This document presents a theoretical framework for analyzing organizational learning developed by Argote and Miron-Spektor. The framework theorizes that organizational experience interacts with organizational context to create knowledge. It discusses key components of the framework including experience, context, knowledge, and organizational learning processes. Factors that affect knowledge retention and transfer are also reviewed.
This document provides an overview of organizational learning. It discusses key concepts in the field such as organizational knowledge, learning processes, and outcomes. Theories of organizational learning attempt to understand how organizational knowledge changes through processes that lead to learning or prevent it, and how learning affects behaviors and outcomes. Current approaches emphasize organizational routines as repositories of knowledge and conceptualize learning as the creation and updating of routines in response to experiences. A dominant notion is that organizational learning is driven by learning processes that facilitate, impede, or direct changes in organizational knowledge. The document reviews the origins and development of organizational learning theory.
This document summarizes research on learning organizations and organizational commitment. It discusses key concepts such as how learning organizations acquire new knowledge and share information to solve problems. It also defines organizational commitment as believing in an organization's values and goals and wanting to continue working there. The document then examines the relationship between learning organization perceptions and organizational commitment. Research has found higher levels of commitment in employees who perceive their workplace as a learning organization. The summarized study aims to compare these factors between faculty at private and public universities.
Dr. Nina Aversano earned her doctorate in management from Case Western Reserve University and teaches courses on international business management and organizational behavior as an assistant professor at the College of Mount Saint Vincent in New York. Some key organizational behavior theories that help groups work more efficiently include scientific leadership, which uses time and motion studies to optimize job methods and timeframes, cognitive theories that acknowledge a changing social environment, and the systems approach which considers inputs, outputs, and processes with a feedback loop for modifications.
Organisational Development Paper Sascha MichelSascha Michel
The document discusses early organizational development theories proposed by Kurt Lewin and how they impact organizations today. [1] Lewin proposed a three stage model of change - unfreezing, moving, and refreezing - but this model assumes organizations can stabilize, ignoring that they must continuously change and adapt. [2] Organizational development focuses on behavioral interventions but has limitations for strategic planning and systems-level change. [3] Contemporary views integrate behavioral and systemic elements, proposing organizations continuously learn and develop like "learning organizations".
This document summarizes several organizational theories and concepts. It discusses scientific management and human relations approaches from the early 20th century. It also outlines Max Weber's theory of bureaucracy and current trends incorporating new technologies. Key concepts on individual behavior, motivation theories, group dynamics, decision-making models, conflict management, and power/authority are defined. Theories from Maslow, Herzberg, McClelland, Vroom/Yetton, Simon/March/Cyert, and Kilmann on these topics are summarized.
History of Organizational Development - Organizational Change and Developmen...manumelwin
Kurt Lewin (1898–1947) is widely recognized as the founding father of OD, although he died before the concept became current in the mid-1950s.
From Lewin came the ideas of group dynamics and action research which underpin the basic OD process as well as providing its collaborative consultant/client ethos.
The document summarizes the history and development of Organization Development (OD) through four main trunks or stems: (1) laboratory training stem including T-groups and workshops, (2) survey research and feedback stem involving techniques like surveys, (3) action research stem being collaborative client-consultant inquiry, and (4) socio-technical and socio-clinical stem examining work groups and tasks. It then discusses areas of increased focus in second generation OD like organizational transformation, culture, learning organizations, teams, and visioning.
This document provides an overview of organizational learning. It discusses key concepts in the field such as organizational knowledge, learning processes, and outcomes. Theories of organizational learning attempt to understand how organizational knowledge changes through processes that lead to learning or prevent it, and how learning affects behaviors and outcomes. Current approaches emphasize organizational routines as repositories of knowledge and conceptualize learning as the creation and updating of routines in response to experiences. A dominant notion is that organizational learning is driven by learning processes that facilitate, impede, or direct changes in organizational knowledge. The document reviews the origins and development of organizational learning theory.
This document summarizes research on learning organizations and organizational commitment. It discusses key concepts such as how learning organizations acquire new knowledge and share information to solve problems. It also defines organizational commitment as believing in an organization's values and goals and wanting to continue working there. The document then examines the relationship between learning organization perceptions and organizational commitment. Research has found higher levels of commitment in employees who perceive their workplace as a learning organization. The summarized study aims to compare these factors between faculty at private and public universities.
Dr. Nina Aversano earned her doctorate in management from Case Western Reserve University and teaches courses on international business management and organizational behavior as an assistant professor at the College of Mount Saint Vincent in New York. Some key organizational behavior theories that help groups work more efficiently include scientific leadership, which uses time and motion studies to optimize job methods and timeframes, cognitive theories that acknowledge a changing social environment, and the systems approach which considers inputs, outputs, and processes with a feedback loop for modifications.
Organisational Development Paper Sascha MichelSascha Michel
The document discusses early organizational development theories proposed by Kurt Lewin and how they impact organizations today. [1] Lewin proposed a three stage model of change - unfreezing, moving, and refreezing - but this model assumes organizations can stabilize, ignoring that they must continuously change and adapt. [2] Organizational development focuses on behavioral interventions but has limitations for strategic planning and systems-level change. [3] Contemporary views integrate behavioral and systemic elements, proposing organizations continuously learn and develop like "learning organizations".
This document summarizes several organizational theories and concepts. It discusses scientific management and human relations approaches from the early 20th century. It also outlines Max Weber's theory of bureaucracy and current trends incorporating new technologies. Key concepts on individual behavior, motivation theories, group dynamics, decision-making models, conflict management, and power/authority are defined. Theories from Maslow, Herzberg, McClelland, Vroom/Yetton, Simon/March/Cyert, and Kilmann on these topics are summarized.
History of Organizational Development - Organizational Change and Developmen...manumelwin
Kurt Lewin (1898–1947) is widely recognized as the founding father of OD, although he died before the concept became current in the mid-1950s.
From Lewin came the ideas of group dynamics and action research which underpin the basic OD process as well as providing its collaborative consultant/client ethos.
The document summarizes the history and development of Organization Development (OD) through four main trunks or stems: (1) laboratory training stem including T-groups and workshops, (2) survey research and feedback stem involving techniques like surveys, (3) action research stem being collaborative client-consultant inquiry, and (4) socio-technical and socio-clinical stem examining work groups and tasks. It then discusses areas of increased focus in second generation OD like organizational transformation, culture, learning organizations, teams, and visioning.
