprehensive relationship
management system by using the visual basic programming environment
wherein bank employees have complete customer knowledge available on tap,
including information on loan histories, deposits, investments and other explicit
and tacit knowledge that facilitates better customer relationships.
In the oil industry, Chevron has been successful in deploying a
comprehensive knowledge management framework. It uses Lotus Notes in a
comprehensive Group Ware solution that is deployed on a corporate intranet.
This establishes communities of best practice and enables sharing of best
practices across the company. The company holds regular internal conferences
for best practices exchange and provides access to corporate and industry news,
human resources information, financial and library services on the same
knowledge network. A variety of on-line training courses enrich the information
and knowledge available on this network.
Dow Chemicals has a comprehensive intellectual asset management
system. It includes the management of know how, copyrights, patents,
trademarks and trade secrets. Pharmaceutical giants like Glaxo and Welcome
are setting up intranet-based executive information systems which enable
knowledge sharing on people, key business activities and best practices. It
enables internal and external benchmarking on an ongoing basis. Various
financial institutions like bankers trust are deploying collaborative computing
technologies to enable sharing of knowledge of financial markets between
employees to create in-house knowledge bases that catalogue and share the
knowledge acquired in various parts of the firm. They also plan to extend the
in-house knowledge base to key customers, which will not only increase
customer satisfaction but also minimize the time that would need to be spent on
actual one-to-one interaction with the customer in any transaction.
The real difficulty in implementing knowledge networks is the ongoing
intellectual effort that will be required to ensure that real benefits accrue to the
organization. The cost itself may be only of an incremental nature, since
corporate intranets are now a common feature in many companies. It is only the
software that will need to be procured and implemented to get the knowledge
network functional. One major challenge to implementing knowledge
management successfully is the tendency for many corporate chieftains and even
functional heads to disbelieve the notion that it is really possible to capture,
store, analyse and disseminate knowledge for shared usage. Until this
realization sinks in and CEOs take the first few steps to establishing a
knowledge performance index for the critical and repetitive activities of the
organization, knowledge management will remain a topic for magazine articles
and intellectual seminars.
However, the business environment demands it, technologies are
enabling it and effective knowledge management will be the difference between
the winners and the also-rans in the corporate world of the new millennium.
Implementing KM in your Organization
At the end of a talk by a leading international speaker at a recent seminar
on knowledge management, there was some unexpected feedback from a rather
agitated gentleman in the audience. Surprising because, the session by any
yardstick had been an interesting one and gave some useful insights on the
subject. The cause of his concern, however, was the fact that the world already
knew that knowledge management is a clear business imperative. However,
most thinkers on the subject resort to talking about rather abstruse theories and
broad generalizations and tend to take umbrage under the assertion that specific
answers have to be figured out by each organization. How does one ensure that
knowledge management is seen as anal pervasive way of life rather than a pilot
project that lost its luster after an overdose of hype and unrealistic expectations?
What is required is an unambiguous action plan, clear guidelines on what is to
be doen, how, when and by whom. Mere pontifications are no longer enough.
Hard-nosed businessmen would rather depend on a scientific approach to
success than leave it to the probable brilliance of a few believers who practice
knowledge management as an art form.
Aspiring practitioners of knowledge management primarily have two
major questions:
How can knowledge management be interwoven into the organizations`s
mainstream activities and functions rather than be looked upon as a
discrete experiment.
For an organization to embark on a sustainable and successful
knowledge management program, is there a clear implementation
methodology that can be followed.
Both these are very real concerns. For KM to get institutionalized it
requires not only organizational conviction but clear processes and
methodologies for achieving the same. However strong the intuitive conviction
about an initiative may be, its longevity can be ensured only by :
(a) a clear correlation to business objectives and strategies.
(b) Identification of quantifiable milestones and outcomes towards the
achievement of these objectives.
There are any number of examples where knowledge solutions have been
implemented without any questions asked because the CEOs saw it as an
absolute necessity. The ability to derive an organization`s knowledge strategy
out of its business strategy lends clarity to this intuitive conviction, enables a
sounder approach for prioritizing various activities of knowledge acquisition and
provides for setting up of processes and metrics to enable an ROI justification.
Knowledge management and more specifically knowledge sharing is
extremely depenent on the organizational ethos. However, implementation
cannot be an open ended exercise whose fate is determined by the employees.
For any initiative to get institutionalized it need to be supported by clearly
defined processes, individual responsibilities and technological enablers.
While it is not our instent to over-simplify the issue by purporting to provide a
solution to the last teail, our experience in various KM engagements leads us to
believe that it is indeed possible to arrive at a well-defined approach to go about
such initiatives. It is both feasible and beneficial to clearly link knowledge
management with business strategy and planning. That way one can associate
some quantifiable outcomes from KM towards achieving business objectives
rather than merely seeing it as a desirable initiative. Moreover, while KM as a
subject has reahed nowhere near the maturity of, say defining a software
engineering process (for perhaps the simple reason that it is to do more with
people than with software) it is possible to chalk out a clear implementation
methodology. Hopefully, what has been shared here will give on (of many)
possible approaches that could translate into a clear plan of action of the
organization.
LINKING KNOWLEDGE STARTEGY TO BUSINESS STRATEGY.
In chapter 5 we examined the process of identifying KM solutions from
the business strategy perspective as one of the possible approaches. This can be
viewed as the top down approach to knowledge initiative. There are
organizations that have started knowledge initiatives in areas that seemed to be
the obvious choices are possibly represented only the low hanging fruit. This has
the obvious advantage of being able to embark on a KM project without much of
a premble and time lag and also ensure an initial success. However, the not so
obvious disadvantage of this approach is the difficulty in identifying similar
projects, prioritizing them and ensuring that they can be retrofitted into some
kind of a cohesive knowledge strategy in future. The initial project has the
distinct possibility of being a lone initiative, albeit being a much-acclaimed and
talked about one. It does not necessarily snowball into an organization-wide
phenomenon that can yield business benefits, on reaching a certain critical mass.
The top down approach on the other hand ensures that there is a clearly defined
knowledge strategy in place. Pilots can then be chosen and projects can be
chosen and projects can be prioritized based on various techno-cultural issues.
It ensures that there are some clearly defined goals in the knowledge domain
that are not lost sight of irrespective of initial successes or failures. In fact, the
feedback from such initiatives can become valuable inputs for refining business
strategies.
THE K-GAP ANALYZER AS A TOOL
An organization needs to be able to identify what are the knowledge
assets required to meet its business strategy. Obviously, the business strategy
would be dictated by an organization`s core competence. ,[s has been elucidated
by Hamel and Prahalad1 in their path-breaking work, core competence has to be
looked at in the context of building competitive advantage. This means that
business strategy has to be based not merely on current activities and existing
knowledge assets, but on the way the organization can build on its current core
competence towards achieving competitive advantage. This in turn would
decide what would be the knowledge assets that need to be acquired.
Business strategy has got to be broken down into a comprehensive list of
key business drivers, with milestones and time linmes for each business activity.
For each KBD, the complete set of knowledge assets (K-sets) required to
achieve that KBD need to be identified. This forms the starting pint for
evolving an organization-wide knowledge strategy.
It is in this context that the use of a tool christened the K-Gap Analyzer
is likely to be of immense help. This is a deceptively simple tool which when
used iteratively has multiple utilities. Some of the processes it aids are:
Building the knowledge strategy
Aiding a K-Need analysis
Evolving a learning strategy as a well integrated subset of the knowledge
strategy
Synchronizing a top down knowledge strategy with a bottom up skills
acquisition plan
Providing a basis for a quantitative analysis of investments in knowledge
acquisition versus realization of business objectives
We will examine each one of these facets as we go along. But right now
we will see how this tool can be used in the context of business strategy. Once
the knowledge sets for each business function have been arrived at, the next step
would be to perform an As-Is Analysis. This entails pegging the current
knowledge levels of the organization as high, medium or low. While some
organizations might like to do this exercise based on the collective judgement of
their key personnel, the K-Gap Analyser, when used in the K-Need analysis
phase, helps to yield some quantifiable results by breaking down each activity
into sub-activities and cumulating the knowledge scores.
Simultaneously, one needs to arrive at a similar rating for key
competitors that is based on market intelligence reports and expert judgement.
By plotting the organization`s skill levels against those of the competitors, it
gives a quick pictorial summary of:
Where the organization currently stands
What kind of skill acquisition plans need to be contemplated
What are the requisite timeframes, based on the knowledge gap between
the organization and its key competitors.
It also serves as a reality check` to figure out whether the business
strategy is indeed feasible, given the current knowledge base of the organization
and how far and how quickly it has to go.
An analysis of the nature and extent of the knowledge gap can enable top
management to take certain strategic decisions, depending on whether the gap
can be bridged through incremental knowledge acquisition or requires quicker,
more comprehensive strategies through tie-ups, mergers or acquisitions. A
classic case in point was the example discussed in Chapter 2, where a
knowledge gap analysis clearly revealed the existing holes in the overall product
offering from Lotus Learning Space, prompting a tie-up with Macromedia.
THE FOUR PHASE KM METHODOLOGY
We have described here a four-phase methodology for KM projects,
Obviously this methodology does assume a certain chronology of processes in
implementing KM solutions. A number of KM initiatives have succeeded
without adhering to well defined methodologies or processes. It is equally true,
though, that these organizations have been unable to answer the What next?
question that crops up immediately after implementing the first project. While
quick initiatives are certainly worth encouraging simultaneously, following a
more systematic and rigorous methodology for evolving a knowledge strategy
ensures that there is a sense of direction in the overall approach, this also
aoolws the retrofitting of the gains and learning from the first few projects into
the future course of action.
The four phases are as follows:
1. K-Need Identification
2. K-Acquisition Framework
3. K-Net Design
4. K-Net Implementation
K-Need Identification
At the business strategy level one can look at broad groups of knowledge
categories or K-Sets for being able to take some strategy decisions. However, in
the K-Need Identification and Analysis phase, a more rigorous analysis is called
for. The K-Gap analyzer comes in handy during this phase too.
The underlying principle behind a knowledge strategy is that an
organization needs to know how the presence or absence of specific knowledge
entities is affecting its overall business. Towards this end the following
correlations have to be established:
1. Translate Business Strategy to KBDs.
2. Identify those KBDs that pertain to new areas of operation. For these, a
fresh analysis of knowledge requirements needs to be done. For current
areas, an as-is analysis as described below, needs to be done.
3. Translate each KBD into Key Business Processes (KBP). This assumes
that the organization has already gone through an exercise of optimizing
its business processes. It is best to do it at this stage if it has not been
done. This will prevent the organization from investing its time and
resources to supplement knowledge levels for activities that might be
redundant.
4. For each KBP, identify all the activities involved.
5. Depending on the size and complexity of the organization, each activity
might have to be broken down into several levels.
6. Each activity (or sub-activity) would be executed by one or more
individuals. In the need identification` phase, each employee will need
to establish this reference in terms of linking his activity to the
corresponding KBP and KBD, besides the regular process of identifying
the department or project that they are working in. This exercise by
itself will help to identify redundancies within the system. It aso, in a
subtle way, gives each employee a sense of participation and
responsibility towards the overall business endeavor.
7. The employee then identifies their knowledge needs to perform their
specific activity. These are listed as a comprehensive list of knowledge
entities and are highly specific to the nature of the task being performed.
Examples of such entities could be the previous marketing proposals for
a marketing executive, manpower resource availability for a project
manager, patient referrals for a sales person in a pharmaceutical
company or Java application development skills for a programmer.
8. Once the knowledge entities` are identified, the employee would have to
rate each of them on a scale of low, medium or high along two
dimensions. These two dimensions are the knowledge level required for
executing that particular job and the knowledge level currently available.
The knowledge entity would get a score of 1,2 or 3 (for low, high and
medium respectively) and of course a score of 0 if it is non-existent.
Hence the required knowledge score` as well as the current knowledge
score` can be arrived at. It needs to be understood that the current
knowledge score should connote the knowledge immediately available
so that is also reflects the time lag, if any, to obtain it and the ease or
difficulty in being able to access it on time. For instance, access to
previous proposals of a similar type would constitute a knowledge
element of a high rating for a marketing executive in their ability to put
together high quality proposals quickly. If they find that a similar
proposal was made elsewhere in the organization, but it takes a
considerable amount of effort to contact the right people and access the
content, then obviously the current knowledge availability (or rather
accessibility) to the marketing executive is low. It is important to
understand that a good knowledge strategy has to take cognizance of
both availability and dissemination of knowledge assets. Depending on
the nature of the organization, a facility can be provided for employees`
assessments of their knowledge scores, to be refined by their superior
who is likely to have a more holistic understanding of organizational
activities.
This seems like an involved and complex procedure that would take up a
lot of time and effort. Actually, this is not so. If the K-Gap Analyzer is
available as an automated tool on the company`s intranet, it would take each
employee barely 15 minutes to file the required details on-line, once the
organization level details of business strategy, objectives and processes are
worked out as an initial, one-time effort. The gap analyzer is then capable of
analyzing these inputs and scores at multiple levels of consolidation to yield
some extremely useful insights. Let us look at some of them.
The total knowledge score can be computed as :
Total Knowledge Score = K
i
j
ij
Which gives the total knowledge scores of all knowledge entities K (i = 1 to m)
i
across all organizational activities (j = 1 to n).
The differences between the knowledge score required and the current
knowledge score gives the extent of the knowledge gap. The number of
knowledge entities, when clubbed into homogenous knowledge sets, is
indicative of the range or diversity of skill sets required.
On another dimension when scores of a single K-set are cumulated
across activities, processes or projects, it gives the relative score (compared to
other K-sets) of both the criticality and extent of the K-gap. Since the scores are
consolidated from individual assessment, if more people experience a
knowledge gap, it correspondingly increases the overall knowledge gap in the
organization, thereby automatically prioritizing itself. This acts as a facilitator
for prioritizing various knowledge initiatives on the basis of the actual need. Of
course there would be other issues like cultural and technological factors and
overall business priorities that might influence the final decision.
The knowledge gap analyzer can be used to consolidate scores at either a
project or departmental level to be able to find patterns of knowledge
distribution and adequacy.
Depending on the criticality of the knowledge gap, decisions can be
taken regarding what kind of investments would be justified for knowledge
initiatives. If figures of opportunity costs because of delayed availability or
non-availability of knowledge or skills are also captured when employees fill the
K-Gap analysis forms, it greatly helps in an ROI analysis at a later date.
The K-Gap Analyzer therefore prepares the ground for identifying areas
in which KM initiatives need to be undertaken. These probable KM projects can
then be prioritized depending on overall business needs, technical feasibility,
costs, expected benefits, required timelines, visibility and current work group
culture. Even if all other parameters strongly drive the need for a knowledge
initiative, the current organizational culture could very often tilt the balance in a
feasibility exercise of this kind. If the knowledge is more tacit than explicit in
nature, and the current organizational climate is just not conducive to knowledge
sharing, it might be well worth postponing the KM project until such time that a
comprehensive Change Management initiative can be undertaken to create an
environment that can sustain a knowledge sharing culture.
However, it needs to be kept in mind that most of the early KM projects
in any organization are bound to entail change management issues. This phase
would be the right time to create the Change Vision`. Behavioral changes
especially in an organizational context cannot be expected to happen overnight.
The process has to start right at the beginning of the project so that by the time
the technical solution is ready for a rollout, significant progress has also been
made to create the right culture for implementation. Towards this end, at this
stage the change management agents` either by way of external consultants or
internal leadership or both have to be identified.
