This is a generic presentation outlining rationale, success factors and 9 practical steps for developing a corporate knowledge management strategy, based on the example of the United Nations Development Programme.
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UNDP Presentation: How to Develop a Successful KM Strategy
1. How to develop a successful
KM strategy
Johannes Schunter
Policy Specialist, Knowledge Services
United Nations Development Programme, New York
2. 2How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
The UN Development Programme
• 7,500 staff members in 150 countries
• “UNDP focuses on helping countries build and share solutions in
Sustainable development, Democratic Governance and
Peacebuilding, and Climate and Disaster Resilience”
• KM programme since 1999
• First corporate KM Road Map in 2004 (20% funded)
• Second corporate KM Road Map in 2007 (20% funded)
• First official KM Strategy 2009-2011 (100% funded)
• New KM Strategy 2014-2017 (80% funded)
3. 3How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
„Knowledge Management is like herding cats“
4. 4How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
Learning Objectives
A. Why a KM strategy, and which road to choose
B. How to go about developing a KM strategy
C. How to determine success of your KM strategy
5. 5How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
Learning Objectives
A. Why a KM strategy, and which road to choose
6. 6How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
What is a strategy?
A strategy is an informed, measurable decision about the direction
you wish to take, and the measures you will pursue to get there.
You define a goal, a destination or end state, and the strategy
describes how you will achieve it.
7. 7How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
A KM strategy
KM Strategy
• Formulated Strategy Document
• Defines destination for KM in
your organization
• Determines steps for getting
there
• Strong KM branding
• Promotion
• Plan for and allocate budget
and capacity
Who of you are
working in an
organization who has
such a KM strategy?
8. 8How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
5 reasons to develop a KM strategy
• Overall guidance, direction, and filter for decision making
• Legitimacy through management approval of strategy
• Legitimacy through staff involvement in strategy development
• Clarification of roles and responsibilities, strengthening position
of KM actors
• Easier to benchmark and measure KM efforts
9. 9How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
5 reasons NOT to develop a KM strategy
• Proposing a big KM strategy implies a big budget
• Some things are easier to achieve when you are working under the
radar (“Stealth KM”)
• Proposing a big KM strategy will create change resistance
• Having a KM Strategy creates expectations that you cannot
possibly fulfil
• Having a KM Strategy in place makes you less flexible to react to
emerging needs
10. 10How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
KM strategy vs. Stealth KM
KM Strategy Stealth KM
• Formulated Strategy Document
• Defines destination for KM in
your organization
• Determines steps for getting
there
• Strong KM branding
• Promotion
• Plan for and allocate budget
and capacity
• Do KM without calling it that
• No formal corporate strategy
document
• Use available budget and
capacity
• Identify opportunities for small,
low-budget catalytic initiatives
• Collect good examples and
stories to demonstrate the value
of KM and scale up
11. 11How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
When to go for a Stealth KM approach
• When the term knowledge management is ‘burnt’ in your
organization
• When there are no senior management sponsor/champions for a
KM strategy
• When you are not ready to raise too many expectations (because
you’re new to the job, because of lacking capacity, or internal
politics)
• When a strategy would be unlikely to be funded
• When there are existing strategies or initiatives that you can build
on and improve, rather than creating new initiatives
• When there is goodwill and energy among individual staff to
experiment and try out new things
• When there are no corporate performance measures that hold the
organization accountable for KM outcomes
12. 12
A. Why a KM strategy, and which road to choose
B. How to go about developing a KM strategy
(in 9 steps)
How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
Learning Objectives
13. 13How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 1: Establish the KM Imperative
• What is the organization’s core mandate?
• What kind of organization does it want to be?
• Where does it want to be in 2, 5, 10 years?
• What kind of products, services and employees do we need
to fulfil our mission?
What is KM’s role in that?
Why do you need KM for that?
How does our KM have to
look like to support that?