This document develops a conceptual framework and hypotheses about the relationships between organizational learning, perceptions of the external environment, and innovation performance at the individual and organizational levels. It reviews literature on organizational learning and innovation performance. The review indicates that organizational learning is positively related to perceptions of an uncertain/complex external environment and to innovation performance. However, the relationship between organizational learning and innovation performance lacks empirical evidence. The framework and hypotheses aim to address this gap by examining these relationships at both the individual and organizational levels.
This study examined the relationship between learning organization characteristics and organizational performance, change adaptation, and innovation. The researchers found that open communication and information sharing, risk taking and new idea promotion, and access to information and resources needed to do one's job were the strongest predictors of rapid change adaptation, quick product introduction, and bottom-line organizational performance.
The document discusses the genesis phase of developing professional learning communities (PLCs) in a school. It outlines the principal's role in facilitating collaboration, developing collegial relationships among teachers, and focusing professional development on improving teaching and learning. The principal works to build teacher leadership and establish collaboration as the primary means of instructional improvement, staff development, and decision-making. Teachers develop trusting relationships, participate in professional development, and commit collectively to evaluating instructional practices and school programs. The goal is for collaboration and data-driven decision-making to become institutionalized in the school's culture.
Generations of planned organisational changeShelly Jose
The document discusses three generations of approaches to planned organizational change. The first generation used approaches like action research, sensitivity training, and quality of work life programs. The second generation focused on aligning organizations with their changing environments through transformations and large-scale interventions. The third generation views learning as continuous and identifies positive organizational aspects to drive change, such as with learning organizations and appreciative inquiry. The implications are that each generation manages the tensions between positive/negative focus, continuous/episodic change, and other dualities differently, and an alternative is to connect the dualities rather than separate them.
Organization Development (OD) is defined as a systematic process that applies behavioral science principles to help organizations change and improve. It emerged in the late 1940s from the fields of group dynamics and planned change theory. OD focuses on long-term, organization-wide efforts led from the top to increase effectiveness through interventions in organizational processes. Major themes of OD include planned change, a distinctive self-renewal approach, a total systems perspective, and action research. Over time, OD has been influenced by different approaches like laboratory training, action research, participative management, quality of work life programs, and a growing focus on strategic change.
classical and contemporary theory of educational administrationLayAnnMadarcos1
This short slide presentation helps you gain a deeper understanding of Classical and Contemporary Theories of Educational Administration. The content of this presentation was mostly from different authors.
The document discusses the performance evaluation context and argues that it is a formal accountability mechanism embedded within a complex social, emotional, cognitive, political, and relationship context. It reviews past research on performance evaluation that has focused on instrumentation and process issues without fully considering this broader contextual backdrop. The paper proposes a framework grounded in affective events theory and emotion cycle theory to better understand the theoretical dynamics and outcomes of performance evaluation when considering the full social, emotional, cognitive, political, and relationship context.
This study investigates the relationship between organizational culture and attitudes toward organizational change in Malaysian companies. Based on prior research, the study developed a questionnaire to assess four types of organizational culture (communal, fragmented, networked, mercenary) and three components of attitudes toward change (affective, cognitive, behavioral). The questionnaire was administered to 258 Malaysian manufacturing companies. The results showed a relationship between organizational culture and attitudes toward change, with some cultures more accepting of change than others. The implications are that understanding this relationship can help managers implement changes more effectively.
This document discusses the evolution and definition of organizational behavior (OB) as a field of study. It defines OB as the study of individuals and groups within organizations, with a focus on individual and micro-level interactions. The document outlines three dimensions that define the conceptual domain of OB: (1) an independent variable-dependent variable framework for problem-solving, (2) an orientation toward facilitating change, and (3) a humanistic concern for self-development. The document also discusses how OB has developed constructs, models, facts, and technologies to study topics like motivation, leadership, and organizational structure. Finally, it concludes that traditional distinctions between OB and related fields are blurring, suggesting a movement toward an "enacted
A Comparative Analysis of Organizational Structure and Effectiveness between ...inventionjournals
The nature of services in institutions of higher learning requires that all stakeholders play
positive roles in the sustainability of the institution’s survival and effectiveness in giving quality teaching,
research and learning. Structure and processes are core requirements for understanding organizational
effectiveness. The actual scenario in the field, however, raises concerns as to whether cases of pending work,
inefficiency, conflicts among others can be arrested by having proper structures and processes. The purpose of
the study was to assess the effect of organizational structure on organizational effectiveness, in public and
private universities in Kenya, using the case of Moi University and University of East Africa (UEA)-Baraton.
Based on the study, this paper undertakes a comparative analyisis of organizational structure and
organizational effectiveness between UEA-Baraton and Moi University and the extent to which the nature of
formalization and level of horizontal integration are antecedents to level of communication and locus of
decision-making. The study utilized a cross-sectional survey design that was descripto-explanatory in nature to
identify attributes of the study population using a small sample of individuals. Independent samples t-test was
used to test whether there was any significant difference in organizational structure and organizational
effectiveness between public and private universities. Further, the study used hierarchical regression analysis to
test the hypotheses. Based on the sample of 365 participants (300 from Moi University and 65 from UEABaraton),
the independent samples t-test confirmed that there were significant differences in organizational
structure and organizational effectiveness between public and private universities. The regression results
indicated that the locus of decision-making had positive and significant effects on productivity, stability,
resource acquisition and human resource satisfaction and development. The results highlight the need to
improve organizational structure which has positive impacts on organizational effectiveness under the
moderation of organizational processes. This move is necessitated by the accelerated pace of business
complexity today.
Open Systems Theory (OST) views organizations as open systems that are influenced by and influence their external environments through a process of mutual adaptation. An open system must actively adapt to changing values and expectations in its external environment in order to remain viable over time. OST recognizes that organizations exist within broader social, economic, political, and technological contexts and must respond to changes in these environments to succeed.
Salas et al (2008) Teams, teamwork and team performanceIgnacio Fernández
The document summarizes key discoveries and developments in team performance research over the past 50 years, as reflected in the journal Human Factors. It highlights eight major discoveries:
1) The importance of shared cognition and mental models for team performance.