K-Acquisition Framework
Once the knowledge gaps have been established and the KM project(s)
identified, the next step is to figure out how and from where these knowledge
components have to be acquired and disseminated. The following need to be
achieved at this stage:
Knowledge codification
Identification of sources for acquiring these knowledge inputs
Creation of knowledge maps by linking source and destination for
knowledge elements
The starting point for this is knowledge codification` as discussed in
Chapter2. Our experience has been that knowledge codification in virtually
every context has been simplified if we keep the Dual Knowledge Solution
Model in mind. Broadly speaking, the Transformation model deals with explicit
knowledge while the Independent model attempts to find solutions to sharing of
tacit knowledge. Detailed classification of knowledge is something that can be
determined by each organization depending on what typology it is most
comfortable with and suits the needs of the organization best. For each K-Set or
K-Entity, the source for acquisition can broadly be classified as under:
I to K Transformation Category
- from structured databases
- from information repositories ? both text and multimedia (existing)
- from information repositories ? existing but non-digitized
Independent Knowledge Category
- skill enhancement programs (training)
- external resources (people/organizations/sites)
- internal expertise (people / products)
For creation of knowledge maps, a knowledge need as represented by a
K-Set or a K-Entity has to be associated with corresponding knowledge objects
(K-object) which are going to be the knowledge source for acquiring that piece
of knowledge. A K-Object could be an individual (expert), book, document, e-
mail, manual, web content, website address, project reports or any multimedia
content. So, in our example of the marketing executive, the K-entity would be
previous proposals` and the K-Object to provide him with those inputs could be
say a list of Word or PowerPoint files available at a certain remote server or
even the names of his counterparts working elsewhere in the same organization
with details of their clients.
Having identified the sources for K-Objects, the probable destinations
would also need to be identified to complete the K-Map at a conceptual level.
(Creating K-Maps ar the time of implementation has other aspects to it as well,
like providing an on-line guide, a complete catalogue of K-Objects customized
for every knowledge worker, a navigation aid and so on). The K-Acquisition
Framework phase thus provides the blueprint for identifying, capturing and
tagging all the required sources of knowledge. Simultaneously, the blueprint for
managing the soft or behavioral issues should also be in place. A clear action
plan has to be drawn up by the change agents.
K-Net Design
The stage is know set for the technical design of the KM solution. The
following activities are done in this phase:
Identification of the KM application portfolio
Selection of appropriate technology for implementing the solutions
Specifying the infrastructure requirements in terms of hardware, network
and software
Choice of the appropriate KM tool or framework, should any be required
Detaining the technical specifications for the KM solution
One of the advantages of viewing KM projects through the Dual Model
approach is that it lends itself to an easy delineation of the software application
portfolio that needs to be developed for the KM project. Once the knowledge
sources for the required knowledge sets are classified under the two models, as
we saw in the acquisition phase, it becomes simple to identify the application
layer. A representative sample is illustrated here:
K-Solution
K-Sets
K-Sources
Application Layer
Model
Transformation
(As
Structured
Datamining/knowledge
identified in
Model
databases
extraction applications
the
Need
Analysis
Interface and gateways
phase)
to bedrock systems
Text
mining
and
Existing
information
retrieval applications
repositiories
Workflow
and
messaging applications
Non-digitized
Document capture and
management,
search
sources
and
retrieval
applications
Skill
Web-based
training
enhancement
solutions with Learning
Independent
programs
Management Systems
Model
External
Yellow
paging
resources
applications
-People/
Web
crawler
and
organizations
broadcast applications
-Web sites
Communities
of
Internal
Practice (using expert
expertise
locators, collaboration,
virtual
work
space
- People
applications)
Best Practice Sharing
(using
knowledge
repositories
and
-
products/
Discussion Group based
processes
applications)
The application portfolio would determine what technologies are to be
used as discussed in detail in Chapter 4. This analysis also makes it relatively
simpler to determine the associated technology costs of developing these
applications. Depending on the relative criticality of these knowledge
components or sets, it could even be decided to start with certain simple`
applications within a KM project. For instance, technologically speaking,
setting up some collaborative frameworks would be relatively easier and less
expensive compared to an extensive data warehousing/mining application. A
quick cost benefit analysis usually helps to take certain operational decisions.
Simultaneously, one would have to determine the infrastructure requirement in
terms of the network connectivity, bandwidth requirements, servers, etc. based
on data and content volumes, the number of employees and their geographic
spread. Of course, more often than not, companies might already have an
intranet infrastructure which means there would be no incremental investments
excepting perhaps for additional servers and some upgrades, besides purchase of
commodity software.
If the application portfolio consists of solutions to be developed in the
Independent model category, then it might warrant a choice of either a KM tool
or a WBT tool or both. We have already discussed, the approach that can be
followed for making an informed decision on these issues, with the help of
consulting aids like a Tool Retrieval Engine.
At this stage the detailed functionality and technical specifications of the
proposed solution would need to be worked out. Processes and procedures for
knowledge capture, storage, dissemination, retrieval, updation and archiving
have to be clearly spelt out. In KM projects, it definitely helps to use the
Prototyping and Rapid Application Development methodologies adhering to
standards like UML that ensure a constant interaction between the developers
and knowledge workers. This is important to ensure buy-in by knowledge
workers at an early stage by providing GUIs that are intuitive and users are most
comfortable with. Where knowledge or skill enhancement through on-line
training is concerned, this too needs to be elaborated out in terms of both
features and content. It is important to customize content as closely as possible
to the knowledge worker`s requirement. Interestingly, the K-Gap Analyzer,
because of its innate ability to be used at any level of detail, can actually be used
to even structure the contents of a learning session. Fig. shows how learning
objectives can be prioritized and structured based on an actual analysis of
specific skill gaps.
This diagram depicting the use of the gap analyzer shoes that merely
because a project team is working on an E-Commerce project, it is not right to
come to the conclusion that putting the entire team through a standard training
program will suffice. Although a standard training program on E-Commerce
may have all the components enumerated above, a particular project team might
require specific content to be sourced and provided as dictated by the K-Gap. In
this example for instance the project does not require much skills based on
TCP/IP concepts. So it does not have to be a part of the learning objectives.
While the project does require javascript and HTML skills, the current skill
levels are more than adequate. Hence the course can be structured in such a way
that it lays additional emphasis on issues like firewall and security, OOAD and
EJB and perhaps gives the latest updates on topics like VRML and Active X.
This analysis can be done either at a group level, based on the cumulative scores
of the entire project team versus the overall skill requirements, in case a regular
instructor-led training program is being contemplated; or it could be done at the
individual project member level in case the personalized web-based learning
systems are available. This is a very strong mechanism of ensuring that the
inputs being given are exactly tailored to project requirements.
Training therefore could be an important dimension in the overall K-
acquisition process. However, it still has to be viewed as a subset of a larger
knowledge initiative for an organization. This issue needs to be clearly
understood. For, in our interactions with people about to launch KM projects,
we have very frequently encountered concerns about whether a K-Need
identification process does not turn out to be a mere Training Need Analysis
which their human resource department is already carrying out anyway. The K-
Gap analyzer clearly establishes the linkages between learning programs and the
overall knowledge strategy in both conceptual and quantitative terms.
By the end of this phase, therefore, all components of the knowledge
solutin would be worked out to the last detail. The technical solution for the
knowledge initiative would have been completely developed and tested, and the
necessary infrastructure (hardware, software, network, etc.) for the eventual
implementation would have to be in place. Equally important is the change
management initiative, which needs to be well underway. Top management
along with the change agents need to ensure that employee buy-in is ensured at
an early stage (at around the time that the technical solution is being rolled out).
Creating a positive environment of preparedness and eagerness among the
prospective knowledge workers to be a part of the knowledge sharing activity is
an extremely vital ingredient to a successful KM implementation.
K-Net Implementation
This is perhaps the most critical phase of any KM project. It is perhaps a
misnomer to call it a phase, thereby suggesting that it has a start and end point.
Unlike in most other projects, where KM is concerned, implementation has to
lead to internalization and assimilation of the knowledge processes as part of the
mainstream activities.
The activities and processes thus far are fairly simple to execute, but it is
during implementation that the best skills of all people concerned have to come
to the fore. The infrastructure is in place, the technical solution has been
developed and validated, what is left to achieve is the buy-in from people. It is
precisely this heavy dependence on people that gives a larger-than-life
implication to a KM project. If it has the power and backing of all the people
behind it, a KM implementation can lead to benefits that are most often much
larger than what was contemplated at the outset. There are tangible and
intangible spin-offs that are seldom foreseen at the beginning of the exercise.
On the other hand non-acceptance by the people can make such projects an
unmitigated disaster as well. Unlike software projects, success does not depend
merely on clearly quantifiable and measurable parameters like how technically
robust the solution is, whether it has been adequately tested and meets the
performance requirements. It depends on that highly subjective and
unpredictable parameter called people involvement`. As Davenport2 has said
while talking about Information Ecology, the right balance of IT and cultural
factors is necessary: From where I sit, successful knowledge management
always occurs through a combination of technological and behavioural change.
It is the subjectivity on account of the people and culture component that
makes it difficult to come up with standard solutions for KM implementations.
People and culture specific issues make it difficult to make generalizations even
within a single organization, leave alone evolving solutions that could be applied
uniformly across organizations. It is here that an organization has to rely
heavily on the ingenuity of its own people rather than leave it to external
consultants who at best might have a partial knowledge of the practical realities
within an organizational set-up. External change agents or consultants can be
used to give an initial impetus to the change management initiative. However,
these need to be sustained. The only mechanism for doing this is for the
organization to internalize the process and provide tangible recognition for
knowledge sharing efforts. Formal mechanisms like story telling are also being
increasingly used to spread awareness and share successes for institutionalizing
KM. Story telling asn an enabler has some very strong protagonists to the extent
where there are several story telling communities over the Net.
There are certain activities that are necessary precursors to most
knowledge solution implementations. Some of these are:
1. Content Population and Organization: The repositories will need to
be populated with the requisite content. In the Transformation Model,
the underlying databases or data warehouses would already be available.
These would have to be appropriately interfaced with the overall solution
and possibly other sources of more unstructured date. If content is either
dispersed or non-digitized, these need to be classified, organized and
supplemented with necessary metadata structures for easy retrieval.
Check-in, checkout procedures need to be followed for constant updates
on the repositories.
2. Cataloguing of knowledge Objects: In the knowledge acquisition
phase, the sources of knowledge and the related knowledge objects
would have been identified. Now is the time to actually catalog these
objects, arrive at a codification scheme that is often dictated by the
nature of knowledge objects in each organization and store the details.
The automated knowledge map then uses these indexes to create an on-
line route map for knowledge workers to locate these knowledge objects
easily.
3. Identifying the Knowledge Workers: The content access would be
determined by several layers of security as required in the context of
each organizational activity. Generally there would be access rights at
organizational, work group and knowledge worker levels. Therefore,
each knowledge worker would have to identify herself into the system
and specify the work group or special interest groups that she might
belong to. In a knowledge organization, it would be important to
remember that the system should enable as much free flow of knowledge
and content as possible, unless they deal with sensitive information. The
underlying philosophy of the knowledge network should always be kept
in mind while configuring roles and this is to enable greater interaction
and knowledge sharing. Therefore, classifying knowledge workers
should be looked at in terms of being able to provide personalized and
relevant information, rather than a mechanism that puts artificial
boundaries to knowledge dissemination and assimilation.
4. Setting up the Expertise Database: This is an important activity for
being able to locate the right people at the right time. In most cases the
use of an automated tool for K-Gap analysis, automatically provides the
skills inventory of the employees and helps to populate the expertise
database. However, this basic layer needs to be supplemented with
additional information on the availability of expertise that might be
external to the organization, yet accessible to it through its network of
consultants or business partners. In addition it is important to
substantiate a perceived level of expertise in people (either through self-
assessment or by the assessment of the superior) by more quantifiable
mechanisms. Intel (which was rated second worldwide in MAKE`99-
Most Admired Knowledge Enterprise) for instance, has been exploring
ways of identifying experts through an analysis of e-mails. In Aptech,
on the other hand, we have had a fair measure of success in identifying
capabilities even among the more reticent employees by their
contribution in solving problems addressed to the Helpdesk.
5. Processes, Roles and Responsibilities: In our consulting engagements,
we have often perceived a strange dichotomy when it has come to
defining mechanisms and roles in a knowledge solution. On the one
hand is the though that any kind of rigidity in a system could discourage
spontaneity and creativity, two very fundamental pre-requisites for
sustaining a knowledge culture. On the other hand is the harsh though
undeniable reality that everybody`s responsibility` is nobody`s
responsibility`. We believe that defining at least some fundamental
processes, roles and responsibilities area virtual pre-requisite for being
able to effectively institutionalize a system. However, while doing so, it
is extremely important for all those who are involved in the exercise to
remember the guiding principle that these are meant to be used as
enablers rather than a set of rules. For instance, there should be
guidelines that are clearly spelt out for checking documents in and out of
the knowledge repository, for removing dated content, for monitoring
discussions, specifying who should be the knowledge integrators for
different groups, fr administration services including enabling and
disabling access and so on.
A lot of the activities mentioned above are generic in nature and would be
valid for a number of situations. It is in this context that it is useful to have
automated knowledge frameworks as a quick start to an overall solution.
The correlation between the requirements as described above and the
functionality provided by such frameworks (such as the Aptech KMF)
described on KM Tools are quite obvious. These provide a quick
mechanism to understand both the processes and activities involved, besides
being able to quickly start some basic initiatives and providing a quick ramp
up of the overall solution.
CREATING THE KNOWLEDGE
ORGANIZATION ? DOES IT REQUIRE A CKO?
However, the job of making the solution work just about starts here. As pointed
out earlier a KM implementation is not really about the success of a single KM
project. It is about setting up a knowledge organization. This means addressing
a whole array of issues from organization structure, values, managerial systems,
employee satisfaction levels and formal and informal communication systems.
For KM to become a way of life it has to be presaged by creating a conducive
environment for the same. This is something that is much easier said than done.
Where sharing of information or explicit knowledge is concerned, people are
amenable to the idea much more easily. However when it comes to the transfer
of tacit knowledge, the barriers for acceptance are much higher. In a
competitive world where the indispensability and therefore the worth of people
is determined buy the amount of knowledge they possess, the natural tendency
to part with knowledge is rather low. This compounded with the fact that
experts very often are not the best of communicators, makes it virtually
impossible to even attempt a knowledge capture exercise. In such cases the best
that a K-Net solution can do is to enable the expert to be tracked quickly, so that
his services can be used through technology like audio/video conferencing. It is
indeed a reality, although even in the Internet era, it is often only the traditional
methods of knowledge transfer through on-the-job training or working as an
understudy, which are most effective.
However, it is impossible to belittle the significant gains that are feasible
through setting up Communities of Practice or sharing of Best Practices. For
organizations to be able to truly elevate themselves to a position where its
people can have knowledge enhancing interactions rather than mere information
transfer practices, it is important to set up meaningful Communities of Practice
and enable sharing of tacit knowledge, however arduous the task may be. This
is where an organization needs a knowledge evangelist. There has been a lot of
debate about whether the role of skill should she possess and what should be her
responsibilities.
It is our firm belief that an organization cannot make a knowledge
culture a reality and knowledge sharing to be an all pervasive endeavor unless it
is carried forward with single-minded devotion and zeal. Whether this is
achieved by the CEO or a CKO or a group of CKOs is a matter of detail. At
least in the initial years it is important for a group of individuals to make
enablement of knowledge sharing their sole priority. The magnitude of the task
would require a CKO (or the knowledge evangelist) to be supported by a
committed group of knowledge officers` and knowledge integrators`. Often
these two terms are used interchangeably. However, they clearly have different
roles to play, knowledge integrators (KIs) are responsible for ensuring that the
content that goes into the repositories is validated, collated, stays updated, is
relevant and worthy of being there.