14. 14How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 2: KM needs assessment
• Existing processes for
Identifying knowledge content and people
Discussing and exchanging knowledge
Aggregating, consolidating, sharing and promoting knowledge content
Learning and applying knowledge
• Knowledge mapping of
Actors, networks, partners, focal points
Past and planned knowledge
products and services
15. 15How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 2: KM needs assessment
• Focus Group Discussions and Interviews to identify
Understand their knowledge-related challenges and needs around
specific key areas of work
• Online Survey to assess
Satisfaction with existing services, products and tools
Understand challenges and needs of staff
• Assessment of IT Infrastructure
Needs/gaps analysis for online
content management,
document storage, internal
communication, collaboration
and knowledge networking
16. 16How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 2: KM needs assessment
Start working on buy-in now!
•With managers: Make the issues visible
•With staff: Listen to concerns and understand obstacles
•With KM staff: Take into account their experience
•With partners: Show you are pursuing a KM agenda
17. 17How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 3: Identify the KM challenges
“Where does it hurt the most?”
The case of UNDP
a)“It is difficult to reliably find a universal compendium of UNDP’s activities and
projects”
b)“Open knowledge sharing is not institutionalized as a natural exercise”
c)“The current process of knowledge product development and dissemination
does not yield the quality, reach and impact that’s needed”
d)“Thematic silos prevent cross-practice sharing”
e)“There is lacking reward for the sharing of knowledge and for support to
colleagues in other units”
f)“Internal hierarchies and politics favor private knowledge sharing”
g)“UNDP needs to do more to tap the knowledge of its external audiences and
beneficiaries”
h)“The potential of KM for identification and management of talent and expertise
is underutilized”
18. 18How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 4: Define the ideal KM state
For your organization, what would the promised land
of KM look like?
19. 19How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 4: Define the ideal KM state
The case of UNDP
1.“UNDP’s k-products are relevant, of high quality, and widely accessed”
2.“UNDP’s knowledge services are easily accessible, of high quality, and in sustained
demand”
3.“Members have easy access to knowledge and information they need, and find what
they are looking for quickly”
4.“UNDP’s knowledge processes, services, products, and experts contribute to
informing and influencing our policy, partners’ policies and public knowledge”
5.“UNDP acts as convener and facilitator of policy dialogue and knowledge “
6.“Lessons from projects and programmes are captured and used to improve the
design and quality of new projects and programmes”
7.“Staff members are well connected across the organization, interact frequently and
work collaboratively”
8.“KM is integrated in UNDP HR procedures and performance systems”
20. 20How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
Your KM focus
Nick Milton and Stephanie Barnes:
• Operational excellence focus: Improve internal practices and
processes so that the org operates better/faster/cheaper/safer/etc.
• Customer knowledge focus: Improve delivery of knowledge to the
people who work with your customers on a day-to-day basis to
improve services
• Innovation focus: Generate new knowledge in order to create new
products and services
• Growth and change focus: Replicate existing success in new
markets or with new staff by learning from lessons learned and
scaling up good practices
[KM World Magazine, 2015, Issue 4]
21. 21How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 4: Define the ideal KM state
The case of Hewlett-Packard Consulting
1.“Our staff feel and act as if they have the knowledge of the entire organization at their fingertips when they consult
with customers”
2.“Our staff know exactly where to go to find information”
3.“Our staff are eager to share knowledge as well as leverage other’s experience in order to deliver more value to
customers”
4.“We will recognize staff that share and those that leverage other’s knowledge and experience as the most valuable
members of the HP consulting team”
[KM Institute Washington D.C.]
Customer knowledge focus
22. 22How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 5: Telling a story with your
KM strategy
• What will your KM enable the organization to do that it couldn’t before,
and why?
• What will it allow staff to do better than before, and why?
Theory of Change
Based on assumptions about our organization and the
environment it finds itself in, it explains how we expect that our
KM activities will affect change, and how that change will help
the organization fulfil its mission.
