2. Knowledge Management
2
What is Knowledge Management?
“Knowledge Management is a waste of money. Organizations
spend billions of dollars in their efforts to cut a corner or two
resulting in just a fraction of savings”
Richard Sapio
CEO, Mutual Capital Alliance
(8)
4. Knowledge Management
4
What is Knowledge Management?
Common Knowledge Management Definitions
(just a few of the many)
Discipline within an organization that ensures that the intellectual
capabilities of that organization are shared, maintained and
institutionalized
The process of systematically and actively managing and
leveraging the stores of knowledge in an organization
The way a company stores, organizes and accesses internal and
external information.
Refers to an entire integrated system for accumulation,
integration, manipulation, and access of data across multiple
organizations
(9),(10)
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Knowledge Management is the explicit
and systematic management of vital
knowledge - and its associated processes
of creation, organization, diffusion, use and
exploitation.
What is Knowledge Management?
(9),(10)
6. Knowledge Management
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Knowledge Management
Tacit Knowledge Explicit Knowledge
Knowledge
Information
Data
Tacit
– This type of
knowledge exists in
people’s heads, not
articulated or
documented
Explicit
– This type of knowledge can be
» Processed by information
systems
» Codified and recorded
» Archived and protected
Knowledge Hierarchy
7. Knowledge Management
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Knowledge assets have often become more important to companies than
financial and physical assets and are often the only way for a company to
distinguish itself from its competitor & gain competitive advantage
Lost knowledge given the enormous of baby boomers that will be changing jobs
or retiring in next few years cause productivity cost of an employee leaving 85%
of their base salary due to their replacement’s mistakes, lost knowledge and
lost skill( Beazley et al, 2002)
Relate to the concept of knowledge half-life, from which it is found that
knowledge reaches obsolescence, on average, in 500 days, but can be much
quicker in some areas
- Lost knowledge obviously has a cost, estimated that $115 billion sits idle in
lost knowledge affiliated with production technologies
- An astounding example of this is the loss of the original computer source
code, written in the 1950’s, that spawned the Y2K software crisis, has cost
businesses worldwide an estimated $1 trillion (Petch, 1998)
KM Significance
(25)
8. Knowledge Management
8
People
Knowledge Teams - multi-disciplinary, cross-functional
Learning Organization - personal/team/org development
Corporate Initiatives – Chief Knowledge Officer
Systems
Knowledge Data-bases - experts, best practice
Knowledge Centers - hubs of knowledge
Technology Infrastructure - Intranets, Domino
Document Management
People and Systems
(9),(12)
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Customer Knowledge - the most vital knowledge
Knowledge in Products - ‘smarts’ add value
Knowledge in People - but people ‘walk’
Knowledge in Processes - know-how when
needed
Organizational Memory - do we know what we
know?
Knowledge in Relationships - richness and depth
Knowledge Assets - intellectual capital
Seven Levers
(9)
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Implementing and Maintaining KM
KM
Who’s Responsible?
Why Implement KM?
IT’s Role in Implementing
Maintaining KMS
Strategy for Implementing
13. Knowledge Management
Why Implement KMS?
IBM, Oracle, Cisco
– Measure intranet value at over $1 billion
BT, UK telecommunications company
– Employee ideas have saved £100 million
Sodexho’s SuperSleuth
– Cash reward for employees submitting
sales leads
– Led to over $90 million in sales volume
13(20)
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Smaller companies, who often claim that they can’t afford
to undertake KM activities, are wrong on two counts!
1.Knowledge is just as important, if not more so, to a smaller company
trying to compete in the rapidly changing global marketplace. Smaller
companies must capture, assimilate, and capitalize on every
advantage they can find, including KNOWLEDGEKNOWLEDGE
2.Smaller firms have the advantages from Culture and Organizational
structure in place that is much more conducive to implementing
knowledge management effort such as type of environment, which is
predicated more on social relationship, familiarity and trust between
employees
A little Knowledge that acts is worth more than much knowledge that isA little Knowledge that acts is worth more than much knowledge that is
idle.(Kahlil Gibran)idle.(Kahlil Gibran)
Common Misconceptions
(25)
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Role of IT in Implementation
“The biggest contributor to this brilliant growth of the
knowledge management system is information technology.”
Lee et al. also say, “...there are negative perspectives about
information technology.”
According to a managing partner at a KM consultancy firm
based in New York, “The biggest misconception that IT
leaders make is that knowledge management is about
technology...Usually people begin a KM project by focusing
on the technology...But the key is people...”
(15),(16)
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Strategy for Implementing KM
Informational
– Info fatigue
– Infofamine
– Infoglut
» According to Lee et al,
“...users do not know
how to utilize effectively
the vast pool of
information.”