2) Advances in measuring shared cognition, moving from post-task surveys to real-time embedded measures.
3) Improvements in team training methods that promote teamwork skills and coordination.
4) The use of synthetic task environments to study teams in controlled research settings.
5) Identification of factors that influence team effectiveness such as composition, leadership, and coordination.
6) Development of multilevel models of team effectiveness that integrate individual and team processes
Dr. William Allan Kritsonis earned his BA in 1969 from Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Washington. In 1971, he earned his M.Ed. from Seattle Pacific University. In 1976, he earned his PhD from the University of Iowa. In 1981, he was a Visiting Scholar at Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, and in 1987 was a Visiting Scholar at Stanford University, Palo Alto, California.
In June 2008, Dr. Kritsonis received the Doctor of Humane Letters, School of Graduate Studies from Southern Christian University. The ceremony was held at the Hilton Hotel in New Orleans, Louisiana.
“Organization Behaviour is concerned with the study of what people do in an organization and how that behaviour affects the performance of the organization.” (Robbins: 1989)
160209 change management (engels) college tbkDo Blankestijn
The document discusses planning a cultural change initiative that may occur in week 30 if everyone is on holiday. It discusses managing the planning for the change and doing the cultural change work if the timing allows in week 30. The document also mentions discussing the planning for the change initiative.
This document provides an overview of organizational theory, outlining four main schools: formal theories, human relations, organizational humanism, and modern organizational theory. It discusses key thinkers and concepts within each school, including Max Weber's bureaucracy model, Frederick Taylor's scientific management, the Hawthorne Studies, and modern systems approaches. Organizational theory examines how organizations are structured and function internally and in relation to their external environment.
Describes organizational learning as a five-stage process: individual learning, (cognition), community validation (collaboration), organizational structuring (bureaucracy), formal authorization (decision making), and changes to business processes or products (adaptation).
This document summarizes a research study that examined the relationships between organizational innovations, internal sources of knowledge, and organizational performance in Tunisian companies. The study confirmed relationships between internal knowledge sources and organizational innovation, and between internal knowledge and organizational performance. However, the study did not find a relationship between organizational innovation and organizational performance. The study was based on a survey of 200 Tunisian companies from various sectors.
Organization development (OD) aims to improve how organizations function and increase effectiveness through planned interventions using behavioral science knowledge. OD focuses on diagnosing issues, planning and implementing changes, and evaluating results through an iterative process of action research. Some common OD interventions include team building, intergroup relations training, organizational restructuring, and culture change programs.
This document provides an overview of organization development (OD). It discusses that OD is a relatively new field that emerged in the 1950s and 1960s to help organizations function better through planned interventions. The document outlines several models of OD, including Lewin's three-stage change model, Lippitt et al.'s seven stage consulting process, and Burke-Litwin's model of transactional and transformational change. It also discusses key aspects of OD like participation, teams, interventions, diagnosis, and managing the change process.
This document develops a conceptual framework and hypotheses about the relationships between organizational learning, perceptions of the external environment, and innovation performance at the individual and organizational levels. It reviews literature on organizational learning and innovation performance. The review indicates that organizational learning is positively related to perceptions of an uncertain/complex external environment and to innovation performance. However, the relationship between organizational learning and innovation performance lacks empirical evidence. The framework and hypotheses aim to address this gap by examining these relationships at both the individual and organizational levels.
This study examined the relationship between learning organization characteristics and organizational performance, change adaptation, and innovation. The researchers found that open communication and information sharing, risk taking and new idea promotion, and access to information and resources needed to do one's job were the strongest predictors of rapid change adaptation, quick product introduction, and bottom-line organizational performance.
The document discusses the genesis phase of developing professional learning communities (PLCs) in a school. It outlines the principal's role in facilitating collaboration, developing collegial relationships among teachers, and focusing professional development on improving teaching and learning. The principal works to build teacher leadership and establish collaboration as the primary means of instructional improvement, staff development, and decision-making. Teachers develop trusting relationships, participate in professional development, and commit collectively to evaluating instructional practices and school programs. The goal is for collaboration and data-driven decision-making to become institutionalized in the school's culture.
Generations of planned organisational changeShelly Jose
The document discusses three generations of approaches to planned organizational change. The first generation used approaches like action research, sensitivity training, and quality of work life programs. The second generation focused on aligning organizations with their changing environments through transformations and large-scale interventions. The third generation views learning as continuous and identifies positive organizational aspects to drive change, such as with learning organizations and appreciative inquiry. The implications are that each generation manages the tensions between positive/negative focus, continuous/episodic change, and other dualities differently, and an alternative is to connect the dualities rather than separate them.
Organization Development (OD) is defined as a systematic process that applies behavioral science principles to help organizations change and improve. It emerged in the late 1940s from the fields of group dynamics and planned change theory. OD focuses on long-term, organization-wide efforts led from the top to increase effectiveness through interventions in organizational processes. Major themes of OD include planned change, a distinctive self-renewal approach, a total systems perspective, and action research. Over time, OD has been influenced by different approaches like laboratory training, action research, participative management, quality of work life programs, and a growing focus on strategic change.
classical and contemporary theory of educational administrationLayAnnMadarcos1
This short slide presentation helps you gain a deeper understanding of Classical and Contemporary Theories of Educational Administration. The content of this presentation was mostly from different authors.
The document discusses the performance evaluation context and argues that it is a formal accountability mechanism embedded within a complex social, emotional, cognitive, political, and relationship context. It reviews past research on performance evaluation that has focused on instrumentation and process issues without fully considering this broader contextual backdrop. The paper proposes a framework grounded in affective events theory and emotion cycle theory to better understand the theoretical dynamics and outcomes of performance evaluation when considering the full social, emotional, cognitive, political, and relationship context.
This study investigates the relationship between organizational culture and attitudes toward organizational change in Malaysian companies. Based on prior research, the study developed a questionnaire to assess four types of organizational culture (communal, fragmented, networked, mercenary) and three components of attitudes toward change (affective, cognitive, behavioral). The questionnaire was administered to 258 Malaysian manufacturing companies. The results showed a relationship between organizational culture and attitudes toward change, with some cultures more accepting of change than others. The implications are that understanding this relationship can help managers implement changes more effectively.