23. 23How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 5: Telling a story with your
KM strategy
UNDP’s Theory of Change for KM
Public development discourse and
partners’ actions are informed and
influenced by UNDP’s knowledge
products, services, experts, and
leadership
UNDP is a more open organization,
engaged in networking, knowledge
exchanges and collaboration with
development partners
UNDP programmes and projects
create and leverage knowledge to
improve their performance
Knowledge management and
learning are made part of UNDP
culture, behaviors & performance
K-products are relevant, of high quality, and widely accessed
K-services are easily accessible, of high quality, and in demand
K-processes, services, products, and experts contribute to
informing and influencing policy, partners and public opinion
UNDP acts as convener and facilitator of policy dialogue and
knowledge exchanges which otherwise would not take place
External k-exchanges generate partnerships and opportunities
Lessons from projects and programmes are captured and used to
improve design and quality of new projects and programmes
UNDP staff members are well connected across the organization,
interact frequently and work collaboratively
Staff members have easy access to knowledge and information
they need, and find what they are looking for quickly
KM is integrated in UNDP HR procedures and performance
systems
• KM Initiative 1
• KM Initiative 2
• KM Initiative 3
• KM Initiative 4
• KM Initiative 5
• KM Initiative 6
• KM Initiative 7
• KM Initiative 8
• KM Initiative 9
• KM Initiative 10
• KM Initiative 11
• KM Initiative 12
• KM Initiative 13
• KM Initiative 14
Activities/Outputs Immediate Outcomes Long-term Outcomes
24. 24How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 6: Linking the story of your
KM strategy with corporate objectives
• Scan your multi-year strategy, your annual business plan, your key
units’ work plans, etc. and reference where and how your ideal KM
state will add value
• Quote from the board papers, corporate strategy paper, media
announcements and from speeches/statements of the CEO, board
members, senior managers and partners
Use the links and references to demonstrate the
relevance of your KM strategy to get buy-in
25. 25How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 7: Design your KM initiatives
Can you find the common pattern?
•APQC: “Critical success factors for continuing the KM journey include […]
developing an evolutionary process, not a ‘big bang’ approach”
•NHS UK: “Whether you choose to create a formal knowledge management
strategy or not, a large-scale, high-cost, ‘big bang’ roll-out is not recommended”
•Oracle: “Avoid ‘big bang’ implementation in favor of a phased approach”
•Kana: “An effective implementation strategy requires […] a realistic roll-out plan
that eliminates the risks of a ‘big bang’ implementation approach”
•Askmecorp.com: “'Grandiose' KM projects that
take more than nine months to implement and
deliver business value are considered to be
extremely risky and end up being the
excellent candidate for dissolution.
The Big Bang approach as a part
of a KM strategy spells trouble.”
26. 26How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 7: Design your KM initiatives
• Avoid a big bang approach, instead go for “squirrels”
(KM Institute Washington): Agile small initiatives that fill niches to
address a specific need
• Try out different approaches, create prototype initiatives, test and learn,
then repeat
• Scale up those initiatives that prove valuable
27. 27How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 7: Design your KM initiatives
• For pointers to different KM methodologies and tools check out the
Knowledge Sharing Toolkit at http://www.kstoolkit.org
28. 28How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 8: Broad Consultation
• Time to present your draft strategy document to a wider audience:
Senior management
Staff
Beneficiaries/Clients/Partners
Peer KM staff in other organizations
30. 30How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
Learning Objectives
A. How to go about developing a KM strategy
B. How to determine success of your KM strategy
C. How to determine success of your KM strategy
31. 31How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 9: Establish a Performance
Measurement Framework
Why are we measuring our strategy?
