Title: Knowledge Sharing, Management
1Knowledge Sharing, Management Innovation for
IT Corporations
- Professor Jon Patrick
- Sybase Chair of Information Systems
- Basser Department of Computer Science
- University of Sydney
2Acknowledgment
- Dr Eric Tsui
- Computer Sciences Corporation
3Industry Partners with the Basser Dept of
Computer Science
- Accenture
- Bullant
- Compuware
- Cisco
4Four views of KM
- Document Management
- Expert Systems -KBS AI systems,
Internet/Intranets, Intelligent Agents - Organisational Learning Memory, Culture Change
Processes - Knowledge Manager - Information Science - Library
Science
5Common questions for Document Management type KM
- We have dealt with this customer before. Where
are the contracts and what were the special deals
with did with them? - How can we best leverage on past experience and
be able to further increase customer
satisfaction? - How can we transfer existing knowledge better and
faster to colleagues and new employees?
6Common questions for Expert Systems type KM
- How can an organisation consolidate its expertise
and experience on product development? - How can we ensure that we apply all the available
knowledge when producing a product?
7Common questions for Organisational Learning type
KM
- What kind of knowledge do we actually have within
the organisation? - Which knowledge areas must we develop in the near
future? - How are we going to develop this new knowledge?
- How can we transfer existing knowledge better and
faster to colleagues and new employees?
8Common questions for Knowledge Manager type KM
- What is the structure of out Corporate knowledge?
- What access paths do people want to get
knowledge? - Can we quickly locate person X who is an expert
on product Y in industry Z?
9Relevant technologies for a KM system
- Data Warehouses
- Data Mining
- Full-text search engines
- Document Management systems
- Navigation tools
- Collaborative Work Group Tools
- Workflow systems
- E-mail
10Tools for managing knowledge repositories
- Lotus Notes
- Database management, discussion-groups
- Intranets
- Publishing information across multiple
platforms, multimedia databases, hypertexts
11Relevant AI technologies for Organisational Memory
- Induction
- Case-based reasoning
- Intelligent Agents
- Deductive (Active) databases
- Natural Language front ends
- Knowledge map or ontology
- Intelligent Workflow
- Others
12Perceptions about the Nature of a KMS
- If we want people to share what they have
learned, we would be wise to create the
conditions in which sharing is a benefit. Nancy
Dixon - Choosing a system depends on
- receiver of knowledge
- task nature - routineness and frequency
- type of knowledge transferred
13Knowledge-transfer Models
- Serial Transfer
- Near Transfer
- Far Transfer
- Strategic Transfer
- Expert Transfer
- Metaphor - not a Warehouse but a Co-operative
14Ansett Case Study
- Photo on The Australian front page 16/4/01 Mr.
Toomey met by operations chief Trevor Jensen, who
has handled the crisis in his absence. - How could KM technology have helped Ansett?
- How can KM technology help Ansett?
15The LIBRA Story (Fin Review, BOSS, April,2001)
- www.libragirls.com.au offers 1-to-1 activities
- aimed at 12-24 year old girls
- 2-day early reminder of period being imminent
- Dear Diary section to record secrets, homework
and important dates details - exchange information with friends
16Libra -What is their KM Strategy?
- Detailed customer demographics knowledge
- Deep psychological analysis of market
- High sensitivity to cultural variables
- Individualisation of client interactions
17What is needed to support this strategy
- What technology can support this strategy?
- What staff competencies are needed to support
this strategy? - What processes are needed to support this
strategy?
18A Model of KM Strategies
-
- Artifact Individual
- Structured Doc Repository Expertise
Profile - Unstructured Intranets Discussion Forum
- (Hahn Subrimani, 2000, A Framework for KMS,
Proc ISIS, pp302-312)
19A Framework of KM Objectives
- Maximise knowledge creation and acquisition
- Maximise knowledge sharing
- (Knowledge managements Social dimension lessons
from Nucor Steel, A.K. Gupta V Govindarajan,
Sloan Management Review, Fall, 2000.)
20Maximise Knowledge Creation and Acquisition
- set stretch goals
- provide high powered incentives
- cultivate empowerment and provide slack
resources - equip every unit with a well-defined sandbox to
play in - cultivate a market for ideas within the
corporation
21Maximise Knowledge Sharing
- ban knowledge hoarding (discourage
under-achievers) - rely on group-based incentives
- invest in codifying tacit knowledge
- match transmission mechanisms to type of
knowledge
22What is KM?
- The collective experience of all members of the
organisation gained in carrying out its
activities, including the organisational memory
and concomitant learnings from dealing with its
clients.
23Organisational memory in organisations
- Not commonly recognised as a key corporate asset
- Only being used to support operational decision
making - Not used to support tactical or strategic level
decision making - Not fully integrated with knowledge acquisition,
maintenance and distributions
24What is KM?
- The care and development of understanding and
detailed analysis of the content that is relevant
to defining the culture and business practices of
the organisation.
25A Knowledge Management Organisation consists of
- People
- Processes
- Information
- Technology
- A Culture of Knowledge
26Culture of Knowledge
- Content/Information
- Intense Analytical Scrutiny
- Deep appraisal of cultural characteristics
- True KM will not arrive until the C of K is
adopted by organisations as their modus operandi
27Information Overload
- IO is leading to dumbing down
- Understanding is disappearing
28The Wrong Agenda - KM in Schools
- Research has NOT told us how children learn from
computers - Information Literacy is needed not Information
Technology
29Information is not Knowledge
- The thrill of acquiring or distributing
information quickly must not be confused with the
more demanding task of converting it into
knowledge and wisdom. Regardless of how advanced
computers become they should (do) not substitute
for basic human cognitive skills of awareness,
perception, reasoning and judgement. (Alan
Bundy, 2000, Information Literacy)
30Information Literacy not IT
- It is time we replace the term IT with IL
(Information Literacy). IT is mainly about flow -
movement of information through networks but
adding information in a time of infoglut and data
smog can actually interfere with learning and
understanding . Information Literacy is mainly
about developing understanding and insight.
Literacy is about interpretation of information
to guide decisions, solve problems and steer
though uncertain complex futures (McKenzie,
2000)
31What is our Proposal
32Innovation Action Groups
- High Level Synthesiser -scout
- Librarian - corporate repository
- Knowledge Engineer - customer focused
- Knowledge Operator - operational processes
- Culture of Knowledge
33WHAT ARE WE DOING at the University of Sydney
- Created an IS program driven around communication
and analytical skills - Created a Bachelor of Arts Informatics -4 year
Arts and IS majors - 55 women
- Defined IS from a cultural perspective
- Defined the IS Professional in new terms
34Future Knowledge Workers
- Critically Analyse
- Communicative
- User Friendly
- Lead innovation
- Construct and justify argument
35Critical success factors for knowledge management
- Provide leadership
- Establish cross-functional teams
- Ensure that a process is in place
- Nurture a sharing culture
- Demonstrate measurable benefits of knowledge
management
36THE END