This document discusses the evolution and definition of organizational behavior (OB) as a field of study. It defines OB as the study of individuals and groups within organizations, with a focus on individual and micro-level interactions. The document outlines three dimensions that define the conceptual domain of OB: (1) an independent variable-dependent variable framework for problem-solving, (2) an orientation toward facilitating change, and (3) a humanistic concern for self-development. The document also discusses how OB has developed constructs, models, facts, and technologies to study topics like motivation, leadership, and organizational structure. Finally, it concludes that traditional distinctions between OB and related fields are blurring, suggesting a movement toward an "enacted
A Comparative Analysis of Organizational Structure and Effectiveness between ...inventionjournals
The nature of services in institutions of higher learning requires that all stakeholders play
positive roles in the sustainability of the institution’s survival and effectiveness in giving quality teaching,
research and learning. Structure and processes are core requirements for understanding organizational
effectiveness. The actual scenario in the field, however, raises concerns as to whether cases of pending work,
inefficiency, conflicts among others can be arrested by having proper structures and processes. The purpose of
the study was to assess the effect of organizational structure on organizational effectiveness, in public and
private universities in Kenya, using the case of Moi University and University of East Africa (UEA)-Baraton.
Based on the study, this paper undertakes a comparative analyisis of organizational structure and
organizational effectiveness between UEA-Baraton and Moi University and the extent to which the nature of
formalization and level of horizontal integration are antecedents to level of communication and locus of
decision-making. The study utilized a cross-sectional survey design that was descripto-explanatory in nature to
identify attributes of the study population using a small sample of individuals. Independent samples t-test was
used to test whether there was any significant difference in organizational structure and organizational
effectiveness between public and private universities. Further, the study used hierarchical regression analysis to
test the hypotheses. Based on the sample of 365 participants (300 from Moi University and 65 from UEABaraton),
the independent samples t-test confirmed that there were significant differences in organizational
structure and organizational effectiveness between public and private universities. The regression results
indicated that the locus of decision-making had positive and significant effects on productivity, stability,
resource acquisition and human resource satisfaction and development. The results highlight the need to
improve organizational structure which has positive impacts on organizational effectiveness under the
moderation of organizational processes. This move is necessitated by the accelerated pace of business
complexity today.
Open Systems Theory (OST) views organizations as open systems that are influenced by and influence their external environments through a process of mutual adaptation. An open system must actively adapt to changing values and expectations in its external environment in order to remain viable over time. OST recognizes that organizations exist within broader social, economic, political, and technological contexts and must respond to changes in these environments to succeed.
Salas et al (2008) Teams, teamwork and team performanceIgnacio Fernández
The document summarizes key discoveries and developments in team performance research over the past 50 years, as reflected in the journal Human Factors. It highlights eight major discoveries:
1) The importance of shared cognition and mental models for team performance.
2) Advances in measuring shared cognition, moving from post-task surveys to real-time embedded measures.
3) Improvements in team training methods that promote teamwork skills and coordination.
4) The use of synthetic task environments to study teams in controlled research settings.
5) Identification of factors that influence team effectiveness such as composition, leadership, and coordination.
6) Development of multilevel models of team effectiveness that integrate individual and team processes
Dr. William Allan Kritsonis earned his BA in 1969 from Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Washington. In 1971, he earned his M.Ed. from Seattle Pacific University. In 1976, he earned his PhD from the University of Iowa. In 1981, he was a Visiting Scholar at Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, and in 1987 was a Visiting Scholar at Stanford University, Palo Alto, California.
In June 2008, Dr. Kritsonis received the Doctor of Humane Letters, School of Graduate Studies from Southern Christian University. The ceremony was held at the Hilton Hotel in New Orleans, Louisiana.
“Organization Behaviour is concerned with the study of what people do in an organization and how that behaviour affects the performance of the organization.” (Robbins: 1989)
160209 change management (engels) college tbkDo Blankestijn
The document discusses planning a cultural change initiative that may occur in week 30 if everyone is on holiday. It discusses managing the planning for the change and doing the cultural change work if the timing allows in week 30. The document also mentions discussing the planning for the change initiative.
This document provides an overview of organizational theory, outlining four main schools: formal theories, human relations, organizational humanism, and modern organizational theory. It discusses key thinkers and concepts within each school, including Max Weber's bureaucracy model, Frederick Taylor's scientific management, the Hawthorne Studies, and modern systems approaches. Organizational theory examines how organizations are structured and function internally and in relation to their external environment.
Describes organizational learning as a five-stage process: individual learning, (cognition), community validation (collaboration), organizational structuring (bureaucracy), formal authorization (decision making), and changes to business processes or products (adaptation).
This document summarizes a research study that examined the relationships between organizational innovations, internal sources of knowledge, and organizational performance in Tunisian companies. The study confirmed relationships between internal knowledge sources and organizational innovation, and between internal knowledge and organizational performance. However, the study did not find a relationship between organizational innovation and organizational performance. The study was based on a survey of 200 Tunisian companies from various sectors.
Organization development (OD) aims to improve how organizations function and increase effectiveness through planned interventions using behavioral science knowledge. OD focuses on diagnosing issues, planning and implementing changes, and evaluating results through an iterative process of action research. Some common OD interventions include team building, intergroup relations training, organizational restructuring, and culture change programs.
This document provides an overview of organization development (OD). It discusses that OD is a relatively new field that emerged in the 1950s and 1960s to help organizations function better through planned interventions. The document outlines several models of OD, including Lewin's three-stage change model, Lippitt et al.'s seven stage consulting process, and Burke-Litwin's model of transactional and transformational change. It also discusses key aspects of OD like participation, teams, interventions, diagnosis, and managing the change process.
This dissertation explores factors that impact employee performance and well-being within organizations. It aims to add empirical insights through four main objectives: 1) determine primary factors influencing performance; 2) investigate the relationship between job satisfaction and well-being; 3) examine the influence of organizational culture; and 4) evaluate employee reactions to organizational change. The study seeks to provide quantitative data and practical implications to inform management practices and enhance employee outcomes. A literature review covers key theories in organizational behavior, including classical management, human relations, and contemporary frameworks. Organizational culture and its effect on behavior will also be investigated.