• At the output level, to understand which elements/activities of our
KM strategy are working, which aren’t, and how to improve them
• At the immediate outcome level, to monitor existing and ongoing
pain points regarding KM, understand how well the organization is
doing in KM, and where to focus further efforts
• At the long-term outcome level,
to be able to demonstrate to management
and donors KM value/impact
and return on investment
32. 32How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 9: Establish a Performance
Measurement Framework
UNDP’s Theory of Change for KM
Public development discourse and
partners’ actions are informed and
influenced by UNDP’s knowledge
products, services, experts, and
leadership
UNDP is a more open organization,
engaged in networking, knowledge
exchanges and collaboration with
development partners
UNDP programmes and projects
create and leverage knowledge to
improve their performance
Knowledge management and
learning are made part of UNDP
culture, behaviors & performance
K-products are relevant, of high quality, and widely accessed
K-services are easily accessible, of high quality, and in demand
K-processes, services, products, and experts contribute to
informing and influencing policy, partners and public opinion
UNDP acts as convener and facilitator of policy dialogue and
knowledge exchanges which otherwise would not take place
External k-exchanges generate partnerships and opportunities
Lessons from projects and programmes are captured and used to
improve design and quality of new projects and programmes
UNDP staff members are well connected across the organization,
interact frequently and work collaboratively
Staff members have easy access to knowledge and information
they need, and find what they are looking for quickly
KM is integrated in UNDP HR procedures and performance
systems
• KM Initiative 1
• KM Initiative 2
• KM Initiative 3
• KM Initiative 4
• KM Initiative 5
• KM Initiative 6
• KM Initiative 7
• KM Initiative 8
• KM Initiative 9
• KM Initiative 10
• KM Initiative 11
• KM Initiative 12
• KM Initiative 13
• KM Initiative 14
Activities/Outputs Immediate Outcomes Intermediate Outcomes
33. 33How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 9: Establish a Performance
Measurement Framework
Output level:
•Collecting data on activities/outputs (e.g. #of k-products produced, #of trainings held,
# of workshop participants, # of staff exchanges, # of roster entries, web hits,
downloads, discussion comments, likes, shares)
Immediate Outcome level:
•Staff perception surveys (e.g. satisfaction with Communities of Practice or onboarding
procedures, percentage of staff who they think documents are easy to find, etc.)
•Client feedback surveys (e.g. satisfaction with quality and relevance of knowledge
products or advisory services, rating of products, etc.)
34. 34How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 9: Establish a Performance
Measurement Framework
Long-term Outcome level:
•Collecting data on uptake/results (e.g. # of new partnerships following an event, # of
citations of UNDP products in government documents, # of backlinks to a UNDP project
website, percentage of staff retention, strength of social networking links between
business units)
•Impact stories (e.g. how client used a k-product to effect change, how a tool helped staff
achieve a goal, how an event helped advance agenda)
•Correlation analysis (e.g. correlation between use of corporate tool and achievement of
results, or number of knowledge products in a country and perception of UNDP as a good
partner in that country)
35. 35How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
STEP 9: Establish a Performance
Measurement Framework
Report on your results
•Annual KM report
•Communicate impact stories
•Talk about successes (webinars, e-discussions, posters)
•Be honest about failures (they are there to learn from them)
•Adjust your goals if they turn out to be too unrealistic
36. 36How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
Learning Objectives
A. Why a KM strategy, and which road to choose
B. How to go about developing a KM strategy
C. How to determine success of your KM strategy
37. 37How to develop a successful KM strategy
A. Why a KM strategy and
which road to choose
• Guidance, direction, and filter for decision making
• Legitimacy
• Clarification of roles and responsibilities
• Benchmark and measuring
Decide whether an official KM strategy is right for you
vs. a stealth KM approach
38. 38How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
B. How to go about developing a
KM strategy (in 9 steps)
• STEP 1: Establish the KM Imperative
• STEP 2: Do a KM needs assessment
• STEP 3: Identify the KM challenges
• STEP 4: Define the ideal KM state
• STEP 5: Tell a story with your KM strategy (Theory of Change)
• STEP 6: Linking the KM strategy with corporate objectives
• STEP 7: Design your KM initiatives
• STEP 8: Conduct a broad consultation
• STEP 9: Establish a Performance Measurement Framework
39. 39How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
C. How to determine success of your
KM strategy
1. Collecting data on activities/outputs
2. Staff perception surveys
3. Client feedback surveys
4. Collecting data on uptake/results
5. Impact stories
6. Correlation analysis
40. 40How to develop an (un)successful KM strategy
Final Comments
1. Relentlessly communicate your KM strategy
2. Control the KM narrative in your organization
(by generating hard evidence and debunking rumors)
3. Avoid the myth of the one overarching KM system
(remember the “squirrels”)