Some companies prefer to entrust the responsibility of administration to
their KI`s while others might want it to be centrally administered by a
knowledge administration. Knowledge officers can be seen as the catalysts
within each division or work group who ensure that the benefits and importance
fo a knowledge sharing exercise are understood and internalized by every
member of the group. These knowledge officers have to belong to and be an
integral part of each of these divisions or groups and not be seen as an outside
element. These are the people on whom the success of the entire project
depends. Hence, they have to be the people with a great degree of conviction
about its need. It helps tremendously if these knowledge officers happen to be
highly placed in the division`s hierarchy. This way the activity is seen as being
relevant not merely because the top management sees it as an imperative, but
because the people at the operational level see it as something beneficial to their
activities. Positive signals sent in this manner tend to have a snowballing effect,
with people actually being anxious to contribute as much as they can.
In the case of the Aptech Education Division, there was a significant
amount of skepticism towards the first knowledge initiative from some quarters.
Though the stated objective of the CRS (Customer Response System) was to
provide an enhanced level of customer satisfaction through a knowledge
solution, there were those who actually though that it would entail parting with
information that was theirs`. The head of one of the regional offices during a
prototype validation session actually wanted to ensure that the system had
adequate controls so that complaints pertaining to his region could not be
viewed by others. His concern was that this could be used either a s policing
mechanism by the head office or for other regions to try to make some unfair
comparisons depending on the number of complaints. No implementation
rulebook can ever give guidelines on how to deal with individual idiosyncrasies.
In this case, however, the management made a very concerted effort towards
ensuring that the solution was understood in its right spirit. No attempt was
made to link this to any performance appraisal systems. What was more, it was
decided that knowledge sharing would be subtly encouraged by measures such
as a T-Shirt that carried the logo I am a Knowledge Enricher for those
knowledge workers who contributed actively to discussion forums and helped
resolve a good number of complaints. The proof was when the regional head in
question was among the first to significantly enhance his connectivity
infrastructure for better access to knowledge repositories. There is a very thin
line between unhealthy comparisons and healthy competition. The transition can
be made through the effort of an enterprising CKO and a supportive and a
supportive management.
THE DUAL SOLUTION MODEL AND THE IMPLEMENTATION
STRATEGY
While tools like the K-gap Analyzer could help in carrying out an objective of
knowledge requirements and therefore prioritize the KM projects, the eventual
implementation strategy to be followed might once again be determined by the
nature of the knowledge solution. A transformation model solution relying more
on explicit knowledge has fewer ramifications in terms of organization culture
and change management issues. A pilot implementation, followed by solution
fine-tuning and subsequently spreading the solution to encompass all work
groups could be a pattern that could easily be used for solutions where the
imponderables on account of acceptance by the people are far lesser. This is
certainly not so in the case of most independent model solutions ( with the
possible excepting of web-based learning solutions), which rely heavily on tacit
knowledge. An organization might have a preponderance of solutions based on
either one of the models or in some cases it could have an equal mix of both. In
arriving at an overall implementation strategy and determining which projects
should be undertaken first, each organization would have to use a good measure
of its own judgement.
In organizations where employee morale is low and there is a perceptible
degree of insecurity among employees, solutions based on the transformation
model are more likely to succeed. One needs to understand though that even for
the transformation model solutions to be really effective, there has to be a good
measure of value addition to the information layers from the people concerned.
Initial successes on these kinds of projects may well pave the way for a more
ambitious tacit knowledge sharing exercise. Besides just the technolofy isues
and culture issues, there could be other parameters as well, which might
influence the overall strategy.
The same organization could even start with both strategies
simultaneously. A case in point is Aptech itself. The training division started
with the transformation model initiatives primarily on account of the following
reasons:
1. Its customer base is extremely large.
2. The division is one of the oldest in the company where business
processes have been clearly identified and streamlined.
3. The information flow is fairly structured.
4. These have already been automated through bedrock systems.
5. While existing information systems have only looked at capturing and
analyzing data, there is a clear case (at least in the case of student
complaints), where it was felt that these systems house an enormous
amount of knowledge. Knowledge in terms of how problems have been
resolved sometimes through the exceptional trouble ? shooting skills of
certain individuals ? knowledge that is rarely recognized and probably
never re-used.
6. The division follows a well-delineated organizational hierarchy and
communication channels are formally defined since it entails interaction
with a very large number of business partners (franchisees).
On the other hand, take the software division of the same company that
is characterized by the following features:
1. It is a relatively new division.
2. processes are still evolving and have not really reached a great level of
maturity.
3. The division has a very loose and non-hierarchical structure.
4. Information flow is not really streamlined and uses more informal rather
than formal channels.
5. The key strength of the division is the sheer brilliance of some of its
people and not so much the maturity of its processes.
6. there is not much that has been done currently by way of automated
systems.
Did this division wait for basic systems to fall in place to follow the
transformation approach from information to knowledge? No. It went right
ahead with several knowledge initiatives that had nothing to do with IT
initiatives that were being evolved. One of them was the Help Desk and Expert
Panel facility. Every knowledge worker is assigned to one or more knowledge
groups depending on her area of work/previous experience/interest. Each
knowledge worker publishes her skill areas. In case of a problem where any one
would wish to request for help, it is logged in through the intranet based help
desk facility. It can either be logged as a general request or it can be directed to
a specific person. In the latter, the person concerned is automatically notified.
The person either sends in a response or could redirect it to a discussion forum.
Resolved problems get achieved for future reference. In a very short time this
solution has resulted in significant time saving on projects. With multiple
projects working with similar skill-sets, this has facilitated a very vibrant culture
of knowledge sharing . Of course, it has to be gently but surely encouraged by
the management, too. In this case anyone who attends to a number of help desk
requests in a particular area becomes a defacto`guru`. There is nothing like peer
recognition to nurture and encourage knowledge sharing.
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT IN THE ORGANIZATIONAL
CONTEXT
Let us first profile the corporation of the new millennium to understand
the role that various initiatives and information technology tools play in building
it up. Then we would conduct an analysis to see how these initiatives could be
approached in an evolutionary manner or as a co-existing set of projects.
The profile of the millennium corporation can be built by looking at its
ability and its arsenal to address each of the five imperatives mentioned earlier.
IMPERATIVE
SOLUTION
Customer focused business processes - Aligning processes to E-
Business
Highest quality at lowest prices
- Enterprise-wide integration
IT playing a transformational role - A whole array of tools
Best in class performance measures - Knowledge capture
Right people for the right roles
- Learning / Knowledge
integration
Organizations all over the world have already embarked on a number of
initiatives to achieve these objectives which will enable them to become leaders
in the global marketplace. We will briefly examine some of the major ones and
see what tools are being deployed in each area. We will then see how an overall
knowledge management initiative links up many of these initiatives
Improved Customer Service
The current trend in this area, pioneered by early Internet and E-
Commerce adopters, is Customer Self Service. Giving customers the
ability to access information themselves has resulted in quantum jumps
in customer satisfaction and also significantly reduced the cost of
employing large numbers of customer service representatives. Web
Technologies, the integration of internet systems with corporate intranets
and the use of Group Ware and collaborative computing systems to
enable the customer to dig deep into the knowledge bases of the
organization within a designed security network have been the key
technology enablers in this area.
Customer care and managing relationships
Customer Relationship Management is emerging as the new Gold
Standard application of the new millennium with new consulting firms
like 12 Technologies leading the way with products that extend the
virtual organization into the office of the business customer and the
hoem of the retail customer. On the organization side, CRM tools help
in linking the customer orders and queries into the legacy systems for
order processing and enquiry or link directly to the Enterprise Resource
Planning implementation of the organization.
E-Business is also becoming a popular way of managing relationships
both at the business-to-business level and at the business-to-customer
level. While legendary successes like the virtual bookstore amazon.com
and the auction site ebay.com have created waves in the business-to-
consumer market space, it is widely believed that the biggest potential of
the Internet and electronic commerce will lie in enabling business-to-
business transactions. International technology majors like CISCO and
Intel are already transacting a major percentage of their business with
partners and corporate customers through these electronic transactions
and even professional communities like doctors and lawyers and
governments all over the world are now embracing this new medium of
interaction.
Enterprise-wide integration
What is expected to be complementary in an organization that enables its
customers to interact and delve deep into its internal business processes
is the ability to provide quick response through a set of business
processes that are re-engineered for quick response and the ability to be
truly market facing`. The process of Internal Integration has been
addressed in the past two decades by waves of solutions ranging from
Material Requirement Planning to Manufacturing Resources Planning to
the now ubiquitous Enterprise Resource Planning with tools like SAP
and Baan now becoming market leaders in their chosen segments. In
addition, collaborative computing enables information and decision-
making to be shared across corporate networks. Tools like Lotus Notes,
Microsoft Exchange and GroupWare systems support and enhance the
capability of both ERP and legacy systems in organizatrions. Business
intelligence, data warehousing and data mining capabilities are also
being brought into organizations to further tighten the capture, sharing
and usage of data and information to benefit internal as well as external
business transactions.
Tighter integration across the Supply Chain
With more and more focus on core competencies, the need for
outsourcing non-essential services and even large portions of the
manufacturing or service delivery process has become the order of the
day. This has consequently led to the imperative of managing the entire
supply chain tightly to ensure that the customer does not suffer on
account of the handoffs from the organization to its partners. Supply
Chain Management tools are now becoming as popular as CRM products
and are inevitably finding linkages to the ERP systems that most
organizations have implemented. These also link to the internal
collaborative systems, making seamless interfaces within and across the
organization, one of the key features of the millennium enterprise.
Inducting and Retaining Talent
In most industries today, attracting and retaining human resources is one
of the most crucial activities. It is the focus of considerable attention at
all levels.
This is one area where information technology has probably contributed
the least. Evolutions in technology-based training, performance support and
knowledge networks have enabled organizations to speed up the training
processes and reduce costs. Even relatively mediocre employees are
empowered to perform at peak levels through finely crafted performance support
systems. These initiatives help primarily in induction and training. Retention
mechanisms are being built through information technology in the form of
career planning and tracking systems. They also provide for Internet and
intranet enabled environments which allow free sharing of ideas across
organizational hierarchies and geographies. With every mentor andboss being
just a mouse click away, behavioral scientists are being continuously forced to
reassess organization development initiatives, and design newer and newer
means of keeping high performers motivated and intellectually challenged.
INTEGRATING
KNOWLEDGE
MANAGEMENT
INTO
THE
MILLENNIUM ENTERPRISE
Some Imperatives and Challenges
Knowledge management presents an opportunity to integrate all the people and
processes that exist within an organization towards stated corporate objectives.
These objectives have already been defined and range from employees to
suppliers to subcontractors and to the customers. And today`s tools range from
the array of information technology solutions ? Business Intelligence,
GroupWare, ERP, SCM, intranets, the Internet ? to every possible form of E-
Commerce. The question is whether each of these is disparate and independent
optional initiatives or whether knowledge management can provide a thread of
continuity to integrate and align all these initiatives towards the common goals
of the millennium enterprise.
All corporations today are faced with enormous challenges that threaten
their supremacy even in relatively unchallenged domains. This fiercely
competitive environment has been created by a combination of competitive pull
factors like globalization and privatization, and technology pushes, primarily
caused by the rapid proliferation of the Internet. The ease of the crumbling of
the Berlin wall has brought down many erstwhile entry barriers. In an
environment where product superiority is transient and brand loyalty is
becoming an anachronism, the only differentiator will be the quality of the
organization`s processes and its ability to attain and sustain customer intimacy`.
Once the customer intimacy objective has been translated into specific consumer
to business electronic interfaces and customer service and response mechanisms,
the next stage is to ensure that the enterprise`s business processes are all
oriented to the needs of the customer. A true market facing enterprise ensures
that customer needs flow quickly down to the last level of response in the
organization and the needs and actions are captured in the legacy systems or
ERP bedrock of the organization. The quick capture, storage, dissemination and
use of data, information and knowledge is essential to ensure that quick actions
and responses are facilitated by information technology at all levels. This
process energy` needs to be supplemented by the third imperative ? that of
People Empowerment.
This is where a knowledge-centric approach can really enable a
corporation to succeed beyond the expectations of its customers and the
capabilities of its competitors. A true knowledge Corporation will be one where
the principles of knowledge management are applied as an underlying
philosophy for all strategic initiatives, ranging from customer interfaces to
internal integration of systems to business-to-business Interfaces. Included of
course is the full continuum of the learning organization from learning systems
to performance support to knowledge management.
An analysis of the potential of knowledge management tools and
techniques to transform the implementation of each of the initiatives will put the
real potential of knowledge management in perspective. These are discussed at
great length . Consumer-to-business and businee-to-consumer transactions can
range all the way from simple customer queries and feedback through a Web
Storefront to comprehensive Customer Relationship Management (CRM) tools.
The trends in Business-to-Consumer (B2C) E-Commerce point towards more
and more self-help for the customer to enable customers to access deep down
into the innards of the organization and conduct secure transactions with very
little interaction with the employees of the firm. Thinking through the
knowledge interventions required to facilitate these self-help environments will
call for a deeper understanding of customer buying patterns and psychology so
that all the intelligence derived form significant customer interactions can
become part of the institutional memory of the enterprise. This will ensure that
every future interaction of the customer with the firm becomes richer and will
enable the concept of customer intimacy to really come alive.
Consumer to business transactions would be meaningless if the
organization did not build processes to quickly enable the flow of expressed and
implied customer needs through the enterprise. Collaborative computing
involves the implementation of Group Ware and messaging solutions and tolls
like Lotus Notes have become synonymous with knowledge management. The
ability to build communities of best practices` and shared ideas is one of the
key capabilities of any significant knowledge management initiative and will
catalyze the development of a Quick Response and Reflective Organization.
Added to this are collaborative knowledge capture and usage capabilities
provided by business intelligence tools which again ensure that processes
respond more creatively to customer issues and a true market Facing Enterprise
is built.
Legacy systems and enterprise resource planning applications are
typically complete in themselves. The role of knowledge management in the
integration of GroupWare or business intelligence tools with these larger
segments of applications would be to ensure seamless interfacing. This ensures
that the results of discussions and intelligence built over a period of time are
able to enrich the data or context-specific information stored and also enable
customers to get better Reponses. In the Insurance Company, the real cutting
edge to customer response comes when the Call Center employee`s interface is
able to give in real time not just the data about policies or information about the
customer`s queries, but also tacit guidance on the best behavioural stance to
adopt with the customer based on previous interactions.
Knowledge management also needs to be integrated with the data
integration strategy of the enterprise. When this is achieved, it will also enable
the business to business transactions from the firm to its virtual enterprise
parterners ? suppliers, sub-contractors, distributors and agents ? to be energized
through knowledge-based interactions. Picture an extended ERP situation where
a comprehensive customer contract has to be executed, involving significant
outsourcing and subcontracting and delivery to be made in installments.
Synchronization of all business processes across the supply chain and
intelligence and knowledge sharing across the virtual organization will ensure
minimum hiccups and maximum customer and partner satisfaction.
And the knowledge Continuum itself? There is no doubt that knowledge
management tools are the best way of making Peter SEnge`s concept of the
Learning Organization come true. While purists argue that there is a lot more to
learning and knowledge than just technology, there is no doubt that the
availability of learning, electronic performance support and knowledge bases on
tap for ready access are the great potential areas for improving corporate
knowledge capabilities. As we move deeper into the new millennium and
knowledge processes, tools and technologies get internalized at every stage of
business interactions. Knowledge management will provide the visionary
organizations with a capability level that will prove a major source of
competitive advantage in the new Information Society.