This dissertation explores factors that impact employee performance and well-being within organizations. Chapter 1 introduces the topic and outlines 4 research objectives: 1) determine factors influencing employee performance; 2) investigate the relationship between job satisfaction and well-being; 3) examine how organizational culture impacts behavior and performance; and 4) evaluate employee reactions to organizational change. The study aims to provide empirical insights and practical implications for management.
BA352 Yu Sun Week 7 Observation Journal Week 7 Obs.docxwilcockiris
BA352
Yu Sun
Week 7 Observation Journal
Week 7 Observation Journal
The study was conducted in an organization that deals with computer maintenance and
software development. The organization is located in the United States. The main focus of the
study was to observe cultural taxonomies, individual’s abilities as well as the personal abilities of
these teams on organization performance. The method that was used in gathering the information
was direct observation and recording of the data. The paper will discuss in details the type of
teams that are present in the organization, their level of interdependence, how their characteristics
influence the organization performance, taskwork and teamwork in the organization, factors
influencing communication processes in the team as well as a recommendation on how to
improve team processes in the organization.
In these teams there is embeddedness, independence, hierarchy, social equality and
mastery. The embeddedness in culture utilizes the existing policies and independence among
employees is given little consideration as they report directly to their CEO. Team harmony was
also observed among the teams. The organization has a clear hierarchical system where all team
activities are outlined hence there is very little utilization of interdependence among the teams
since all the activities are dictated from above downwards although there is a degree of
innovation among the team members (Hanel, Maio and Soares). The team has a collectivist
culture with a power distant approach in which the teams accept the direction with very little
uncertainty avoidance.
The level of organization performance and commitment is directly influenced by the way
the teams carry out their given tasks. The teams carry out their tasks while utilizing the group
dynamics and hierarchical principles, which dictates that they perform their assigned duties for
the well-being of their team leader and the organization in general. The CEO is the motivating
factor for the teams. The individuals in the groups are diligent and are in agreement with all the
policies that are set out by the CEO. There is very little consideration of openness to experience
as all their duties are dictated from above. The teams are also very extrovert as tasks are carried
out through teamwork hence improving the overall organizational performance (Ownsworth and
Dwan). The organization carries out regular measures on the teams’ abilities as a performance
appraisal and this has an effect of motivating the teams to get better and even work with
motivation for the betterment of the organization.
The organization utilizes both taskwork and teamwork processes among its members. In
taskwork, individuals are given tasks or activities which they are supposed to work independently
are deliver the required results to their team. In the organization example of taskwork that are
given to the employees i.
The document provides definitions and descriptions of organization development (OD) and related concepts. It defines OD as "an effort planned, organization-wide, and managed from the top, to increase organization effectiveness and health through planned interventions in the organization's 'processes,' using behavioral-science knowledge." It also discusses different types of OD interventions such as human process interventions focused on interpersonal relationships and group dynamics, and techno-structural interventions dealing with an organization's technology and structure. The document outlines the typical process of OD including diagnosis, intervention, and evaluation steps.
European Journal of Training and DevelopmentRevisiting knowl.docxSANSKAR20
European Journal of Training and Development
Revisiting knowledge sharing from the organizational change perspective
Sunyoung Park Eun-Jee Kim
Article information:
To cite this document:
Sunyoung Park Eun-Jee Kim , (2015),"Revisiting knowledge sharing from the organizational change
perspective", European Journal of Training and Development, Vol. 39 Iss 9 pp. 769 - 797
Permanent link to this document:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/EJTD-06-2015-0042
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/EJTD-06-2015-0042
Revisiting knowledge sharing
from the organizational change
perspective
Sunyoung Park
Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA, and
Eun-Jee Kim
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST),
Daejeon, South Korea
Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this study is to identify how knowledge sharing literature has discussed
task, structure, technology and people as elements of organizational change and to examine the
interactions between the four elements of knowledge sharing.
Design/methodology/approach – The research questions guiding the study are: How do
organizational change elements influence knowledge sharing? and What are the critical elements of
organizational change in relation to knowledge sharing? Based on Leavitt’s (1965) organizational
change model, 133 articles published between 2000 and 2012 from 13 journals were reviewed and
analyzed.
Findings – The total number of articles covering task, structure, technology and people in knowledge
sharing was 49, 79, 49 and 97, respectively. Of all references, 97 articles (72 per cent) discussed the
important ...
Dr. Salvatore Falletta presented on Employee Engagement: Models, Methods & Madness to the SBODN community on Monday, September 12th 2011 at Citrix, a corporate sponsor to SBODN. Enjoy!
- SBODN Directors Jeff Richardson & Cherie Del Carlo
Adaptive Structuration Theory examines how groups interact with technology and each other to develop social structures and communication patterns. It focuses on how groups appropriate the rules and resources available to them to accomplish goals. The theory proposes 7 principles about how technology features, tasks, and social interactions shape group decisions and structures over time. It can be applied at the micro, meso, and macro levels to understand and guide group communication.
1) Action research is a method used by practitioners, such as healthcare workers and educators, to examine their own practices and solve problems in real-world situations. It involves systematic inquiry, data collection, analysis, action planning, implementation, and reflection to improve practices.
2) Key characteristics of action research include that it emerges from issues of concern to people in a social setting, has a practical focus of recognizing problems and acting to change them, is small-scale and context-specific, and involves cycles of action and reflection.
3) Benefits of action research include gaining research skills, increasing critical reflection of one's own practice, leading to professional and personal development, bringing positive changes to practices and institutions, and
Business innovation through knowledge sharing an applied study on the jordani...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a study on knowledge sharing and innovation in the Jordanian mobile
telecommunications sector. The study found that individual enjoyment in helping others and top management
support positively influence employee knowledge sharing, while individual knowledge self-efficacy and
organizational rewards do not. The study reviewed literature on knowledge sharing enablers at the individual
level, like enjoyment in helping others and self-efficacy, and at the organizational level, like top management
support and rewards systems. A questionnaire was administered to employees in Jordanian mobile companies to
examine the effects of these factors on knowledge sharing and innovation capabilities.
