
The strategy of knowledge management
The first and perhaps most difficult of launching a knowledge management
program is is to put in place a strategy for sharing knowledge. It entails
a collective visioning as to how sharing knowledge can enhance organizational
performance, and the reaching of a consensus among the senior management
of the organization that the course of action involved in sharing knowledge
will in fact be pursued. Implicit in such a process is a set of decisions
about the particular variety of knowledge management that the organization
intends to pursue, including:
The question of “what to share” includes not only the type of knowledge, but also its quality. In organizing knowledge-sharing programs, it is common to put processes in place to ensure that the content that is shared reaches a certain minimal threshold of value and reliability. Some programs make no explicit distinction between different levels of reliability of the material offered, once the initial threshold has been met, thus allowing users to reach their own conclusions as to its ultimate value. Other programs, particularly those that offer external knowledge sharing, provide explicit guidance on whether the material has been authenticated, so that users can make inferences about its reliability. Most knowledge-sharing systems also allow in varying degrees the inclusion of new and promising ideas that have not yet been authenticated and in this sense are not yet knowledge. Choices about what knowledge to share must go beyond generic prescriptions. As discussed in the previous section, knowledge-sharing programs have to cope with the issue of adapting know-how to the local context in which it is to be applied. Where the know-how is extremely robust and the local context largely predictable, this may not pose so much of a problem. But in most areas of complex activities or in areas of rapid development, know-how is typically less than fully robust, with continuous evolution, and the local context is often unpredictable; hence knowledge of the local context and local know-how become very important. Often in complex environments, problems will appear as wicked problems, in which the issue is not so much finding the answer to a defined problem, as it is one of defining the problem to which one is trying to solve. Once the problem is successfully defined, the answer may be obvious.
Since
pursuing all of these worthy objectives simultaneously may result
in a failure to achieve any of them, it will be useful to make an
explicit choice about objectives from the outset. Moreover, agreement
on objectives can help keep focus: since knowledge management
in a large organization is inevitably a long-term process involving
many people in different units of the organization, there is a tendency
for people to forget why the organization is pursuing knowledge management
in the first place, and become distracted with peripheral activities.
Finally, since knowledge management programs inevitably have a cost,
expenditures will need to be justified, and defended against those
who would prefer to spend the resources on other activities. References: Stephen Denning, The Springboard: How Storytelling Ignites Action in Knowledge-Era Organizations. Boston, London, Butterworth Heinemann, October 2000. Stephen Denning: The Leader's Guide to Storytelling (Jossey-Bass, 2005) chapter 8. |
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The
Leader's Guide to Storytelling: Mastering the Art & Discipline
of Business Narrative
Squirrel
Inc: A Fable of Leadership Through Storytelling,
Storytelling
in Organizations The
Springboard: How Storytelling Ignites Action in Knowledge-Era
Organizations Steve Denning consults and gives workshops and keynote presentations on topics that include: leadership, innovation, organizational storytelling, business storytelling, springboard storytelling, knowledge management, branding, marketing, values, communication, communities of practice, business performance, collective intelligence, tacit knowledge, business collaboration, knowledge, learning, community, performance improvement, visionary leadership, social potential, institutional community building, and internal communications. You can contact Steve at steve@stevedenning.com Copyright © 2000-2004 Stephen Denning Webmaster CR WEB CONSULTING
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