DISSEMINATION TECHNOLOGIES
Dissemination can either be through pull-based or push-based technologies.
Pull-based technologies would include the regular IR technologies that we have
looked at earlier including query and search. Push technologies include
broadcasting, alerts and triggers, channels, software agents, etc. Most solutions
would use a combination of push and pull technologies.
KBMS
One would be loath to call knowledge Base Management Systems (KBMSs) a
separate technology. There are some that believe DBMSs are to Information
Systems what KBMSs are to KM. it is not so. A knowledge base` is more of a
conceptual entity than a technology by itself. What we need to understand is
what a knowledge base really connotes. To recap from the last chapter:
A knowledge base is information along with inter-relationships and
contexts.
Technologically, this translates into a database or an information
repository with advanced search capabilities.
Therefore, any set of technologies that would enable the above would
also facilitate creation and maintenance of a knowledge base. It is more
important to understand the conceptual implication of a knowledge base as
being different from a database or an information repository, rather than add to
the technological muddle by classifying it as a separate technology all together.
So which technologies should an organization settle for?
It is always easier for any organization to leverage onits existing
technological skill-base to implement solutions. An information to knowledge
Transformation model will need to build on the technologies used in its bedrock
systems, whether it is through RDBMSs, data mining/data warehousing or
Document management applications and enable knowledge sharing and
generation by supplementing it through technologies like collaboration search.
An independent knowledge solution model does not have to be built bottom
upwards. Several quick solutions can be built by merely ensuring the necessary
connectivity between people and the use of powerful collaboration and
conferencing mechanisms. This is not to say that the latter should not use what
are commonly designated as IS technologies. Conversely, most transformation
model solutions may also use some of the independent model technologies. The
functionality provided by a number of these technologies is complementary in
nature and can be judiciously used to evolve a suitable solution.
The key technological elements that are driving knowledge management
forward according to a Delphi research note2 are:
The broad acceptance of intranets and extranets as the network backbone
for automated business processes
The growing sophistication of object technologies and their deployment
in new software applications
The arrival of practical standards for data integration and metadata
management in the I-net environment, specifically the XML standard;
and
The merging of knowledge management priorities into the competition
among the major software platform developers, specifically IBM/Lotus
and Microsoft
Further, according to a Delphi User Survey in 1999, respondents have
identified
Intranets,
Text
Search
and
navigation.
Tools,
GroupWare/Collaboration Software, document management and the
Internet/World Wide Web as the most significant technologies in their KM
initiatives. The respondents current efforts are focused on organizing, leverging
and sharSearch and navigation. Tools, GroupWare/Collaboration Software,
document management and the Internet/World Wide Web as the most
significant technologies in their KM initiatives. The respondents current efforts
are focused on organizing, leveraging and sharing exiting efforts are focused
organizing, leaveraging and sharing existing corporate knowledge. They feel
that the next round of technologies will help them generate new knowledge and
uncover hidden knowledge. This runs congruent to our earlier hypothesis that
the Transformation model calls for a higher degree of effort and technological
maturity. Hence, both an analysis of the relevant technologies, as well as hard
data from existing organizations who have undertaken KM initiatives, seem to
reveal that starting with the relatively simple Independent model technologies
with an initial focus on explicit knowledge might be a good starting point for
organizations embarking on a KM journey.
Reference
1. Managing Knowledge Workers, Frances Horibe John Wiley & Sons,
2. Knowledge Management ? Enabling Business Growth Ganesh
Natarajan and Sandhya Shekhar, Tata McGRAW ? Hill Publishing
Company Limited.
3. Management by Consciousness, Edited by Dr. G.P. Gupta. Sri,
Aurobindo Society, Pondicherry.
Unit IV
Content Outline
1. HRIS for KBOs
2. Performance Management in KBOs with special reference to balance
score card
3. Software requirements for the performance management
Teams in IT projects have traditionally involved two parties: end users and IT
staff. However, for a knowledge management system, teams need to be more
comprehensive to be effective. A knowledge management system is built on
expertise, knowledge understanding, skills and insights brought into the project
by a variety of stakeholders who might have little in common from a functional
standpoint. The quality of the collaborative relationship between these
stakeholder and mines the ultimate success of the system. Having the world`s
best knowledge management system still does not guarantee successful
management of knowledge: That success comes come from KM`s
implementation and cultural embodiment by both the knowledge workers and
the employees who will ultimately use it. This relationship is complex and often
highly problematic. Therefore, selecting the right blend of team members to
lead the knowledge management project is a critical step.
The fifth step on the KM roadmap involves design of the knowledge
management that will build, implement, focus, and deploy the KM system. In
this chapter we identify sources of internal and external expertise needed,
prioritize stakeholder needs, evaluate member selection criteria, and examine
team life span and sizing issues. We identify characteristics of the KM project
leader to determine mechanisms to streamline internal dynamics and maximize
users` participation. Next, we identify tasks for the KM team and fit them to the
risk evaluation matrix to circumvent common points of failure.
SOURCES OF EXPERTISE
Companies implementing knowledge management must draw their expertise
from several different sources:
? Internal, centralized IT departments
? Team local experts
? External vendors, contractors, partners, and consultants
? End users and front-line staff
Although we cannot undermine the importance of IT staff who will actually
build a system, the most important part of this team member set is the set of
local team ? based expert(s). The burden of balancing counteracting
requirements falls on the shoulders of the knowledge management ream.
Drawing from a variety of functional groups within and outside your company is
essential. If done properly, this approach will become the strength of your
knowledge management team and a major contributor to the success of such an
endeavor.
LOCAL EXPERTS AND INTRA-DEPARTMENTAL GURUS
Active end-user involvement throughout the knowledge management project is
critical to its success. In most companies, there are the early adopters of
technology--the so-called gurus within your company. These are the people
who come in early or stay late to play with new tools that become available.
Even though many of these folks tend to be non-technologists,
They are the best people to gauge the possible usefulness of each feature that
your system has. These local experts are often the first to notice the limitations
of existing systems, and to think of possible upgrades and changes to meet the
evolving needs of their group. Examples of such workers include marketing
people who realize that existing technology could possibly be used to deliver the
latest sales figures and data needed by traveling salespeople in remote locations.
INTERNAL IT DEPARTMENTS
Relying solely on local experts, of course, has its limitations. Even though local
experts might possess a fairly high degree of technical knowledge besides
knowledge of their own job, they might lack an understanding of the
interdependencies between complex systems, networks, and technology that
pure technologists like the IT staff might be able to bring in. While the local
experts will bring in the business case and ideas, it is IT staff who will bring in
knowledge of:
Infrastructural capabilities and limitations
Connective and compatibility among the team-based systems and the
overall organizational technology infrastructure
Standardization issues across different platforms, applications and tools
Technicalities underlying the adaptation of these tools by various
knowledge worker groups within the company
When you are selecting team members from the internal IT department within
your company, it is critical that you select personnel with credibility in the
eventual user group. This helps ensure that the relevant set of stakeholder needs
are adequately represented. With increased emphasis on customer service, it is
easy for internal customers to outsource their development services to external
consultants. Therefore, delegates selected from the IT department must have a
more expansive view of who the customer is. This must include the internal
customer at the same level of significance, as they would view an external
customer or buyer. Technical skills, of course, are a priority in making these
decisions.
NON-LOCAL EXPERTS AND EXTRADEPARTMENTAL GURUS
Non local experts and extra departmental proponents promote team laterality.
Laterality refers to the ability to cut across functional boundaries and relate to
people from different areas. People who exhibit this characteristic are best
suited to be on a knowledge management team. Such members can:
Act as a bridge and as interpreters between people from different
backgrounds, skill areas, and specializations
Learn faster than the average person in your company and are not
defensive about
Their lack of understanding or knowledge in areas other than their own
Bring value to the overall team synergy as they tend to be confident but
not egoistically constrained
Learn the basic lingo and understand the frameworks that their
collaborators refer to
Have the ability to deal creatively and rationally with the problems that
the aforementioned differences can, and often do, lead to
Groups of such people have also been referred to as communities of practice;
they ate charac- terized by
Multifunctional groups that incorporate diverse viewpoints, training,
ages, and roles
Enacting a common purpose by engaging in real work, building things,
solving problems, delivering service, and using real tools
Developing intellectual property, knowledge, firm culture, internal
language, and new skills
Making lasting changes in the people and the competency that they
embody
CONSULTANTS
Even though most of the technical, design, and soft skills needed for the
knowledge management project might be available in there might be some areas
that are no one`s strength within the company. These shortcomings can often be
overcome by bringing in external consultants. Internal participants might have
slight cultural differences owing to their differing departmental and functional
affiliations, but they are still tied together by a common frame of reference built
around the overall company culture, dominant values, and image. However,
extern consultants do not always fir into this frame of reference. Because
external participants often lack this common frame of reference, it is essential
that other binding mechanisms, such as their personal characteristics be strongly
matched with those of internal team members.
Nevertheless, this lack of shared culture can often be turned from a liability into
an asset. These external participants can bring balanced, unbiased our
perspective into the entire design process.
In such cases, rust becomes another significant issue. Give the nature of the
consulting business; it should come as no surprise if the consultant is developing
exactly the same type
Of system for your competitor a few months down the road. Selecting a
consultant should therefore be partially based on the extent to which die person
(or consulting company) is willing to transfer existing skills to your company`s
employees. Some of the other issues that must be considered while selecting a
consultant include:
The consultant`s reputation for integrity
The consultant`s history that demonstrates the ability to maintain
confidentiality about past projects
Whether the consultant has worked successfully for your own company on
earlier projects
Whether the consultant (or consulting company) is working on a similar
project for a competitor.
Whether your internal team trust and has confidence in the consulting
company.
In any case, highly specialized and capable consultants are often hard to find.
Since knowledge management projects are strategically oriented, the level of
confidentiality must be based up with specific, legal nondisclosure agreements.
Where highly confidential material is involved, it might be a better idea to have
an employee trained in the deficient area rather consultant from the consulting
position to a permanent job within your company. However, corporate budgets
can often restrict this option.
KM stakeholders should typify the group that they represent. For example, the
person representing your company`s human resources department should be one
who is typical (where the meaning of typical is highly subjective) of the HR
department, and has had a sufficient level of experience within your own
company.
The human resources and project sponsors or senior management provide
overall stability to the knowledge management project team.
The human resources and project sponsors or senior management provide
overall stability to the knowledge management project team.
MANAGERS
The status and influence of senior managers would make one assume that they
are the least likely group to be left out of the development process. However,
several studies have shows that this exclusion is not only possible but one that
also frequently does happen. As teams become too deeply engrossed in the
user/developer relationship, senior managers tend to be left out of the loop. As
we understand that the managers should be kept active in the knowledge
management project; and without their active involvement the entire project may
end up on shaky ground.
STRUCTURING THE KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT TEAM
Focus
Shareholder
Role in the knowledge
Characteristics
Group
Management Project
Strongly
Desired
Teams
User teams
Provide functional
Must
understand work
Expertise.
Processes in
their area.
Finance
Provide business
Must have
good inter-
expertise in their
personal and
team skills.
Specific area.
Other functional
Participate in the
Must have a
certain
areas with which
process design stage
degree of
credibility
knowledge
within other
participating
management
groups.
Help in the implementation Must be
willing to see
stages of the system
from other
functional
viewpoints.
Technology IT experts/
Provide technology
Must
understand
Information systems expertise.
technology
in depth.
Internal IT staff
Participate in the actual
Must have
good inter-
implementation and
personal
skills.
design.
External Consultants Represent the internal
Must be
willing to
and internally proficient
understand
the per-
technologists.
Specialities
brought in by
other team
members and
actually
incorporate them
into the design.
Bring in a perspective
Must be
willing to learn
on functional capabilities
and limitations of existing. Must be
credible.
Must have an
expansive
customer
orientation.
STRUCTURING THE KNOWLEDGE MANGEMENT TEAM (Cont.)
Focus
Shareholder Role in the knowledge
Characteristics
Organizational
Senior
Support the legitimacy of the
Understand the
Management/ project.
Management and
sponsors/
strategic processes
knowledge
Bring in vision that correlates
champion(s) with the overall company wide
Must
be credible
/CKO
vision.
Serve on steering committees Must have a clear (if
needed)
idea of the bigger Picture of where Commit the
resources
Knowledge needed leveraging should take the
company.
Must eat their Own dog food, that is, they must themselves believe what they
say.Need to be thoroughly convinced of the worth of the project.
TEAM COMPOSITION AND SELECTION CRITERIA
As with most other technologically driven enterprise-wide teams, functional
diversity in knowledge management teams should be taken as a given
characteristic. Teams need to be designed for effectiveness. While there is not
straightforward formula for designing a good knowledge management team, the
team`s design has much to do with the nature of the project itself. Functional
diversity can lead to only two possible outcomes, depending on how its handled.
The first, and very common, outcome is destructive conflict and tension. The
second, more desirable, outcome is characterized by synergy, creativity, and
innovation. This happens only when laterality among team members is high and
there is sufficient room to accommodate different backgrounds, values, skills,
perspectives, and assumptions that the members bring into the team. Summarize
the major team design considerations.
TEMPORARY VERSUS PERMANENT TEAM MEMBERS
Knowledge management is not like a typical business restructuring or
technology introduction project. Those projects are temporary and depend on
temporary teams, whereas a knowledge management project needs at least a
small portion of the group to be permanent. A knowledge management project
is not over once a knowledge management system is implemented; it must go on
and continually improve and change with changing external and internal
environments. While some members might be needed on the team only during
the initial stages, others are not as temporary. Core team refer to this
permanent, essential group. Team members can be dedicated to the project
either full time or part time. The size of the core team must be kept to the
smallest size possible-the smallest member count that can actually do the to
work. Temporary team members often belong to specific user groups. The core
team should consist of only the following participants:
Knowledge champion or a senior manager.
IT staff.
User delegates representing the core business area that is going to depend
on the knowledge management system. This could be engineering staff in
case the knowledge management system is built to support research and
development; it could be marketing if the KM system is for sales force
enablement, etc.
The remaining participants, in most cases, should be involved in the startup
phases of the project and can be called in later for further input as and when
needed.
TEAM LIFE SPAN AND SIZING ISSUES
There are two schools of thought on the future of knowledge management: One
school believes that knowledge management will continue to depend on people
to manage knowledge throughout the lifetime of the organization; the second
and more convincing school believes that knowledge management is a self-
eliminating field. This means that as a company begins to accept knowledge
management practices, they should, over several years, become so second nature
to employees as the company evolves that eventually there should be no need
for a knowledge manager or CKO to manage knowledge. Knowledge workers
themselves should be able to handle all KM tasks once KM becomes embedded
in the company culture and in work practices.
One would argue why the knowledge management team would, in the first
place, do their job so well that it would eliminate their very need! That is a hard
question to answer. Though there is a lot of ongoing research to find an answer
to this question, there is little other than very strong financial and promotional
incentives that can help here. For that matter, team members on the knowledge
management team should be promised strong rewards and promotions should
the knowledge management initiative truly succeed. A team that sets out to
work with the fear of losing their job by performing too well is bound to be
under motivated, if not unmotivated.
PROTOTYPES:
Systems developers have long realized the value of prototypes. A prototype
provides both the developers, in this case the knowledge management team, and
the users with an idea of how the system in its final form will function.