WHY KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM FAILED by DANIEL DONI SUNDJOJODaniel Doni
The document discusses why knowledge management systems often fail in organizations. It argues that for a KM system to be effective, an organization must first transform into a learning organization where there is a culture of learning, motivation to learn, and a willingness to challenge assumptions. The document presents research from a case study of an internet services provider that implemented a KM system alongside strategic, policy, and operational learning initiatives. The results showed that the KM system was effective because the company had transformed into a learning organization where sharing knowledge and improving was a priority.
2.[10 18]influencing organisational behaviour through the application of lear...Alexander Decker
This document discusses how organizational behavior can be influenced through the application of learning theories. It first defines key terms like organization, organizational behavior, and organizational learning. It then outlines several major factors that influence organizational behavior, including individual differences, organizational culture, information technology, organizational structure, and learning. The document argues that learning underpins organizational competitiveness and is essential for an organization's survival and success in changing business environments. It proposes that applying learning concepts can help build effective organizational learning.
MEDIATING EFFECT OF OCB ON RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN JOB ATTITUDES AND KNOWLEDGE S...IAEME Publication
This document summarizes a research paper that studied the relationship between job attitudes, organizational citizenship behavior (OCB), and knowledge sharing behavior among employees of Add Soft Technologies in Bangalore, India. The study found:
1) There was a significant relationship between employee knowledge sharing and their job attitudes. Employees with more positive job attitudes were more likely to share knowledge.
2) There was also a significant relationship between job attitudes and OCB. More positive job attitudes led to greater OCB among employees.
3) OCB had a mediating effect on the relationship between job attitudes and knowledge sharing behavior. Positive job attitudes increased OCB, which then increased knowledge sharing.
What is Organizational Behavior
The study and application of knowledge about how people, individuals, and groups act in organizations.
Its framework,history and importance to manager.
Running head GLOBALIZATION AND KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT .docxcowinhelen
Running head: GLOBALIZATION AND KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
GLOBALIZATION AND KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
GLOBALIZATION AND KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
Name
Institution
Advices:
The document needs to be well written: tone of writing, grammar, punctuation, formatting indent, paragraphs, title, sentences structure and so on.
Considering all of the changes and learning that has been accomplished in your field of study during the past two decades, what have you studied or seen as innovative or linked to the creation of new knowledge? Needs to be included in the essay.
During your course of study, you have been exposed to the areas of distance learning and virtual teams (whether working as a group or with your instructor(s) on a one-on-one basis), so you have seen innovation in terms of moving the classroom from a physical location into a virtual state. With this virtual state in mind, more and more organizations have been able to operate globally to a larger degree. Thus, the sharing of knowledge between organizations has become a valued commodity in the workplace and marketplace. Needs to be included in the essay.
Specifically, as you write your response to this question, you may want to incorporate how your current level of knowledge can be used in an innovative way to help strengthen or increase the knowledge in your field. Also, you may want to consider how your experience in distance learning has changed or not changed your views on globalization, distance learning, and/or knowledge management. Needs to be included in the essay.
Abstract
Globalization and knowledge management deals with the application of knowledge, tools and methodologies in the coordination of the complex and unique project. In accordance to the definition, project knowledge can be regarded as useful, resourceful information that enables implementation of the project concerning the objectives that is time to be taken, the execution cost and the quality of the outcome. Knowledge in organisational activities has been confirmed by researchers as fundamental for building competitive advantages of firms and business. This paper aims to document the results of the survey concerning the use of knowledge management practices in international organizations and shows that knowledge management as a helpful tool in the globalization process.
Introduction (It goes in the second page) (Each paragraph needs to be indent) (You have long paragraphs, it needs to be distributed)
Basing your information on the striping and downsizing of the organizations’ core assets in the 19th century, knowledge always surpassed the downsizing aspects. Most of the organization came into realization on the lost assets thus established a framework for managing their existing and future know-how on the assets. Progressively, the companies are focused on the establishment of explicit management in the knowledge assets and seek to leverage the experiences, know-how as well as th ...
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The chemistry of the actinide and transactinide elements (set vol.1 6)Springer
Actinium is the first member of the actinide series of elements according to its electronic configuration. Actinium closely resembles lanthanum chemically. The three most important isotopes of actinium are 227Ac, 228Ac, and 225Ac. 227Ac is a naturally occurring isotope in the uranium-actinium decay series with a half-life of 21.772 years. 228Ac is in the thorium decay series with a half-life of 6.15 hours. 225Ac is produced from 233U with applications in medicine.
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2. 32 2 Organization Learning: A Theoretical Framework
organization can acquire knowledge without a corresponding change in behavior,
researchers have defined organizational learning as a change in the range of potential
behaviors (Huber, 1991). Similarly, Pentland (1992) defined organizational knowl-
edge as the capacity of an organization to act competently. Researchers have also
measured knowledge by assessing characteristics of an organization’s products or ser-
vices (Helfat & Raubitschek, 2000) or its patent stock (Alcacer & Gittleman, 2006).
The best approach to measuring organizational learning depends on the research
question and empirical context. One limitation of current approaches to measuring
learning by assessing changes in cognitions through questionnaires and verbal proto-
cols is that these methods are not able to capture tacit or difficult-to-articulate knowl-
edge (Hodgkinson & Sparrow, 2002). Physiological and neuroimaging techniques used
to study individual learning (Keller & Just, 2009) might one day be adapted to study
organizational phenomena, including learning (Senior, Lee, & Butler, 2011). With the
exception of a few studies of dyads, these techniques are currently used on individual
participants. Researchers using cognitive approaches—whether questionnaire, verbal
protocol, or neuroimaging techniques—need to be sensitive to the distribution of cog-
nitions. For example, every member of an organization would not necessarily need to
show the same changes in cognitions for organizational learning to occur. Instead every
member would need to know that certain members had experienced a change in cogni-
tions and be able to access those members or the knowledge that they had acquired.
Approaches to assessing knowledge by measuring changes in practices or
performance capture tacit as well as explicit knowledge. When using the latter
behavioral approaches to measure learning, one has to be sensitive to control for
other factors that might affect changes in behavior. For example, changes in routines
might be driven by regulatory changes rather than experience. Changes in the speed
or quality of performance might be driven by exogenous changes such as improve-
ments in material that are not a function of the organization’s experience. Thus, it is
necessary to control for explanations of performance gains that are alternative to
experience and to show that performance improvements are a function of experi-
ence when these alternative factors are taken into account. Organizational learning
researchers taking a behavioral approach are typically not behavioral in the
Skinnerian sense of not including cognitions in their theorizing but rather are behav-
ioral in the sense of believing that changes in behavior at the organizational level are
good indicators of organizational learning.