(16),(19)
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Maintaining KM Systems
Provide Adequate Access
– Intranets
– Classes
Psychological Barriers
– Ook Lee study
» 103 questionnaires from Korean KMS users
» 93 respondents were reluctant to say that a knowledge
management piece was not valid
(17)
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Maintaining KM Systems
Use it or lose it
– Cook compares KMS to draining battery
Share knowledge
– Knowledge is individual power, not group power
Removing knowledge “constipation”
– Crowded closet
(13)
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Maintaining KM Systems
Incentives
– Financial
– Big Idea
– Pub Money
Organizational Sociology
– Know your audience
Be flexible
– “No single recipe” for success
(13)
28. Knowledge Management
Cultural Factors Impacting knowledge Management
Internationalization creates a need to know
how peoples in different countries to apply
knowledge management.
People from the United States and China
have a distinctive prevailing decision style that
reflects differences in cultural values
28(4)
30. Knowledge Management
American Chinese
Extroverted, encouraged to express
and to show feelings
Introverted , not encouraged to show
emotions,
Emphasis is placed on the individual
and independence. Society is a
collection of individuals
Emphasis is placed on the society and
the role of the person in the social fabric
Rules and Regulations are written broad
but what is written is enforced very
strictly
Rules and Regulations are written very
strictly but enforcement is selective
The difference of American and Chinese in personal character
30(2), (3)
31. Knowledge Management
The different ways in deal with gift
Presents are
usually
opened in
front of the
giver
Presents
are usually
opened in
private
31
32. Knowledge Management
The difference of U.S. and CHINA in Knowledge management
U.S. CHINA
View of
knowledge
Explicit and measurable Largely tacit and contextual
Key
assumption
Knowledge is mostly
objective and can be made
explicit
Knowledge includes both objective and
subjective element
Knowledge
management
role
Knowledge workers
capture, codify , and share
knowledge from experience
Senior manager are responsible for
knowledge management
Communicati
on process
collection, distribution,
reuse, and measurement of
existing codified knowledge
and information in whole
organize
One-way flow of information (from
superior to subordinate) and by
guanxi net
32(5)
33. Knowledge Management
“guanxi” in China
Social ties -- interaction frequency, degree of
intimacy and trust
It’s not what you know, it’s who you know.
Business guanxi (personal relationships in
Chinese market)
Government guanxi (personal relationships
with government officials in different levels
and bureaus).
33(5)
35. Knowledge Management
In the international work group, people need to know
how to combine different knowledge into an integral
whole. To achieve this goal we should understand
the knowledge creation process
35(5)
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PwC: The PricewaterhouseCoopers Law Firm & Law Department Service Group
The World’s largest professional service organization:
Service and Help general counsel and law firm executive management solve
complex business problems
Measurably enhance their ability to build sustainable shareholder value
Manage Risk
Improve quality and performance by providing services based on quality and
integrity
PwC includes the member firms of PricewaterhouseCoopers International Ltd.,
PricewaterhouseCoopers
(21)
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Helping corporate law departments and their outside counsel
reduce their research costs and efficiently manage their legal
knowledge for nearly 25 years
Remain the nation’s premier provider of outsourced legal
research, KM, and compliance e-training services
Culturally committed to operational excellence
Customer intimacy and product/service innovation
LRC: Legal Research Center
(21),(22)
40. Knowledge Management
The Study
In 2003, Florida Legal Technology Institute Study
Reviewed the marriage between PwC and LRC,
catalog the advantages of KM in PwC law firms and
departments
KM Study with 348 legal professionals around the
world (law departments and outside law firms)
+ =
40
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PwC and LRC KM Study Results Announced
70% of law firm respondents and 63% of Law Dept. respondents reported
having KMS in place indicated that they use KMS either “frequently” or “all
the time”
The survey indicated that their KM program either meets or exceeds their
targeted ROI
85% of the law firms
78% of the law dept.
The Avg. budget to support KM initiative was reported at 4.7% of the total
legal spend.
Quality, speed and cost containment are what a majority of legal
professionals are seeking from their KM solution providers.
The most common standards to measure the value of KM programs are
productivity enhancement and cost reduction.
(21),(22)
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Legal professionals are increasingly cognizant of the value of KMS that
retrieve information from multiple sources and locations. 82% said they
would be more efficient if their KM solution could access legal knowledge
in multiple formats from multiple resources.
