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Lecture 4 The Human Factor

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Title: Lecture 4 The Human Factor


1
Lecture 4 The Human Factor
2
Learning Outcomes
  • Uncover factors supporting introduction of KM in
    organisations
  • Realise barriers to KM implementation
  • Investigate the role of the KM Leader

3
KM - An approach for organisational change
  • World of radical, discontinuous change with
    global implications
  • Revolutionary (unplanned) change programmes
  • Continuous improvement - cannot precisely define
    direction or end-point to change initiatives
  • Re-engineering, restructuring and innovation
    required
  • Knowledge Management will change the business
    landscape beyond recognition
  • Handy, 1989

4
KM - Changing the organisation culture
  • Boot et al., (1994), Peters (1992), and Brooking
    (1997) identify two types of emerging
    organisations
  • Those whose sole assets are their intellectual
    property, namely, employees e.g. McKinseys
    Consultancy
  • The knowledge-based organisation which recognises
    the value of knowledge e.g. ABB

5
Two ways of approaching KM
  • As an ASSET
  • Knowledge can be extracted from wherever it
    resides and put onto a system as a discrete asset
    to be managed
  • As a way of DOING things
  • Using knowledge as a means of judgement - this
    approach has the most value and derives the
    fastest benefits, however this approach is more
    difficult to achieve

6
Consider
  • Structure
  • Strategy
  • Culture
  • Future

7
Knowledge-based Organisational Structure
  • Scientific and Social knowledge recognised
  • Consider themselves as brokers of knowledge
  • Emphasise decentralisation and virtualisation
  • Exhibit network structure
  • Flexible boundaries

8
Organisation Strategy
  • Managers need to reject the temptation to look
    for one dimensional external answers and need to
    look within the organisation where the answers
    lie in learning and insight, skills and
    perspectives
  • Noer, 1997
  • Considers organisational and operational
    compatibility, symbolised by shared philosophies,
    strategies, end-goals across the whole
    organisation
  • Everyone aware of organisation mission and the
    contribution their role makes
  • Everyone singing from same song sheet

9
Organisation Culture
  • Changing a culture is not a matter of teaching
    people a bunch of new techniques, or replacing
    their behaviour patterns with new ones. It is a
    matter of exchanging values and providing role
    models. This is done by changing attitudes
  • Crosby, 1986
  • Recruitment, education and training, leadership,
    reward and recognition, etc.

10
Culture in the Knowledge-based Organisation
  • hire smart people and let them talk to each
    other
  • Davenport Prusak, 1998
  • Dedicate resources to knowledge programme
  • Encourage knowledge sharing and social
    interaction
  • Build a culture of trust, confidence, mutual
    respect and support
  • Encourage risk-taking, a no-blame culture

11
Knowledge SharingDedicated knowledge worker
roles
  • Chief Knowledge Officers (CKO)
  • Chief Information Officers (CIO)
  • Chief Learning Officers (CLO)
  • Community of Practice Co-ordinators
  • Knowledge Authors and Brokers
  • Information Publishers
  • Web Masters
  • Project Managers, etc.

12
Knowledge Sharing Dialogue
  • create a trusting and meaningful relationship
    between those in dialogue to ensure the maximum
    possible knowledge is transferred
  • Phillips, 1994
  • apply the principles of dialogue to facilitate
    processes directed at the creation, questioning
    and development of knowledge in organisations
  • Burgoyne Jackson, 1997

13
Learning Networks
  • Learning Networks Porter, 1990 are groups of
    people within the organisation who are brought
    together for a period of time, either physically
    or electronically, to construct, embody and
    disseminate knowledge on a specific issue.
    Learning Network combine specialists (who develop
    and maintain the group) from various disciplines
    to disseminate knowledge widely through the
    organisation. Highly valued by the organisation.

14
Communities of Practice
  • the Community of Practice CoP is united by
    shared knowledge and shared ways of knowing which
    are created by people being involved with each
    other in action
  • Drath Palus, 1994
  • Emphasis is on learning interaction and transfer
    of knowledge within the community, rather than
    wider organisation. Usually involve people with
    same professional interest, concerned with
    disseminating knowledge to CoP only

15
Supporting Knowledge Communities
  • Self-organising
  • Leader and co-ordinator
  • Building relationships
  • Investing in structural capital
  • Facilitating global connectivity

16
Collaborative Practices
  • If HP knew what HP knows, we would be three
    times as profitable
  • Platt, CEO Hewlett-Packard
  • CONK - Cost of Not Knowing
  • Reduction of Knowledge Silos Offsey, 1997
  • Create Corporate Memory Quintas et al., 1997
  • Eliminate Re-invention of the Wheel
  • Record lessons learned not glory stories
  • Facilitate ceaseless innovation Demerest,
    1997

17
Managing Professional Intellect
  • The capacity to manage human intellect and to
    convert it into useful products and services is
    fast becoming the critical executive skill of the
    age.
  • A flurry of interest in intellectual capital,
    creativity, innovation, the learning organisation
    and knowledge management
  • Little attention has been given to managing
    professional intellect - surprising as
    professional intellect create most of the value
    in the new economy.