By using such a prototype, even if it is incomplete, users can see the possibilities
of the knowledge management system under construction, and this improved
understanding of the final product can lead to, or trigger, highly desirable
refinement of its features, interface, functionality, and design. Tweaking the
system`s design based on user feedback in the prototype stages can save your
company much headache and unnecessary rework-related expenses at a later
date. Other ways the project manager can link to the final user.
THE KM TEAM'S PROJECT SPACE
One of the first tasks that the knowledge management team needs to undertake
is that of understanding the project`s strategic intent, organizational context,
technological constraints, monetary limitations, and short-term as well as long-
term goals. Members of your knowledge management team should be able to
provide adequate answers to these questions collectively;
1. What is the company`s strategic goal ?
2. What is the company`s performance goal? Knowing where the company
stands before the project provides a healthy basis for answering this
question in specific terms.
3. Where does the knowledge management team fit in the organizational
hierarchy?
4. Does the knowledge management project fit vertically or horizontally in
the value chain?
5. What are the financial constraints?
6. What are the technical limitations in terms of existing platforms,
company-wide network standards, etc. ?
7. What are the critical missing elements in terms of skills, people, and
knowledge that are still missing in the team? Can consultants help? If
so, which ones and how
8. What is the time frame within which the project must be delivered?
9. What are the immediate payoffs? If there are none, when will the payoffs
begin to show up? If that is not viable either, how will the value of the
project be demonstrated and tested?
10. What level of commitment does the team have from the senior
management and from the users? If it`s poor, what can be done about it?
Are there representatives from both these camps on the knowledge
management team?
11. What are the cultural bloakades that should be expected? Does the
company culture actually fit with the knowledge-sharing attitude that is
needed to make a knowledge management system work? If not, what
changes in reward structure are necessary? Who has the authority to
make such changes? Are they willing to make them?
12. Has any competitor or non competing firm implemented a project like
this? What do we know about it? If it was successful, is there some way
to get a key participant to switch jobs? Should we call that transfer of
experiential knowledge?
Judging the true value of the project is a critical issue. If the project costs more
than the long term value that it adds to the firm, it`s probably not worth the
investment. Therefore, exploring these initial questions is critical before the
next step can be taken. If there are no direct answers, surrogate measures might
be adopted. If your knowledge management team cannot collectively answer
these questions, revisit its structure and constituents. For example, if the
primary objective of the knowledge management project is to improve product
quality by managing past and current knowledge about product quality
problems, it might be valuable to question quality quantitatively. How much
quality and at what costs? Can the customers tell the difference. Will they be
willing to pay say, 7 percent more for the same product if higher quality is
guaranteed?
MANAGING STAKEHOLDER EXPECTATIONS
The second task, after the knowledge management team has decided on an
initial set of objectives for the knowledge management initiative, is to formally
present this work to various stakeholders groups. The biggest advantage of such
an interaction is that it can help the team compare the projects objective with
stakeholder expectations and perceptions. Resolving differences at this point is
a more efficient approach than trying to fix basic design assumptions and errors
after the fact ? when the project is ready for implementation.
TEAM CONSTITUTION VALIDITY. SUMMARIZING THE PROCESS
The initial process that the knowledge management team must go through
before the initial design effort is organized well enough to proceed to the next
stage. Examine this process flowchart and determine if your team, as
constituted, is collectively able to elicit these requirement and design goals for
the knowledge management system.
POINTS OF FAILURE
Lets take a quick look at the key points of failure in systems-oriented KM
projects. Perhaps the most important study of project risks is by some
colleagues, who examined software project risks in several international
companies. In the United States alone, almost $60 billion was spent in cost
overruns and another $80 billion in canceled projects in 1995 alone. Although
other, more recent figures abound, this is perhaps one of the most rigorous
studies done in this area, and the figures proposed here are depressing! An
informal study of a group of 2,600 CEOs, CIO, and technology managers by the
Cambridge Information Network in 1999 revealed that approximately 90 percent
of IT projects exceed their budgets and over 20 percent exceed their budgets by
more than 100 percent.
THE BREAKPOINT. BUY-IN-FAILURE
Lack of an active role of the top management has been identified as the primary
reason why many projects fail; and the second reason is failure of the users to
buy in to the project. If you decide to invest in a knowledge management
project, and either your top management remains unconvinced of the value of
the idea or the users you are building it for fail to see why they need the system,
you are venturing in murky waters.
CATEGORIZING RISKS
The below figure, illustrates the four categories in which knowledge
management project risks can be classified. This framework describes four
quadrants on which project risk can be classified the level of risk (high/low) and
the level of control that a project manager has on each category. Customer
mandate, the shaded quadrant, is a high-risk area over which you have little
control.
Customer mandate refers to the level of buy-in from the ultimate users, who is
effect are your system`s customers. Unless they buy in to the whole notion of
the knowledge management system that you are building or planning to build,
they will have neither the inclination to use it nor support it.
Similarly, initial commitment from the top management is a necessary but
insufficient condition for your project`s success. This support must be ongoing
and active throughout the project. The problem with many of the companies
that we have studied often falls into one of these two areas. Once a project has
been initiated, the project leader must gauge the level of commitment from both
senior management and the end-user community to avoid being caught in a
situation where support for the project suddenly evaporates.
CONTROLLING AND BALANCING REQUIREMENTS
As shown in Fig, there are some areas where you, as the knowledge champion or
knowledge management project manager, have significant control. However,
there are some areas in which you have little or no control. Not having control
over an area does not, by any stretch of imagination, mean that it will not
contribute to the potential failure of your project. Customer or end-user buy-in
and the environment in which the knowledge management system will be used
are two such factors. The only thing you can do about customer buy-in
problems is to try selling the project harder, and gauge end-user needs more
appropriately; the operating environment is a wholly different story. That is
where the cultural aspects of a knowledge management system and the people
around it come into play. While all these risks must be thought be together
rather than independently, a strong focus must be on the risks over which you
have little control.
TRADITIONAL METRICS
FINANCIAL ROI AND TOBINS
Albert Einstein, very thought provokingly, reminds us that what can be
measured is not always important and what is important cannot always be
measured. It does not take an Einstein to conclude that the value of knowledge
management cannot be fully measured in terms of financial return on
investment.
A relatively old measure that has been in use for many years within business and
academic circles is Tobin`s q. This metric essentially measures the ratio
between the firm`s marker valuation and the cost of replacing its physical assets.
While Tobin`s q provides a snapshot of the firm`s state of intellectual health at a
given point in time, it provides no direction for knowledge management strategy
development. It does not tell you what you are doing wrong or what to focus on.
What is needed is a more dynamic view of knowledge performance that can help
a firm trace both the growth and decline of its knowledge assets and the reasons
underlying such changes. Traditional metrics like Tobin`s q do not tell a firm
how it can create further value, prevent imitation or substitution, and leverage its
knowledge assets to gain a sustainable competitive advantage.
Nevertheless, when it comes to measuring returns on investment in knowledge
management, two conventional approaches are in common use: putting a dollar
figure on intellectual assets, and determining the dollar amounts saved or earned
by using existing knowledge.
TOTAL COST OF OWNERSHIP
Current methods of measuring and evaluating information technology
investments do little justice to information technology itself. How, then, can we
expect those methods to be able to give us a clear picture of how our knowledge
investments- which stretch far beyond pure technology alone- are faring? Out
interviews and studies show that companies do not always demand solid
business cases for IT investments but have trouble handling decisions based on
soft gains and benefits. Maturity of judgment becomes a distinctive inhibiting
factor that prevents them from making decisions where limited quantitative data
exists.
Many companies have responded by falling back on a total cost of ownership
approach, which is much touted by Microsoft`s release of windows 2000. This
methodology identifies and measures components of IT expense beyond the
initial cost of implementation. While TCO can be a useful tool to reduce
ongoing costs by improving IT management practices, it does not provide a
sound foothold for decision making. TCO does not cut it as a sufficient
knowledge metric for several reasons:
It leaves out significant cost categories, such as complexity costs.
It ignores benefits beyond pure costing.
It neglects strategic factors.
It provides little or no basis for comparison with other departments and
other companies, such as competing firms operating in the same markets.
Lifecycle costs are difficult to gauge.
Applying TCO blindly can lead to bad and highly impolitic decisions. For
example, the decision to switch vendors to get the lowest prices does not capture
the implicit cost of supporting multiple vendors, the cost of dealing with
compatibility issues, or the benefits of high volume purchasing. Total cost of
ownership (or a similar measure fails) to do justice, comprehensively or
completely, to the decisions made.
LEARNING MORE FROM THE TELEPHONE
Just as a telephone is hard to cost-justify and evaluate, knowledge management
is something firms often find difficult to cost-justify in the face or other needed
investments, but is something they want to and should have. Even though
middle managers feel the need for a strong knowledge management initiative,
convincing senior management to shell out the couple of million dollars for an
initiative with intangible results can be a hard sell. However, there are ways and
means to measure the short-term gains to demonstrate the need for, the extent of
the longer-term guestimations of value added by knowledge management to the
firm`s bottom line and competitive standing.
THE METRIC IS THE LIMITATION
A recurring problem in knowledge management is the problem posed by a lack
of standard metrics for measuring the impact of KM. Two of the most widely
cited research projects relating to knowledge management and organizational
learning are the case descriptions provided by DeGeus at Shell Corporation and
by Ray Stata at Analog Devices. DeGeus approach at shell used scenarios in the
strategic planning cycle that encouraged managers to revisit and challenge
commonly accepted assumptions. The underlying belief was that learning
would not take place unless managers exposed the hidden and embedded
assumptions with which they approached new problems.
Similarly, Stata found that focusing on activities, such as improving response
time in external changes and utilizing planning and quality improvement as
learning tools rather than purely administrative tools, could accelerate learning.
Chaparral Steel, a large U.S. steel producer, similarly found that there was a lot
to gain by emphasizing problem solving, constantly integrating internal and
external knowledge into daily work-related activities of employees, and
allowing the time and resources needed to make this integration happen. In
addition, a good reward structure helped further.
COMMON PITFALLS IN CHOOSING METRICS
No metric is better than one that is absolutely wrong. A choice of a wrong
metric can have more ill effects than positive ones. Metrics, when applied to
knowledge work, or in general, are vulnerable to seven common pitfalls.
USING TOO MANY METRICS
A few robust are better than a number of marginally significant ones. A good
rule of thumb is about 20 metrics. They need to focus on the past, present, and
future simultaneously to be able to relate past performance, present processes,
and future results. The common problem that many measurement programs
become victims of is that of putting too much emphsis on the past. Knowing the
past is good, but it rarely is sufficient to give you a concrete idea about where
your present efforts are leading your company. As John Naisbitt put it, We are
drawning in a sea of information and starving for knowledge. Make sure you
do not add any further to that glut of information by introducing more metrics
than can be effectively, accurately and efficiently tracked. Forget quantity;
focus instead on linking measures to strategic capabilities, competitive
positioning, customer expectations, and financial indicators.
As John Billings once said, Knowledge is like money, the more he gets, the
more he craves. Nothing perhaps captures the essence of manger`s rush to add
more metrics once they figure out that they have found something that affects
their company`s bottom line. In this rush, many finally end up with more
metrics than they can simultaneously keep track of.
Robert Kaplan and David Norton have an interesting discussion between a pilot
and a passenger on the opening page of their book. The pilot says that he need
to work on air-speed, so he ignores the altitude and fuel gauge altogether. It is
not what I am focusing on, he says. Amused at their own interesting analogy,
they think that you would not want to fly in his plane, ever! Isn`t this very close
to what companies do when they focus on a single metric such as a bottom line
or market share? On the other hand, some hand, some go to the opposite
extreme and try to track too many at the same time. This is where lean metrics
fit in. Lean metrics are the few but essential metrics that can be simultaneously
tracked.
Some metrics might seem reasonable, but when they are put into action, they
result in counterproductive consequences. A good lean metric must be precise,
tied to overall value (not just profits), applicable, and designed to motivate extra
normal effort from employees.
.DELAYED AND RISKY REWARD TIES
Rewards that are tried to metrics with a relatively longer term focus should be
robust and structured in a manner that allows employees to reap short-term
benefits by successfully achieving them. Job mobility is a fact of life. Delayed
rewards will only bias employees to work toward metrics that deliver short-term
payoffs to them. To keep the long view, select metrics that can be measured
today but impact future outcomes. Alternatively, the long-term gains of the firm
should be tied closely to the compensation of the employees (Stock options are a
good example)
CHOOSING METRICS THAT ARE HARD TO CONTROL
Companies often make the grave mistake of implementing metrics that are
beyond the control of their employees. Phrases such as Build a $2 billion
browser market by 2001, Let every hand in America hold a Palmtop by the
dawn of the next millennium, or Put a Net PC on every desktop are
visionary ideas but almost impossible to control or achieve even through
systematic efforts. There are exceptions of course: Microsoft`s Internet strategy
and Netscape`s browser business are a few of those. But these are exceptions
rather than examples of what can be normally achieved. Similarly for
knowledge management systems, you cannot have metrics that cannot be
controlled. Statements such as Build the largest knowledge repository of
Website design solutions look good on paper, and that`s about it.
CHOOSING METRICS THAT ARE HARD TO FOCUS ON
Performance of a company is not solely based on internally generated ideas. 3M
and Xerox are leaders in innovation. But the difference is that 3M has actually
commercialized more ideas than Xerox. The result has been that Bill Gates and
Steve Jobs built entire industries on a few ideas that Xerox created (in its Palo
Alto Research Center, PARC) but never used.
If you think that the Palm Pilot family of plan PCs are surprisingly successful
products coming out of 3COM`s bag of tricks, remember that the product was
externally acquired from US Robotics (which had previously bought out Palm
Computing, the commercial originator of the device). The key idea is that the
metrics that you select must encourage decisions that also move your company
in the same direction as its long-term goals.
CHOOSING METRICS THAT EMPHASIZE HARD RESULTS AND
NEGLECT THE "SOFT STUFF"
Many companies emphasize hard (often financial) results while neglecting or
totally ignoring soft ones. A national survey of U.S. organizations revealed that
about 60 percent of the organizations studied never officially set any soft goals
related to managing people, suppliers, customers, and innovation even when the
hard goals were clearly laid out. Inspite of all the windy rhetoric about loving
customers, empowerment, and learning, not many executives are willing to put
measures where their mouths are. It is dangerous for top management to focus
on hard results and expect lower-level managers to take care of the rest.
Financial success, for example,
as many research studies have shown, is highly dependent on soft employee
attitudes and behavior. Make sure that your hard and soft measures go hand in
hand and are well balanced.
CHOOSING METRICS THAT ARE TOO REAR-VIEW ORIENTED
Too often, measurement is not used to anticipate the future but to record the
past. One way to avoid this trap is to ask yourself this question: Do we have
metrics that can serve as early sorting signals for future problems and signal
future opportunities?
MEASURING THE WRONG THINGS
Companies can run into troubled waters when they decide to measure things that
are precisely wrong. This is very different from the notion that a few good
measures today are better than
a perfect one tomorrow. One lousy metric tomorrow is better than a wrong one
today. If that happens tomorrow might never come!
Wrong metrics can often prove more damaging than helpful. Not all metrics,
such as calls answered per hour or sales pitches per week, that can be measured
easily and cleanly are
necessarily good. Similarly, for knowledge work, measuring aspects such as
time spent reading tw1edge reports or intranet screens are poor metrics. I could
as well be sipping coffee (God forbid vodka!) while playing Quake II on my
laptop while my desktop is connected to the knowledge management system at
work! A poor metric would still create a perception of productivity The number
of contributions by employees to a knowledge repository is an equally worthless
measure. Employees then try to maximize the number of contributions, and then
the due of those contributions takes a second place! There is something to be
learned from McKinsey; McKinsey places value on the number of times its
consultants` contributions are by other consultants.