The majority of legal professionals surveyed believe that research
redundancy, the reduction of which is a key goal of KM, is caused by lack
of communication inside the firm or law dept., and by the lack of incentives
to motivate knowledge reuse and eliminate redundant research
“With the ever – increasing volume and types of information available, KM isWith the ever – increasing volume and types of information available, KM is
more critical than ever. This study provides compelling data on the valuemore critical than ever. This study provides compelling data on the value
and important of KMS. KM is an essential ingredient for efficient andand important of KMS. KM is an essential ingredient for efficient and
effective delivery and management of legal services.”effective delivery and management of legal services.” (Jonathan Bellis)
(21),(24)
PwC and LRC KM Study Results Announced (cont.)
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Charles Lucier, Chief Knowledge Officer at International
management and technology consulting firm said up to
84% of all KM programs fail.
A global bank spanning 70 countries abandoned their KMS
before it was ever rolled out.
A European manufacturing company successfully implemented
a KMS, but it was rarely used.
A pharmaceutical company implemented a KMS that could not
be easily adapted to specific context of each work group
(21), (26)
When Knowledge adds up to nothing
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Many companies find that their departments have different takes on
what the project means or what it is trying to achieve
Many KM program leaders are ignorant when it comes to the
“complexity of these micro-political processes”
Even though some firms are implementing KM programs with support
from senior management, it can still fail as a result of lack of support
Some organizations do not achieve adequate ROI from KM as they
are failing to measure effectively
Many companies professed to suffer from “information overload” and
a shortage of time with which to both share and utilize knowledge
Many firms rely too heavily on consultants who position themselves
in highly influential positions within the organization
Many initiatives fails as they only enjoy superficial support from the
top management
(21)
Why Knowledge Can add up to nothing --
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Evidence shows that, despite the potential pitfalls and seemingly high failure
rate, companies are still willing to invest in KM. Why? Because there are big
benefits there for taking.
The results of several surveys met:
87% of European business directors believe they could enhance their
company’s competitiveness with improved KM and 76% believe Building +
Sharing Knowledge is important for their company.
Study of 500 firms conducted by KPMG illustrated 80% of senior executives feel
that KM is strategic to their organization and 78% feel they have missed business
opportunities.
Hoffmann-Roche, the Swiss pharmaceutical firm, has estimated that it saves over
$1 million per day due to its KM activities
BP Amoco attributed $260 million in bottom-line savings to a KM program
(23)
Knowledge Management Success
46. Knowledge Management
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Energy firm Schlumberger Ltd. reported an estimated 668% ROI on a $72 million
investment in KM over a period of six years
Chevron Corporation estimates that it saved an initial $150 million, plus at least
another $20 million annually by instituting a best practices program
Teltech Communications, a firm that specializes in aiding companies to implement
knowledge management programs, reports that its clients enjoy an average ROI of
12:1 for their efforts
In a survey carried out by Information Week , IT executives said they considered
KM a strategic initiative of high importance, and KM spend is to climb at 62% of the
IT institutions surveyed
Hewlett-Packard’s knowledge efforts aimed at customer service have reduced
average call times by two-thirds and the cost per call has fallen by 50 percent
(21),(23),(25)
Knowledge Management Success (Cont.)
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Keys to successful KM
As is the case with many new practices in workplace:
Getting employees on board from day one and making sure they realize
exactly how KM program is to impact on their routines and bring benefits
for the organization as a whole is pivotal
Make sure KM becomes a fundamental aspect of the way you do business
Be sure your KM implementation is less about reporting and more about
sharing knowledge
“Knowledge is a company asset, hidden, until the knowledge worker releases it.
The key to generating the best returns from your KM Program is to implement a
well-planned methodology and ensure that your organization facilitates this release
of information.”
-Mike Bagshaw, Development Director at Trans4mation Training Ltd,
(24)
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“It is the Army’s goal to deliver critical capabilities to the
warfighter, and oversee the development of a knowledge-
based workforce”
LTC William Nelson
Deputy Director GA & CKO
(Governance, Acquisition and Chief Knowledge Office)
Army Office of CIO/G-6
Army Knowledge Management
(7)
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Army Knowledge Management
Development of Army IM/IT and KM
Coordination between Combatant Commands and
Joint Staff, components and agencies, etc…
Serves as the focal point for management and
integration with IM/IT
Oversees the acquisition of IM/IT and KM
solutions
(7)
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KM is a Journey, not a destination.KM is a Journey, not a destination.
(Warick Holder)
Knowledge resides in the users and not in the collection.Knowledge resides in the users and not in the collection.
(Y. Maholtra)
Successful knowledge transfer involves neitherSuccessful knowledge transfer involves neither computerscomputers nornor
documentsdocuments but ratherbut rather interactionsinteractions betweenbetween peoplepeople!!!!