2.3 A Theoretical Framework
Figure 2.1 depicts a framework for analyzing organizational learning (Argote &
Miron-Spektor, 2011). The figure portrays an ongoing cycle through which task
performance experience is converted into knowledge through organizational learn-
ing processes. Task performance experience interacts with the context to create
knowledge. The knowledge flows out of the organization into the environment and
also changes the organization’s context, which affects future learning.
3. 332.3 A Theoretical Framework
Experience accumulates as the organization performs its tasks. The total or cumu-
lative number of task performances is typically used as the measure of organizational
experience. For example, in a medical device assembly plant, the cumulative number
of devices produced would be a measure of the organization’s experience. In a hos-
pital surgical team, the cumulative number of surgical procedures performed would
be a measure of experience. Because organizations learn from attempts to perform
tasks that are incomplete or unsuccessful, I define experience in terms of the number
of task performances rather than the number of task completions.
Organizational learning occurs in a context (Glynn, Lant, & Milliken, 1994),
which includes the organization and the external environment in which the organi-
zation is embedded. The environmental context includes elements outside the
boundaries of the organization such as competitors, clients, educational establish-
ments, and governments. The environment can vary along many dimensions, such
as volatility, uncertainty, interconnectedness, and munificence. The environmental
context affects the experience the organization acquires. Orders for products or
requests for services enter the organization from the environment. For example, a
hospital emergency unit in one location would receive different kinds of patients
than an emergency unit in another location, which serves a community with different
characteristics. The organizational context includes characteristics of the organiza-
tion, such as its structure, culture, technology, identity, memory, goals, incentives,
Fig. 2.1 A theoretical framework for analyzing organizational learning. Reprinted by permission,
from Argote, L., and E. Miron-Spektor, 2011. Organizational learning: From experience to knowl-
edge. Organization Science, 22(5), 1123–1137. Copyright 2011, the Institute for Operations
Research and the Management Sciences, 7240 Parkway Drive, Suite 300, Hanover, MD 21076
USA
4. 34 2 Organization Learning: A Theoretical Framework
and strategy. The context also includes relationships with other organizations
through alliances, joint ventures, and memberships in associations.
The context interacts with experience to create knowledge. Ella Miron-Spektor
and I proposed differentiating the organizational context into an active context
through which learning occurs and a latent context that influences the active context
(Argote & Miron-Spektor, 2011). The active context includes the organization’s
members and tools, which interact with the organization’s task. As the name implies,
the active context is capable of taking actions to perform tasks. The latent context
affects which individuals are members of the organizations, which tools they have
and which subtasks they perform to accomplish the overall task of the organization.
The difference between the active and the latent contexts is their capability for
action. Members and tools perform tasks: they do things. By contrast, the latent
context is not capable of action.
This conceptualization of the active context builds on a theoretical framework
developed by McGrath and colleagues (Arrow, McGrath, & Berdahl, 2000; McGrath
& Argote, 2001). According to the framework, the basic elements of organizations are
members, tools and tasks, and the networks formed by crossing the basic elements.
The member–member network is the organization’s social network. The task–task
and the tool–tool networks specify the interrelationships within tasks and tools,
respectively. The member–task network, the division of labor, assigns members to
tasks. The member–tool network maps members to the tools they use. The task–tool
network identifies which tools perform which tasks. Finally, the member–task–tool
network specifies which members perform which tasks with which tools.
These elements of members, tools, and tasks and their networks are the primary
mechanisms in organizations through which organizational learning occurs and
knowledge is created, retained, and transferred. Members are the media through which
learning generally occurs in organizations. Individual members also serve as knowl-
edge repositories in organizations (Walsh & Ungson, 1991). Further, rotating mem-
bers from one organizational unit to another is a mechanism for transferring knowledge
across the units (Kane, Argote, & Levine, 2005). Tools can aid learning, for example,
by helping to identify patterns in data. Tools can be a knowledge repository. Moving
tools from one unit to another is a mechanism for transferring knowledge (Galbraith,
1990). Tasks sequences or routines can also be knowledge repositories and serve as
knowledge transfer mechanisms (Darr, Argote, & Epple, 1995).
The latent context affects the active context through which learning occurs. For
example, contexts where members trust each other (Levin & Cross, 2004) or feel
psychologically safe (Edmondson, 1999) promote organizational learning. A context
with detailed process specifications enables knowledge retention (Ton & Huckman,
2008). A context where members share a superordinate identity facilitates knowl-
edge transfer (Kane et al., 2005).
A significant amount of the organization’s knowledge is embedded in its prod-
ucts or services, which flow out of the organization into the environment (Mansfield,
1985). For example, a patient might receive a new treatment from which the medical
staff of other hospitals could learn. Or a medical devices firm might introduce a new
product that other firms are able to “reverse engineer” and imitate.
5. 352.4 Organizational Experience
In addition to flowing into the external environment, knowledge acquired by
learning is also embedded in the organization’s context and thereby changes the
context. Knowledge can be embedded in the active context of members, tools, and
tasks and their networks. Knowledge can also be embedded in aspects of the orga-
nization’s latent context such as its culture. Thus, knowledge acquired through
learning is embedded in the context and affects future learning.
The learning cycle shown in Fig. 2.1 occurs at different levels in organizations
(Crossan, Lane, & White, 1999)—individual, group, organizational, and interorga-
nizational. When analyzing learning at a particular level of analysis, the context for
that level includes the higher levels. For example, when studying group learning, the
organization in which the group is embedded is part of the group’s context.
Individual learning is a mechanism through which group and organizational
learning occurs. Individual learning, however, is not sufficient for group or organi-
zational learning. In order for learning to occur at these higher levels of analysis, the
knowledge the individual acquired would have to be embedded in a supra-individual
repository so that others can access it. For example, the knowledge the individual
acquired could be embedded in a routine (task–task network) or a transactive memory
system (member–task network).