ALL THE RIGHT THINGS NOT MEASURED
The other side of the coin is not measuring all the right things. Without getting
into Ito complexities of agency-agent conflict theory, a manager or employee
will tend to maximize
William Schienmann and his colleagues point to the serious gulf between what
should be measured and what actually is measured. See Schienmann, William,
and John Lingle. Seven Greatest Myths of Measurement, IEEE Engineering
Management Review, Spring (1998),
...tomorrow might never coma, from a song by Janis Joplin, in The Best of
Janis Joplin, Warner Music.
The metrics that are actually measured. If a manager is told that a high market
share for a product indicates brand value, he will try to maximize the market
share of that product, even though quality (not measured) might be equally
important. John Hauser and Gerald Katz explain this concept, which is further
illustrated in fig.
Let A, B,C, Y and Z be some arbitrary metrics. If all five of these are important,
but only three of these, A,B and X, are actually measured, employees will focus
only on those and simply ignore Y and Z, however important they might be.
Managers and employees who maximize A, B and X will be rewarded for their
performance even if Y and Z go to the dogs. Soon the entire company or
department is focused on improving the metrics that are actually measured, as
they alone provide an indication of the quality of their work, If A,B and X lead
to productive results, then the metrics are considered effective. If they fail to
produce good results, they are considered ineffective. Hauser and Katz suggest
that the chosen metrics gain tremendous inertia and that employees who have
painfully learned to maximize the chosen metrics fear to change course. The
problem begins right there.
Knowledge sharing and creation often tend to be akin to metric Y-ignored and
little rewarded. Knowledge-intensive companies, on the other hand, have
included knowledge sharing and creation in their repertoire of critical metrics.
Every employee`s compensation is, in part, determined by the amount of
knowledge that the employee adds and the frequency with which other
employees refer back to that contribution. Choosing the right metrics is
therefore critical both to evaluate the performance of your knowledge
management strategy and to make it work in the first place.
THREE WAYS TO MEASURE
We met Roger Bohn`s Stages of Knowledge Growth framework in the
preceding Thanks to its simplicity and ease of use, it provides a more readily
usable method for the measurement of process and technological knowledge.
However, the biggest strength of this work is also its primary weakness. The
Stages of Knowledge technique is good at providing a15,000-foot view and a
clear bigger picture, but it does not let you examine progress improvements at a
lower level. While we began with that model, we will need to some technique
that is better suited for a micro level analysis.
Let us examine three possible approaches to measuring edge work and the
efficacy of the knowledge management system. The first is as ward
benchmarking methodology; this can be a good starting point, but in the long
term this technique loses value and flexibility The second technique is the House
of Quality. That competes with the third technique: the balanced scorecard
approach. The advantage the House of Quality (QFD) methodology is that it has
been widely used and a number of low cost software tools can partially automate
its application.
BENCHMARKING
Robert Camp aptly describes benchmarking as the search for industry wide best
practices that lead to superior performance. In plain English, this simply means
that benchmarking is an undertaking of companies that aim to emulate the ways
things are done best, anywhere in or outside their firm, industry, or sector. Many
large firms have adopted bench a significant, systematic technique for
measuring the company`s performance toward its strategic goals. This concept
was popularized by Carla O`Dell and her colleagues at the American
Productivity and Quality Center (www.apqc.org). One argument for
benchmarking is that there are existing best practices within different parts of
the same company. So we should begin by identifying those skills and
capabilities within our own organizations before we look outside. Companies
repeatedly end up solving the same problems that have already solved in other
offices or locations of the same company; they expend time and money building
solutions to issues that have already been addressed: If only we knew what we
know! Texas Instruments, Harris Corporation, AMP, UNISYS, and Rank Xerox
have tried this approach and reaped substantial benefits and cost savings.
The benefits of benchmarking are not limited just to process improvement or
reuse; they extend far beyond and promote both the growth and acceptance of a
learning culture through out the organization. Benchmarking efforts can often
provide insights into various areas.
Anecdotal evidence suggests that managers do not buy into ideas that strain
finances of a company without short-term payoffs for too long. Even though a
comprehensive knowledge management strategy might be at work in the
background, show your senior management some short-term outcomes.
Make it rare. Focus on the areas of knowledge that give you an edge over
competition. Through benchmarking studies, you can easily figure out the areas
in which your com petition is not strong. If any of those areas are a possible
source of competitive advantage, by all means, support them!
Gateway for example, is known for its customer service. If you have a problem
with a computer you bought from them, you know that you will probably find a
knowledge able customer support representative on the other end. Almost all PC
manufacturers have some kind of customer support, but Gateway decided to
strengthen this over any thing else. Most Gateway`s customers tend to be repeat
buyers simply because of their excellent customer service. Gateway also uses a
customer knowledge repository to be able to track all previous problems that a
customer might have had in the past.
Some companies build a competitive advantage by taking one of the given
metrics to a level that is rare and that customers value. NEC has built on this
rarity as well. NEC`S printer division provides an overnight replacement
warranty for all its laser printers for two years from the date of purchase. By
being able to track customer information through a sophisticated knowledge
retrieval system, NEC provides overnight replacements after asking little more
than one question (the printer`s serial number) on the phone.
Make it hard to copy. Customer data is an excellent example of a resource that
is very hard to copy. Benchmarking can help you figure out the resources that
you have and your competition does not. If you focus on resources that can be
copied, it will, at best, buy you a temporary competitive advantage. However, if
you focus on knowledge areas in which your employees possess skills, you can
make it immensely difficult for your competition to copy those without luring
away your employees. Consulting companies have known this for a long time,
and it`s about time you thought of applying the same idea to the knowledge
assets within your own company.
Make it hard to substitute. Whatever categories of knowledge that you focus on,
make sure that straightforward substitutes do not exist. Companies that thought
they had gained an edge by outsourcing a part of their manufacturing operations
to firms in Third World countries did not take long to realize that everyone else
could do the same. And they did.
Knowledge relating to skills, reputation, and experience cannot be easily
substituted with close equivalents. Make sure you focus on such areas when you
begin.
Benchmarking is unlikely to reveal such areas unless a high level of job
diversity in the employee pool that is involved in the effort).
Benchmarking practices often reveal anecdotal evidence and impressions about
competition
It`s dangerous to rely on such impressions because they cannot be generalized in
any
Benchmarking is most useful when you know what your expectations and
objectives are and
the process itself is closely tied to your firm strategic knowledge drivers.
HOUSE OF QUALITY AND QUALITY FUNCTION DEPLOYMENT
The House of Qua1ity approach was developed by Hauser and Clausing in an
original paper that appeared in the Harvard Business Review. This methodology
has been successfully adapted to link customer needs to business processes and
internal decisions.
HOUSE OF QUALITY METRICS MATRIX
Figure shows the basic House of Quality metrics matrix. We begin by listing
the desirable outcomes on the left wall of the house. As the quality function
deployment (QFD) method incorporates an increasing number of these desired
outcomes, the outcomes house begins to build up.
Be careful to select outcomes that are that observable without much delay and a
seen clearly. Being able to see outcomes clearly does not imply that they must
be easily measurable quantitatively. Outcomes can be high level or low level.
Examples of such target out- comes include:
? Improve knowledge sharing to a level where 20 percent of an average
employee`s work is based on existing knowledge.
? Speed up problem solving by a factor of 5 percent over the next six months.
? Improve quality such that the rate of failure of product X decreases by 15
percent within the next 12 months.
? Generate more conversations among employees in our Atlanta and Barbados
offices (a relatively vague but measurable outcome).
? Increase customer satisfaction levels by 50 percent
? Create a comprehensive knowledge repository on our Winblows 2004
(fictitious product) operating system for use by support representatives within
three years, etc.
Although these should not exactly be your own goals, the point is that even
though some of the objectives might be high level, the outcomes are observable.
On the other hand, an objective like create new knowledge or dominate the
South American coffee markets (where the coffee market is a vague definition,
domination is not articulated, and the extent of what is considered South
American is unclear) is too vague. You`ll never know when you get there, and
when you get there you`ll never know that you are already there!
To attach relative priorities to each of these objectives, we attach weights to
each of them. These weights form the right-hand wall of the house and indicate
the importance of the issues in question. See Fig, for an example.
? Overall productivity of knowledge investments
? Service quality
? Customer satisfaction and the operational level of customer service
? Time to market in relation to other competitors
? Costs, profits, and margins Distribution
? Relationships and relationship management
Even though the term benchmarking probably did not exist when Aristophanes
made the above quote in 414 B.C., he said something very profound about it! By
benchmarking your own business against your competitor`s, you get information
on how to tweak your company`s performance goals to stay competitive in
relation to your competitors. Arthur Andersen, an international consulting firm,
perhaps took the first strike at the intimidating problem of measuring knowledge
work. Andersen developed a tool in association with APQC called the
Knowledge Management Assessment Tool (KMAT); it contained a series of
questions on a scale. Answers to these questions could then be compared to the
industry-specific and cross- industry averages of the responses. This process is,
in essence, benchmarking.
By using such a relative measure, all companies stand to gain. By knowing
where they stand on the intellectual forefront in relation to their competition,
companies can focus on improving processes and process knowledge in areas
where their scores are below average. Benchmarking, like any other business
process, is most likely to produce a payback when strategic business objectives
and goals drive it.
Benchmark Targets
Possible targets against which you can benchmark your company`s knowledge
management initiatives. You can identify other relevant targets from your own
company, from rival firms, from nonrival firms, or from averages representing
your industry or sector, Each has its own benefits and downsides, and the
choice, finally, is one of subjective judgment and weighted costs.
Stephen Drew proposed the original version of the target set that this table is
built upon. He also suggested that a possible target was international firms. I
disagree with this stand and have not included that as a potential target, since the
preceding options, by themselves, encompass international firms. Rarely do
American firms compete solely with domestic rivals.
There are companies that represent the ideal firm within each industry. Lacking
any other options. this is usually the best place to begin. These firms have
performance levels that other
WHAT DO YOU BENCHMARK AGAINST?
Benchmark Target
Upsides
Downsides
Other units within
This breaks down internal Internal policies might come into
your company barriers to communication
play; the measures are not
and conversation between
indicative of what is considered
various divisions and
performance in your
industry
offices of your company;
targets are easily accessible
Competing firms
Your company is measured
Legalities can make
this
against its direct competition; difficult; if a trusted
third party
you get a fair understanding
such as a consulting
firm
of the knowledge assets of
is brought additional
costs
your competitors as an are imposed.
aggregate; partners can easily
be identified.
Industry
All of the above; this also
This can be very
expensive;
lets you gauge your
privacy issues begin to
surface.
company`s standing in the
overall market.
Cross-industry
You might be able to gain
All of the above; this
does not let
valuable insights from you gauge your company`s
noncompeting firms and
standarding in relation
to your
apply them to your own competitors; the sample popu-
company.
lation is not truly
representative
of your own industry
or sector; it
is often difficult
participate in
such an effort; the cost
of such an
effort is rarely worth it
firms aspire to achieve. In the software industry arguably, every firm aspires to
be a Microsoft. In terms of customer loyalty every firm aspires to be an Apple
Computer Other examples, including some provided by Stephen Drew, of such
role models can be listed.
Although benchmarking can be a good starting point, you need to be aware of its
limitations.
Benchmarking, by itself, cannot be used as a strategy for knowledge
management. The best that it can do is provide a relative set of measures that
can help gauge what your efforts are leading to. Many companies, including
Xerox, have successfully used in their 10- steps program; however, it is not a
sufficient metric for knowledge work in and of itself.
THE BENCHMARKING PROCESS
On the lines of Xerox`s benchmarking program, M.J. Spendolini` has suggested
a five- procedure thy benchmarking efforts. An adapted version of this process.
applied to knowledge work is shown in Fig
Prevalent Role Models in the Benchmarking Process
Speed of product development
Netscape Corporation
Knowledge management integration
Buckman Labs
Knowledge management technology
implementation
Platinum Technology
Software development and marketing
Microsoft Corporation
Innovation and new product development 3M
Customer loyalty
Apple Computer
Brand Management
Disney
JIT manufacturing
Toyota
Logistics and enterprise-wide It leverage
Wal-Mart
Knowledge management measurement
efficacy
Skandia
Mail order
Dell, L.L. Bean, Lands End, Gateway
Franchising
McDonald`s
Quality Management
Motorola
Product line recognition
O`Reilly publishers
Strategic planning
General Electric
Cost-based competition through
E-machines Inc., Airtran, Southwest
Airlines, Apollo logistics and market demand
Printers
Volume
The benchmarking process can be used for self-comparison as well. That is, you
can use the benchmark to obtain an initial benchmark value before you
implement a knowledge manage- ment system or program. You can then, at a
later stage, run the same benchmark to see if any- thing improved from last time.
For example, you might want to see if your knowledge sharing network and
customer support repository have a positive effect on the average level of
customer satisfaction. You can benchmark the level of customer satisfaction
both before and after the new system is implemented and see if any changes
occurred. Be cautioned, however, that this is a slippery road: If you select the
wrong benchmark, you will end up focusing on the wrong set of processes.
BENCHMARK LESSONS
If you consider your company`s knowledge management system as a
competitive resource, then build into the four things that benchmarking teaches:
1. Make it valuable. Focus on including knowledge that is most valuable and
then expand the coverage to less valuable knowledge. The key phrase is
valuable knowledge with rel
The balanced scorecard can also be used to evaluate the impact of the
knowledge management system on four complementary criteria. The four
processes involved in using the balanced scorecard approach for managing
knowledge are described in Figure. These processes specifically put in the
context of knowledge management, involve the following steps.
1. Translate the knowledge management vision. As Figure describes, this is the
first process in the balanced scorecard strategy. At this stage, managers need to
reach consensus
as to why knowledge is being managed or needs to be managed. What are the
firm`s visions for the knowledge management investment? The vision needs to
be translated into concrete goals and objectives before any actions can be
measured. The beauty of the balanced scorecard is that it can be used to create
short-term, specific go individual employees, all of which feed to the
organizational vision.
While we are on the subject of vision, let me make it very clear that this rarely
comes by copying the mission statement! Mission statements often carry too
much fluff or are at too high a level to be actually useful. They need to be
brought down to the level where two people can agree on what it says after
reading the same documents and that is rarely the case with mission statements
that most companies have. That`s probably the reason why most mission
statements are updated only when the next year`s annual reports are due.
2. Communicate and link. This lets you measure as you go along your objective
of selling the idea to your company`s employees. You can gauge how well your
employees are being trained to use the system as a part of their work. You can
also measure how well you have linked rewards to both the effective use and
contribution of knowledge. Here, the KM champion must communicate the
strategy along the entire rung of employees and demonstrate the links between
individual employee goals, and the departmental/organizational goals in terms of
leveraging knowledge.
3. Do a reality check. This part of the balanced scorecard strategy determines
how well your chosen metrics, explicated goals, targets, and allocated resources
align with the initial ideas you had in mind for the knowledge management
system.
4. Incorporate learning and feedback. The balanced scorecard lets you evaluate
the goals, metrics, and targets that you have chosen for your knowledge
management system and then analyze how well they are actually working.
In summary, the balanced scorecard approach lets you track the current health of
the knowledge management strategy that you have chosen for your company.
By replacing the original four perspectives with measures successfully used by
Skandia, a knowledge-based version of the balanced scorecard can be obtained.