(Mason & Mitroff; 1973)
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Summary
Key Concepts of KM
– Explicit Knowledge
– Tacit Knowledge
Implementation, Maintenance
China
KM cases, advantages and disadvantages
Army KM
53
55. Knowledge Management
Sources
(1) Communications of the ACM ,Volume 48, Number 4 (2005), Pages 73-76 ,Knowledge management in China, Glen R.
Burrows, Damon L. Drummond, Maris G. Martinsons
(2) KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT OF HIGH-TECH FIRMS
Chung-Ming Lau, Yuan Lu and Shige Makino;The Chinese University of Hong Kong
(3) Xiaohong Chen ;State Development Research Center, PRC ;Ryh-Song Yeh ,Peking University
SOURCE: http://unpan1.un.org/intradoc/groups/public/documents/APCITY/UNPAN020318.pdf
(4) Inkpen, A.C. 2000. Learning through joint ventures: A framework of knowledge acquisition. Journal of Management
Studies, 37: 1019-1043.
(5) Hoskisson, R.E., Eden, L., Lau, C. M., & Wright, M. 2000. Enterprise strategies in emerging economies. Academy of
Management Journal, 43: 249-267.
(6) Army Regulation 25-1 “Army Information Management”
(7) LTC William Nelson, Deputy Director GA&CKO, Office of Army G6, interviewed by phone by Dave Owens,
15 October 2007.
(8) Richard Sapio, CEO of Mutual Capital Alliance, interviewed in person by Dave Owens, 22 September 2007
(9) Skyrme, David J, “Developing a Knowledge Strategy” STRATEGY, January 1998,
http://www.skyrme.com/pubs/knwstrat.htm
(10) Corral, Sheila, “Are We in the Knowledge Management Business?” ARIADNE, February 1999,
http://ariadne.ac.uk/issue18/knowledgemgt/
56. Knowledge Management
Sources
(11) KNOVA, “10 Principles for Knowledge Management Success”, Gartner INC., April 2003
(12) Ferran-Urdaneta, Carlos, “Organizational Structures for Knowledge Management”, Boston University Systems
Research Center, 1999
(13) Cook, P. (1999). I heard it through the grapevine: making knowledge management work by learning to share
knowledge, skills and experience. Industrial and Commercial Training , 31 (3), 101-105.
(14) Gottschalk, P., & Holgersson, S. (2006). Stages of knowledge management technology in the value shop: the case
of police investigation performance. Expert Systems , 23 (4), 183-193.
(15) Kulkarni, U. R., Ravindran, S., & Freeze, R. (2006). A Knowledge Management Success Model: Theoretical
Development and Empirical Validation. Journal of Management Information Systems , 23 (3), 309-347.
(16) Lee, H.-S., Chae, Y.-I., & Suh, Y.-H. (2004). Knowledge Conversion and Practical Use with Information Technology
in Korean Companies. Total Quality Management , 15 (3), 279-294.
(17) Lee, O. (2006). Psychological Barriers to Maintaining Knowledge Management Systems. CyberPsychology &
Behavior , 9 (3), 367-368.
(18) Moffett, S., & McAdam, R. (2006). The Effects of Organizational Size on Knowledge Management Implementation:
Opportunities for Small Firms? Total Quality Management , 17 (2), 221-241.
57. Knowledge Management
Sources
(19) Moffett, S., McAdam, R., & Parkinson, S. (2003). Technology and people factors in knowledge management: an
empirical analysis. Total Quality Management , 14 (2), 215-224.
(20) Ward, T. (2007). Does Your Intranet Pay Its Way? SCM , 11 (2), 10.
(21) “When knowledge adds up to nothing: Why knowledge management fails and what you can do about it”, Journal
of Development and Learning in Organizations (2003), Vol. 17 Issue:1 Page: 32-35
(22) News & Legal Editors from Legal Research Center KM Study (2003) “Legal Knowledge Management Improves
Quality and Speed of Service, Reduces Costs and Delivers High ROI, According to Landmark
PricewaterhouseCoopers”, Business Wire, June 9, 2003.
(23) Braganza, A., Mollenkramer, G.J. (2002), “Anatomy of a failed knowledge management initiative: lessons from
PharmaCorp’s experience”, Knowledge and Process Management (UK), Vol. 9 No.1,.
(24) Storey, J., Barnett, E. (2000), “Knowledge management initiatives: learning from failure” Journal of Knowledge
Management, Vol.4 No.2, .
(25) Yeldon, Eugene F., Synrad INC, Albers, James A., Pacific Lutheran University, Journal of Knowledge Management
Practice, The Business Case for Knowledge Management, August 2004
(26) Chua, A., & Lam, W. (2005). Why KM projects fail: a multi-case analysis . Journal of Knowledge Management , 9 (3),
6-17.