18
What is IC?
  • Intellectual Capital (IC) is an asset such as
    knowledge, collective expertise, good will, brand
    value, or a patent that cannot be measured by
    traditional accounting methods but can be used by
    a company to its advantage. Skilled people,
    their competencies, market positions, good will,
    recognition, achievements, patents, contacts,
    support, collaborators, market innovation
    leadership, a repeat customer base, and
    reputation represent various facets of IC.

19
Four levels of Prof Intellect
  • Cognitive knowledge (know-what) is the basic
    mastery of a discipline that professionals
    achieve through extensive training and
    certification.
  • Advanced skills (know-how) translate book
    learning into effective execution. The ability
    to apply the rules of a discipline to complex
    real-world problems is the most widespread
    value-creating professional skill level.

20
  • Systems understanding (know-why) is deep
    knowledge of the web of cause-and-effect
    relationships underlying a discipline. It
    permits professionals to move beyond the
    execution of tasks to solve larger and more
    complex problems.
  • Self-motivated creativity (care-why) consists of
    will, motivation and adaptability for success.
    Highly motivated and creative groups often
    outperform groups with greater physical or
    financial resources. Without self-motivated
    creativity, intellectual leaders can lose their
    knowledge advantage through complacency.

21
  • Intellect clearly resides in the brains of
    professionals.
  • Levels 1-3 can also exist in organisations
    systems, databases or operating technologies
  • Level 4 often found in culture.
  • The value of intellect increases as one moves up
    the intellectual scale from cognitive knowledge
    to self-motivated creativity.

22
Organisational Risks
  • Companies focus virtually all training attention
    on developing basic rather than advanced skills
    and little or none on systems or creative skills.
  • Members of every profession tend to look to their
    peers to determine codes of behaviour and
    acceptable standards of performance.
  • Professionals tend to surround themselves with
    people who have similar backgrounds and values,
    this leads to risk of cocoons which quickly
    become inward-looking bureaucracies that are
    resistant to change and detached from customers.

23
Developing Professional Intellect
  • Recruit the best
  • Force intense early development
  • Constantly increase professional challenges
  • Evaluate and Weed

24
Leveraging Professional Intellect
  • Boost professionals problem solving abilities by
    capturing knowledge in systems and software
  • Overcome professionals reluctance to share
    information
  • Organise around intellect

25
Knowledge Leadership
  • Leader as a sponsor of social collaboration
  • A person who .
  • Supports
  • Promotes
  • Encourages

26
Characteristics of Knowledge Leadership
  • Linking the knowledge idea to our personal
    experience
  • Connecting to a tradition of leadership theories
  • The challenge of creative collaboration

27
New Challenges for Business Leaders
  • Take on the Intangibles
  • Put people first, technology second
  • Audit your knowledge base
  • Reward knowledge-sharing
  • Build on success

28
An Internal Strategy
  • Intentional Strategy Create a Knowledge Vision
  • Develop a Knowledge Crew
  • High Density interaction field
  • Piggyback new product development
  • Adopt middle-up-down management
  • Switch to a hypertext organisation
  • Construct external knowledge network
  • Nonaka Takeuchi, 1995

29
An Agenda for Knowledge LeadersPulling it all
together (1)
  • Personal commitment to learning and knowledge
    creation
  • Value learning from experience self-reflective
    learning to foster perspective
  • Challenge linear, rational critical path
    engineering mindset
  • Explore poetry, music, storytelling and other
    arts encourage metaphorical thinking

30
An Agenda for Knowledge LeadersPulling it all
together (2)
  • Set up an architecture for learning
  • Value hierarchy and middle managers
  • Learn new collaborative skills (facilitation,
    action learning)
  • Actively encourage diversity in teams
  • Sponsor and tolerate some chaos
  • Treat mistakes sincerely as a learning investment

31
Cultural Blockers
  • Not Invented Here (N.I.H.)
  • Time is money
  • Knowledge is Power
  • Technophobia
  • Valuing Intangibles
  • Information Overload

32
New World Office Environment
  • No barriers
  • Meeting Space
  • Quiet Rooms
  • Coffee Lounges
  • Rendezvous facilities
  • Flexibility

33
Future .
  • Where people learn from the application of
    information and share the results
  • Where processes are in place to support sharing,
    effective resourcing and people capability
    development
  • Providing the most effective collaborative
    environment
  • With appropriate management systems, values and
    behaviours

34
Task
  • Think of an organisation that you have worked in.
    List 5 positive and 5 negative characteristics
    which have contributed to the culture and working
    environment
  • How did management contribute to these via
    leadership styles (if at all)
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