The underlying implementation and use would be akin to the conventional
balanced scorecard method, but the measures provided will be those relating to
knowledge management. This way, the financial, customer-related, process-
capability-related, and employee-performance-related gains coming from the
knowledge management system can be simultaneously tracked.
The actual implementation and use of the balanced scorecard approach is
beyond the intended scope of this chapter. Now, you have a starting point for
applying the balanced score card to knowledge management. For
implementation level details, I recommend reading The Balanced Scorecard
(Harvard Business School Press, 1996) by Kaplan and Norton.
As Kaplan and Norton state, a balanced scorecard need not just have four
dimensions. It can have five, six, or seven. The only concern of going beyond
seven is that you have too much to keep track of and a lot of it isn`t even critical.
KPMG, for example, uses five different dimensions for its scorecards.
Although these choices seem reasonable, I recommend that you initially try
using the dimensions similar to those suggested in Fig, which are based on
Skandia`s Navigator and which the company has used very effectively. The
choice of dimensions is not set in stone. As long as you are sure about what you
are measuring and why you are measuring it, that variable has a justifiable place
on the balanced scorecard that your company adopts.
KPMG'S CHOICE OF DIMENSIONS FOR ITS BALANCED
SCORECARD
Balanced Scorecard Dimensions
Questions
Client Orientation
What do I want to achieve with my
existing Clients?
Market orientation
What am I going to do to decrease
existing client turnover and find new clients? What am I
going to do to strengthen my position
in the
business?
People orientation
What am I going to do to enable the
team that I
am managing to function better and to
help my
employees gain stronger
competencies?
Result orientation
How can I attain better results with the
same
inputs? How can I increase the added
value of
my teams and myself?
Personal effectiveness
What am I going to do in the coming
year to
improve weak points and strengthen
strong
points?
Professionalism
How do I keep abreast of the newest
developments?
How do I collaborate with my peers
more
extensively?
ADVANTAGES OF KM BALANCED SCORECARDS
The balanced scorecard has some characteristics that the other approaches
discussed in this chapter do not have. These characteristics make it especially
useful as a knowledge metric.
? Ability to provide a snapshot of the intellectual health of your firm at any point
in time.
? Built-in cause-and-effect relationships that can help you guide your knowledge
management strategy.
? Sufficient (neither too many nor too few number of performance drivers and
metrices.
? Capability to communicate the knowledge management strategy throughout
the firm.
? Capability to link individual goals with the overall knowledge strategy of the
firm. This implies that each employee can k his own and continue to contribute
toward the goals of the knowledge management system and strategy without
even realizing it!
? A direct, and often missing, link between long-term knowledge and
competence goals of the firm and its annual budget.
? Translation of the lofty visions of a firm into more doable, realistic,
manageable, and specific performance goals.
? Logical integration into the overall strategy of your business, and still make
sense.
? Objective measurement of the contribution of knowledge to the more
intangible sources of competitive advantage, such as customer satisfaction and
employee skills and competencies.
The selected objectives are grouped and listed on the left-hand side of the house
matrix.
The relative weights are assigned to each of these objectives on a scale of 1 to 5.
Some other tools let you attach weights on a percentage scale of 0 to 100, as
originally proposed in the House of Quality approach. A simple 5-point scale is
easier to track. than a 100-point scale, which only makes some decisions and
weight assignments both arbitrary and confusing.
Appropriate performance metrics can then be listed and clustered on the top of
the matrix (the ceiling). The matrix itself indicates the levels of correlation
between the metrics and the performance outcomes. Figure, for example, uses
three different symbols to rep resent these levels of correlation (high, medium,
and low). Alternatively, a numerical value can be used, The decisions and
metrics that also improve the outcome are said to have a high level of
correlation. The interrelationships between all these parameters are represented
on the roof of the house: By looking at the correlations within the body of the
matrix, we can accurately focus on those areas of knowledge management that
are most likely to affect overall company performance and help us move toward
preset goals.
SOFTWARE TOOLS FOR QFD ANALYSIS
A variety of software tools can help automate the QFD analysis process. One of
the more popular tools is QFD Designer (by Qualisoft Corporation) shown in
Figure. Software tools allow real-time evaluation of the percentage of fills along
different dimensions.
Skaridia`s Intellectual Capital (IC) annual report also provides indicators of
some other parameters that can be added to the House of Quality outcomes for
analysis of knowledge management effectiveness. Some ideas, including some
found in Skandia`s annual IC report, for such parameters are the following:
? Competence development expenses per employee in dollars
? Employee satisfaction
? Marketing expense per customer
? Time spent on systematic packaging of know-how for future use, after a
project is completed
? Research and development expense to overhead expense ratios
? Training expenses per employee
? Payback on development activities
? Average development time per new product
? Expense per dollar earned (e.g., in consulting)
? Renewal expense per existing customer
? Level of customer attrition
? Expense of business development (new customers) per dollar spent on
overheads
? Training expenses per customer per year in dollars
? Information-gathering expenses per existing customer
? Total competitive intelligence expense per year
? Expense (dollars) of distribution of new sales material and data
? Time spent per unsuccessful business bid
? Total number of patents held
? Number of patents pending
? Average time of approval for pending patents
? Employee attrition rate
? Dollar figure value of losses per employee lost
? Dollar figure value of tosses per employee lost to a competing firm
? Expense of reinventing solutions per year
? Success ratio of new products and/or services
? Number of ideas implemented from the suggestion box
? Total production capacity or internal production capacity (this can be applied
both to production and service firms)
? Capacity utilization
? Delivery time deviation rate
THE BALANCED SCORECARD TECHNIQUE
The third approach that is a viable method for measuring knowledge-centric
performance of your organization is the balanced scorecard approach. Kaplan
and Norton originally proposed the balanced scorecard in their landmark article
published in the Harvard Business Review. The balanced scorecard provides a
technique to maintain a balance between long-term and short; term objectives,
financial and non-financial measures, lagging and leading indicators, ad between
internal and external perspectives. The basic scorecard for translating vision
and strategy into actual goals is shown in Figure.
? Direct link to financial measures and your knowledge management system`s
effect on the company bottom line.
LIMITATIONS OF KM BALANCED SCORECARDS
On the downside, a well-designed balanced scorecard is more difficult to levels
a similar QFD/HoQ (House 0 Quality) model. It is rarely possible to directly
adopt another firm`s balanced scorecard because subtle differences exist even
between very similar However, there are some software tools that can make the
initial ride lesser bumpy, such as the balanced scorecard tool, Gentia Balanced
Scorecard, sold by Gentia Inc. (http://nee tia.com).
CLASSIFYING AND EVALUATING PROCESSES
This section touches on a very useful taxonomy that can help you classify sort,
and processes by their category. Understanding and classi5`ing processes helps
firms manage these processes as well as the knowledge that drives them. The
sales process, fore pie, might have very little to do with the sales department in
some high technology companies where primary customer interaction is with the
engineering staff. What can be readily used here is a taxonomy of processes that
has been developed by the American Productivity, and Quality Center (APQC)
benchmarking clearinghouse.
The process classification framework (PCF) was originally developed as a
collaborative effort across 80 organizations and envisioned as a taxonomy of
business processes in 1991. A primary issue with the PCF continues to be the
enablement of process benchmarking across industry boundaries. The utility of
this process taxonomy is not just limited to benchmarking. It can be used to
better structure the clustering of processes and functionalities your own
company. The biggest strength of this framework comes from the fact that it was
built by the joint effort of almost 100 U.S. organizations, many 0 which had an
inter al presence.
The APQC process classification framework serves as a high-level, generic
enterprise model that encourages businesses and other organizations to see their
activities from a cross-industry process-oriented viewpoint rather than from a
narrow, functionalist viewpoint. The process classification framework supplies a
genetic view of business processes often found in multiple industries and sectors
and service companies, health care, government, education, and. others, thereby
allowing companies to compare processes meaningfully to other, different
organizations.
The process classification framework represents major processes and sub
processes, functions, through its structure and vocabulary. The framework does
not list all processes found within any specific organization. Likewise, not every
process listed in the framework present in every organization.
THE APQC PROCESS CLASSIFICATION FRAMEWORK
1.0
UNDERSTAND MARKETS AND CUSTOMERS
1.1
Determine customer needs and wants
1.1.1 Conduct qualitative assessments
1.1.1.1
Conduct customer interviews
1.1.1.2
Conduct focus groups
1.1.2 Conduct quantitative assessments
1.1.2.1
Develop and implement surveys
1.1.3 Predict customer purchasing behavior
1.2
Measure customer satisfaction
1.2.1 Monitor satisfaction with products and services
1.2.2 Monitor satisfaction with complaint resolution
1.2.3 Monitor satisfaction with communication
1.3
Monitor changes in market or customer expectations
1.3.1 Determine weaknesses of product/service offerings
1.3.2 Identify new innovations that are meeting customer needs
1.3.3 Determine customer reactions to competitive offerings
2.0
DEVELOP VISION AND STRATEGY
2.1
Monitor the external environment
2.1.1 Analyze and understand competition
2.1.2 Identify economic trends
2.1.3 Identify political and regulatory issues
2.1.4 Assess new technology innovations
2.1.5 Understand demographics
2.1.6 Identify social and cultural changes
2.1.7 Understand ecological concerns
2.2
Define the business concept and organizational strategy
2.2.1 Select relevant markets
2.2.2 Develop long-term vision
2.2.3 Formulate business unit strategy
2.2.4 Develop overall mission statement
2.3
Design the organizational structure and relationships between
organization al units
2.4
Develop and set organizational goals
TABLE THE APQC PROCESS CLASSIFICATION FRAMEWORK
(CONT.)
3.0
DESIGN PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
3.1
Develop new product/service concept and plans
3.1.1 Translate customer wants and needs into product and/or
set requirements
3.1.2 Plan and deploy quality targets
3.1.3 Plan and deploy cost targets
3.1.4 Develop product life cycle and development timing
targets
3.1.5 Develop and integrate leading technology into
product/service concept
3.2
Design, build, and evaluate prototype products and services
3.2.1 Develop product/service specifications
3.2.2 Conduct concurrent engineering
3.2.3 Implement value engineering
3.2.4 Document design specifications
3.2.5 Develop prototypes
3.2.6 Apply for patents
3.3
Refine existing products/services
3.3.1 Develop product/service enhancements
3.3.2 Eliminate quality/reliability problems
3.3.3 Eliminate outdated products/services
3.4
Test effectiveness of new or revised products or services
3.5
Prepare for production
3.5.1 Develop and test prototype production process
3.5.2 Design and obtain necessary materials and equipment
3.5.3 Install and verify process or methodology
3.6
Manage the product/service development process
4.0
MARKET AND SELL
4.1
Market products or services to relevant customer segments
4.1.1 Develop pricing strategy
4.1 .2 Develop advertising strategy
4.1.3 Develop marketing messages to communicate benefits
4.1.4 Estimate advertising resource and capital requirements
4.1.5 Identify specific target customers and their needs
before you begin the process externally. Remember that benchmarks do tell you
what to do next, but not how to do it.
QEDs relate high-level goals to discrete actions. QEDs let you link goals,
relationships, perceived significance, and outcomes for each strategic step
that you take with your knowledge management system. QFDs integrate
inputs from all stakeholders and provide explicit direction for enhancing
your company`s knowledge management strategy. QFDs can be automated
to a fairly high degree with readily available soft ware. You can translate
high-level goals to specific tasks, and these tasks can further be
decomposed into measurable and manageable actions.
The balanced scorecard links strategy, technology, competitiveness, and
knowledge management. The KM BSC method helps you translate the
knowledge management vision into action, communicate the KM strategy
bottom up validate your choice of metrics, and analyze results of knowledge
management in the long run. It will provide a robust direct link between
knowledge management, the system, your company`s clients, markets,
people, results, and profitability.
Do not ignore the soft stuff Metrics must take both hard and soft results into
account to present a true picture of your firm`s intellectual health.
Metrics in the rearview minor appear more significant than they are. Ask
yourself: Do we have metrics that can serve as early warning signals for
future problems and those that signal future opportunities?
In conclusion, we need to take a closer look at the cases of some companies
representing a diversity of industries. All of them have one thing in common:
They are immensely successful both from a competitive standpoint and a
financial one because they realized the value of knowledge management and
appropriately put their idle knowledge to work, and work hard.
Review Questions
1. Discuss the contributions of team managers in implementation of HRIS
in the organization.
2. Discuss the concept of Balance Score Card in detail.
3. Discuss the APQC classification framework.
4. Discuss the contribution of experts and consultants in managing the
HRIS of an organization.
Unit - V
CASE STUDIES
OBJECTIVES
Understand how high performance companies manage knowledge.
Understand process distribution in successful knowledge management
projects.
analyze HRM in KBO and km case studies from the aerospace ,
software, consumer technology, telecommunications, publishing, consumer
products, pharmaceuticals and consulting industries.
understand the strategic alignment of a successful knowledge
management project with existing business processes.
understand how your knowledge management project can build both
upon the failures and success of these companies.
Introduction
In this unit we will take a closer look at some companies that have implemented
knowledge management system. Their outcomes have had mixed results. Some
have fallen flat while others have provided their organizations with an
unprecedented competitive advantage. There is a lot to learn from these early.
Pionee5rs who dared to make that leap of faith in the face of analyzing the
HRM in KBO and rewarding the compensation.
HRM performing knowledge management projects how focused on activities
involving delivery and production of services, customer support, competitive
intelligence and external knowledge integration, project management in virtual
teams, sales enablement and intellectual asset management.
This unit will give you an idea about the areas on which you must focus your
knowledge management investments. The common failure points in a
knowledge management system was found to be the lack of commitment or
resources for managing the system once it was implemented.
Case 1
Knowledge management in the aerospace industry the case of rolls Royce
Introduction ? rolls Royce was founded in 1906. in addition to making
expensive cars. Rolls Royce is also a market leader in the long- haul aircraft
engines market. As of 1999, rolls Royce was serving about 300 commercial
airlines where its competitive stance was the total cost of ownership.
The problem ? the problem with rolls Royce was that everything that was done
to maintain engines was time sensitive. However 20 million pages of paper.
documenting a variety of aspects of aircraft engine parts ( refer table 1) were
produced by the company. Each engine model had over 20 variants. Each
variant needed to be serviced differently about a 100 airlines with which rolls
Royce had active relationships were based in other countries. Even with several
gigabytes of data in the companies mainframes it was often difficult to get the
right piece of information in time. The consequences were not just limited to
productivity and financial health of the company but also linked to safety of the
aircraft that company employees worked on.
Problem scope ? rolls Royce decided to scope the problem down to the critical
issues that had immediate paybacks for the firm. They decided that the key
players to be considered would be limited to
Airlines
Airframe manufacturers
Engine and engine part manufacturers
Component manufacturers
It was also decided that the scope of the initial knowledge management project
would be restricted to enabling different levels of reuse. mechanisms that would
allow workers to find use reuse and reintegrate knowledge related to servicing
long haul commercial engines.
Such scooping is essential to place reasonable limits on the expectations from a
knowledge management system. scooping helps firms figure out if the targets of
their knowledge management investments are the one that need immediate
attention both in terms of business sense and strategic urgency.
Rolls Royce and referential sources of knowledge.
Air craft
Referential knowledge
Trent 700
Engine maintenance manuals
Trent 800
Illustrated catalogs of parts
RB 211 - 524
Supply diagram
RB 211 ? 535
Service bulletins
Time limits manuals
Standard practices
Overhaul manuals
Maintenance manuals
Tay
IAE V2 500 A1A5
IAE V2500 ? D5
Knowledge management project goals
Rolls Royce was very good at laying out realistic and achievable goals up front.
The initial set of goals specified for the KM systems were classified in two
broad categories.
Customer oriented goals-these were goals that would accrue benefits for
the customer
1.
reducing equipment downtime for maintenance
2.
doing it right for the first time
3.
improving maintenance quality
4.
improving maintenance scheduling
5.
reducing data handling as well as access and search costs.
Internal goals ? these were the benefits in terms of improved internal
efficiency that were expected from the rolls Royce knowledge management
system. The knowledge management team hoped that the new system would
help the company in the following ways.
1.
improve customer data access across multiple platforms
2.
deliver applications that required little or no training
3.
reduce publishing costs, ensure security and comply with ATA( air
transport association )
Measurement ? lacking any other mechanisms for measurements, rolls Royce
measured its return on investment by using surrogate financial measures.
Most of these figures were translated into dollar figures as shown below.
Paper costs saving of $3 million
Customer productivity savings worth $1 million
5% improvement in maintenance time
un measured savings in data processing costs.
Solution ? this system resembles the improved version of an intranet. It had user
specific table of contents a customizable interface, the ability to add
annotations, provided dynamic updates and delivered notifications.
Case 2 knowledge management in sales and marketing ? the case of platinum
technology
Platinum technology inc based in Oakbrook terrau. Illinois is a company on the
first track with close to $ 800 million in revenues in 1997 lane platinum has
been on an acquisition war path since 1994. between 1994 and 1998 the
company brought out 70 other companies.
The series of acquisitions resulted in a 500 percent growth I n its portfolio of
product offerings. Platinum has almost 7000 employees and has been a six fold
growth in its sales force head count since 1995. these employees are distributed
across platinum`s 120 offices world wide.
Platinum realized early on that managing the companies knowledge assets was a
critical enabler that would allow it to sustain this growth with strong
commitment from senior management platinum has been exploring the use of
knowledge management in the following areas of operation.
Sales and marketing
New product development
Contracting and outsourcing
Customer and partner interaction knowledge management
Consulting
Education
In the sales and marketing division alone an employee has a number of potential
sources that she can tap into for information needed to make a sale or to pursue
a prospective customer these include
Over 100 lotus notes databases
Two custom developed applications
35 intranet sites
Thousands of networked disk drives
Printed documentation
Discussion forums
The problem
Platinum`s marketing and sales department was faced not with information
paucity but with information overload and redundancy. Even if an employee
making a sales call could retrieve information that see needed she would com e
across multiple versions of it in different locations. There was no telling what
content was current and applicable. To overcome these challenges, platinum`s
marketing and sales department took its first step towards building a
comprehensive knowledge management system.
The system
The knowledge management system that platinum built was called jaguar.
Jaguar began with two components an intranet based system that contained
detailed documents and information and jaguar direct a machine resident bullet
style nugget information repository. The system was built on documenters
EDMS software and easy software from wisdom aware for capturing context
and tacit forms of knowledge. The driving web servers were based in the united
states , Singapore and Europe and were supplemented with fortnightly updated
notes databases replicated on 65 servers worldwide. Since the system was meant
to support sales and marketing staff it provided the following information
Platinum`s products
Current pricing
Competitive information
Enterprise wide information including that about other divisions of the
company
World wide sales calendars
Information on platinum`s partners
Details ion mergers and acquisitions that were relevant to the company
References to documents and manuals
Subscription service that allowed users to subscribe to content of interest
Development stages
Platinum started at the point where it was easy to get a stable start managing
explicit knowledge. Only later did the company proceed to manage tacit forms
of knowledge. The system made extensive use of icons to represent different
types of content and each intent element and meta data attached to it. Easily
recognizable icons were used to identify information that was newer than two
weeks and information that had changed in the preceding seven days. As a
knowledge management team member put it, we are a very visual society sop
we made excessive use of icons. Ridiculous? Yes ! but effective ? yes !
Through out the development process the knowledge management team asked
the actual sales staff about what seemed to work and what did not., based on
their feedback the systems developers promptly incorporated relevant
suggestions and features. The companies knowledge champion says that over
50% of the enhancements came from end user suggestions. As a result about 40
% of the companies sales force personnel use of the system daily. With such an
exceptionally high level of usage, platinum found that banner advertisements
with in the site were the most effective way of making company wide
announcements.
Throughout the development process the knowledge management team asked
the actual sales staff about what seemed to work and what did not. Based on
their feedback the systems developers promptly incorporated relevant
suggestions and features. The companies knowledge champion says that over
50% of the enhancements came from end user suggestions, as a result about
40% of the companies sales force personnel use the system daily. With such an
exceptionally high level of usage, platinum found that banner advertisements
with in the site were the most effective way of making company wide
announcements.
At a later stage, the system introduced push content delivery. Users should
select content areas that were of interest to them. As new content came in users
could either opt to receive it in an e-mail message or go to a personalized page
on the site and follow hyperlinks pointing them to new relevant information as it
became available. General updates were automatically sent every Sunday. The
company hopes that analyzing usage statistics on jaguar it can
predict sales
activity Ahead of time. To ensure the content is relevant and up to date emails
are sent to contributors by the system one week before an expiration date. If
they do not review their contribution, it gets archived, since the additional
burden of validating and reviewing their own contributions was placed on
employees, platinum made sure that they were given extra time to spend on the
task.
The initial version of the system was implemented with in four months of its
initial approval. The system was so successful that it became the second most
widely used application in the company next only to email.
Measurement :
Lacking any other formal mechanisms for demonstrating a return on investment
for their knowledge management investments, platinum demonstrated the
success of its system entirely in terms of the financial benefits. Benefits
quantified in terms of their effect on the companies bottom line are easier to sell
to senior management. the knowledge management teams quantified benefits in
the following terms.
The system paid for itself in 1.5 months
The knowledge management system resulted in cost savings of about $ 6
million in its very first year.
Sales force productivity increased by a then current run rate of 6%
The system reduced international FedEx shipments by 15% ( primarily
resulting from the savings resulting from not having to produce and
distribute lotus notes and database CD-ROM updates to several dozen
offices worldwide, every few weeks.)
The knowledge management team further estimated that jaguar saved an
average sale a and marketing person about two hours every week, created a
bottom up pull of knowledge and contributed to the competitive stand of the
firm as a whole. Although the aforementioned benefits delivered a lot more
value to the company, the knowledge management team initially quantified
these benefits only in terms of FedEx savings that resulted from the introduction
of this system. by choosing such a metric the KM team was able to successfully
demonstrate the tangible benefits of the system ( even though one might argue
that they were pessimistically underestimated)
Case 3- knowledge management in customer support - the case of Nortel
Nortel corporation sells a suite of design and manufacturing applications in the
united states and Europe. The global support group provides support to both
European customers and units states. There are group of support personnel in
both the united states and Europe. Nortel is required to provide 24 hour support,
seven days a week, with limited budgets and restricted head counts of workers.
Issues ? Nortel was facing problem providing support to its customers
primarily because there was no suitable mechanism that allowed a support
representative to check if anyone in the support organization had encountered a
citation problem before. This meant that the teams in different offices did not
share any of their knowledge related to problem solving and ended up
reinventing solutions time and again. Nortel identified several knowledge
related problems that its support group faced.
Unclear definition of roles and responsibilities of personnel
Lack of a formal process and guiding documentation
Informal service level agreements
Inconsistent measures of customer satisfaction
Lack of formal training for support staff
No centralized collection of repository of predefined solutions
European and US offices operating as groups of teams rather than as a
single distributed team
Excessive rework and reinvention of solutions ( no formal mechanism for
capturing problems and solutions existed)
Lack of knowledge sharing between teams based in the two continents.
The three phases of organizing knowledge
The support group knowledge management team at Nortel decided to manage
knowledge more effectively, hoping to help the support group perform better,
given budget and head count constraints,, they decided to tackle the whole
process of managing knowledge in three discrete steps.
Phase 1: capturing knowledge and processes that were being used by their
American and European support offices.
Phase 2: consolidating these processes to provide an environment for co
operative trans pacific problem solving.
Phase 3: implementing integrated systems to enable collaborative knowledge
intensive processes.
Nortel began by bringing in an external consultant who interviewed support
staff both in Europe and the United States. After receiving positive feedback
from these interviewees, the knowledge management team concluded that it had
the support of prospective end users. to gain acceptance, the external consultants
presented their understanding of the process to key stakeholders and support
staff. Following this feedback from employees was incorporated into the
process descriptions that the consulting company had written. The processes
identified were then classified into different areas of process ownership. Roles
were assigned to each area on the basis of training provided to support
employees.
Nortel support staff members were then trained in terms of the new integrated
process that were synthesized, as a final step, Nortel implemented an integrated
progress tracking system that allowed team members to track progress on
solving a problem s teams across the globe worked on it. The final step in terms
of support technology was the implementation of a centralized database where
all problems and their outcomes were recorded.
Although the implementation done by Nortel seems to be less sophisticated in
comparison to some other companies knowledge systems its results were
delivered exactly where they were needed most. Remember that esoteric notions
of organizational good cannot drive knowledge management until it is helping
the company solve critical process problems and eliminating knowledge related
problems that are threatening to bring the company down. Nortel expended
more effort on the people side than it did on the technology side: a perfect way
to begin when the processes themselves are not clearly understood or explicitly
defined. The lesson here is that the problem should define knowledge
management technology, technology should define the problem. The effort paid
strong dividends. Nortel is a leading provider in its markets and enjoys high
levels of customer loyalty.
Case 4 knowledge management in the semi conductor industry ? gasonics
international
Gasonics is a company operating out of north America, Europe, Asia and the
pacific rim with annual revenues in the range of $120 million. gasonics
produces processing systems for fabrication of semiconductor wafrs. companies
manufacturing electronic chips for use in electronic equipment use systems such
as the ones that the gasonics produces.
Gasonics systems have for a long time enjoyed a reputation for high reliability
and low systems downtime when compared to industry averages. The company
depends on its customers for feedback and it extensively uses this feedback to
improve both its existing systems and services. Faced with extremely low
margin like other competitors operating in the industry, gasonicse operating
costs and improve internal efficiencies since the whole process of designing and
building wafer processing equipment is knowledge intensive, gasonics decided
that the answer lay in stream lining its use of internal knowledge.
The Starting Point : Technical Publications
The technical publications department wrietes , typests, updates, provides and
support technical manuals, literature and other information that support gasonics
products. The company found that its technical publications department was an
increasingly major cost centre for four reasons.
1.as equipment sold by gasonics was expensive, typically over $1000000 a
piece downtime costs for customers resulted in thousands of dollar worth of
loses every time the system went down. Hence the technical publications
department at gasonics needed to provide an increasingly high number of
customers custonmised version of their publications, this in effect is similar to
mass customization.
2.updates were frequently required.
3.customers demanded electronic versions of product manuals.
4.the cost of archiving old documentation was increasing at an abnormal rate.
Gasonics realized that its technical publications department was the most logical
place to begin its knowledge management initiative. since the goals of the
business unit and the technical publications departments were highly congruent,
improving one the company hoped would improve the other
The below table shows the two se4ts of objectives.
Technical publications department Business unit goals
goals
Speed up delivery of technical
Reduce training and support costs
Documentation
Improve usability of documentation Increase equipment uptime Reduce
and application manuals
training and support costs
Improve content and currency of Increase equipment uptime, increase
publications
service revenues, reduce training and
support costs, improve customer
service through better feedback
mechanisms.
Link publications to other enterprise Improve customer service
resources
Make
technical
literature, Improve
product
and
service
documentation and publications easily offerings, improve customer service.
accessible.
The goal : three months to target
Gasonics planned for a knowledge management system that could be
operational within three months. the challenges that came up included:
The need to replace legacy data and paper based information with
consistent and accurate electronic data equivalents.
The ability of customers to customize product and service documentation
electronically.
Integration with other enterprise systems.
Justification of costs involved in doing the above.
Gasonics reduced paper related costs by 50% immediately. besides this obvious
financial benefit, the company reducing training costs used technicians instead
of engineers for providing support, and improved the quality of solutions
provided by making maintenance efforts work right the first time more
frequently than it had done in the past.
Case 5 knowledge management pilot case : Monsanto nutrition and consumer
products
Monsanto a Chicago based company with over 2000 employees is the owner of
leading brands of nutrition products such as nutria sweet and equal. The
employee base consists of sales, marketing, research, manufacturing and
administrative personnel. Monsanto began its knowledge management efforts
with a small community of analysts consisting of marketing and business
strategy analysts. This effort served as a pilot project for the large scale
deployment of its knowledge sharing network based on plum tree knowledge
server. As john Ferrari the process and technology manager at Monsanto aptly
puts it you do not want to focus too much time and energy into solving
technology problems; focus on process issues and use off the shelf customizable
applications where possible.
By using a pilot deployment, Monsanto identified the areas in which expected
problems of deploying a large scale, organization wide knowledge management
system were concentrated. The pilot implementation led it to believe that about
75% of the issues were concentrated. The pilot implementation led it to believe
that about 75% of the issues were people, process and culture. Technology the
easy part was the remaining 25%.
Case 6 Knowledge Management To Build Economies Of Reuse ? The Case Of
Texas Instruments
Texas instruments the semiconductor firm that is credited with
commercialization of the integrated circuit ( also known as an electronic chip),
began its knowledge management initiatives centered on its technical literature
and documentation. As one would expect .TI has over whelming amounts of
data relating to its semiconductor products this data needs to be managed
updated and effectively distributed. for example
TI has about 3100 data sheets relating to its semiconductor products. each of
these average about 12 pages in length.
TI produces and maintains about 50 user guides each of which averages 250
pages.
TI supports its products with 400 application notes each of which is between
2 to 100 pages in length.
TI maintains 14 gigabytes of SMGL files and 12 gigabytes of meta data.
TI revises about 90000 pages of documentation every year
TI has about 100 technical writers, 5 illustrators and 10 team leaders who
collectively manage this process.
Texas instruments decided to change these work processes so that they would
be better aligned with the ways in which documentation staff worked on these
documents and technical literature. the focus was on creating content in a
manner that allowed ease of reuse and enabled production of multiple outputs
from a single input or data source. By toggling all content, I hoped to be able to
manage context along with associated data. I uses the notion of a fundamental
shift to describe this process migration from document thinking to object
thinking.
To make this shift happen the knowledge management team actually converted
all paper documents to an electronic form. These expense of the conversion
process was justified on the basis of the following.
Cost containment ?reusing portions of existing documents resulted in cost
savings of up to 70% of the cost o new documents.
Value added ? by adding non textual information to documents ( such as
code, models, executable files and demo files)additional context was added
to knowledge that was well explicated and codified.
Reduced labor cost ? it took fewer people to do the same job so savings in
employee compensation were a direct outcome.
The important lesson to take from this highly specialized initiative that
primarily focused on managing already confided knowledge is that a good place
is to begin knowledge management is with content that is already there.
Creating meta data for that content is the next logical step. but Jeff Barton of
Texas instruments warns that creating such met can be the expensive part of the
process.
Conclusion ? we looked at cases analyzing knowledge management projects in
some of the most innovative pioneers in knowledge management. We examined
the strategic drivers for knowledge management have put these programs into
place primarily as a vehicle for increasing revenues and cost containment. The
common thread running through most of these cases was an intent to leverage
best practices, improve collaboration, profit from knowledge, strengthen
organizational competence, widen competitive gaps and leverage expertise.
Clearly identify the business objectives that drive knowledge management. All
these companies have demonstrated their ability to show tangible even if small
returns on their knowledge management investments otherwise it is all too easy
to lose focus of what the project is supposed to actually accomplish.
This post was last modified on 14 March 2022