Major components of the framework for analyzing organizational learning shown
in Fig. 2.1 are now discussed. Because organizational learning begins with experi-
ence, organizational experience is discussed first.
2.4 Organizational Experience
Because various types of experience can affect organizational learning processes and
outcomes differently, researchers have characterized experience at a fine-grained level
along various dimensions (Argote, McEvily, & Reagans, 2003). The most fundamen-
tal dimension of experience is whether it is acquired directly by the focal organiza-
tional unit or indirectly from other units (Argote, 2012). Learning from the latter type
of experience is referred to as vicarious learning (Bandura, 1977) or knowledge trans-
fer (Argote, Ingram, Levine, & Moreland, 2000), which is discussed in Chap. 6.
A unit of task experience can also be characterized in terms of its novelty, success,
ambiguity, timing, and geographic location. The cumulative amount of experience
can be characterized in terms of its heterogeneity and pace. Argote and Todorova
(2007) reviewed the effects of different types of experience on learning process and
outcomes. Major findings and recent developments are highlighted here.
2.4.1 Direct Versus Indirect Experience
Early learning curve studies investigated how organizations learn from their own
direct experience (see Yelle, 1979, for a review). Although the rate of learning has
been found to vary across organizations, considerable evidence that organizations
6. 36 2 Organization Learning: A Theoretical Framework
learn from their own direct experience has accumulated (Dutton & Thomas, 1984).
More recently, researchers have investigated how organizational units learn from
the experience of other units (Darr et al., 1995; Szulanski, 1996). This latter form of
learning is also referred to as knowledge transfer.
An important research issue is the relationship between direct and indirect
experience. Several researchers have found that direct experience and indirect expe-
rience are negatively related (Haas & Hansen, 2005; Schwab, 2007; Wong, 2004).
That is, one form of experience seems to substitute for the other. By contrast, other
researchers have found that direct and indirect experience relate positively to each
other in complementary fashion (Bresman, 2010). Understanding the conditions
under which direct and indirect experience complement or substitute for each other
is an important question that would benefit from further research.
2.4.2 Novelty of Experience
Experience can be acquired on a novel task or on a task that has been performed
repeatedly in the past. March (1991) distinguished between “exploitation,” which
involves learning from repeating the same tasks (low novelty), and “exploration,”
which involves learning from new tasks (high novelty). Researchers have investi-
gated the relationship between exploitation and exploration. Although originally
conceived as a trade-off, exploitation and exploration have been found to be inde-
pendent dimensions in several studies (Katila & Ahuja, 2002). There is considerable
evidence that organizations need to both explore and exploit in order to be effective
(He & Wong, 2004; Katila & Ahuja, 2002; Knott, 2001). Research on “organiza-
tional ambidexterity” investigates how organizations can both explore and exploit
(see Raisch, Birkinshaw, Probst, & Tushman, 2009, for a review).
2.4.3 Success Versus Failure Experience
A unit of task experience can be a success or a failure. Organizations learn from
both successes and failures. Denrell and March (2001) argued that learning pro-
cesses are biased because of the tendency of individuals to sample and replicate
successful experiences. Organizations can learn from failed units of experience. For
example, Haunschild and Sullivan (2002) found that airlines learned from acci-
dents, a failure in their context. Similarly, Baum and Dahlin (2007) found that prior
accident experience reduced the costs of future accidents reported by US railroads
and Madsen (2009) found that organizations in the coal mining industry learned
from their own accidents and the accidents of other firms.
Sitkin (1992) proposed that learning from failure is more effective than learning
from success because failure motivates deeper search and richer understandings
than success. Consistent with this argument, Madsen (2009) found in his study of
7. 372.4 Organizational Experience
accidents in coal mines that the effect of minor accident experience decayed at a
faster rate than the effect of disaster experience, major accidents in which lives were
lost. Similarly, Madsen and Desai (2010) found that knowledge acquired from
failure experience decayed more slowly than knowledge acquired from success
experience in their study of orbital launches.
Other studies, however, have found that organizations learn more from success
than from failure or learn from both success and failure. For example, Gino, Argote,
Miron-Spektor, and Todorova (2010) found that laboratory teams learned more
from other teams that developed a successful product than from other teams that
developed an unsuccessful one. In a study of chains of nursing homes, Chuang and
Baum (2003) found that organizations learned both from their own failures and
from the failures of other organizations but that they learned less from their own
failures when the organization was invested in the failed activity. Differences in
motivation may reconcile these disparate findings on learning from failure. When
the failure is very serious such as an airline (Haunschild & Sullivan, 2002), mining
(Madsen, 2009), or orbital launch (Madsen & Desai, 2010) accident, organizations
are very motivated to learn from the failures. On the other hand, if the stakes are not
very high or if organizations are invested in the failed activity (Chuang & Baum,
2003), learning from failure occurs less frequently.
Learning from contrasting successful and unsuccessful experiences can be
especially effective. Kim, Kim, and Miner (2009) found that learning occurred from
both success and failure experience, at least after a threshold level of experience was
obtained. Further, success and failure experience operated as complements, enhanc-
ing each other’s value.
2.4.4 Ambiguity of Experience
Experience can be ambiguous (March, 2010) or easily interpretable. Causally ambig-
uous experience occurs when the relationship between causes and effects during task
performance is unclear. Causal ambiguity makes it hard to interpret experience (Bohn,
1994; Carley & Lin, 1997) and can lead to “superstitious” learning (Levitt & March,
1988) in which participants draw the wrong inferences from experience.
Delays between actions and their effects contribute to causal ambiguity. Diehl and
Sterman (1995) found that participants did not learn much from experience when
delays between causes and effects occurred. Similarly, Repenning and Sterman (2002)
found that in contexts where there were delays between making a process improvement
and observing results, participants made attribution errors about the causes of results.
2.4.5 Spatial Location of Experience
An organization’s experience can be geographically concentrated or geographi-
cally dispersed (Cummings, 2004; Gibson & Gibbs, 2006). Learning from
8. 38 2 Organization Learning: A Theoretical Framework
geographically distributed experience poses challenges to organizational learning
but also provides opportunities for accessing new knowledge (Argote, Denomme, &
Fuchs, 2011). Organizational units that are geographically dispersed have access to
more knowledge than those that are geographically concentrated (Ahuja & Katila,
2004). Geographically distributed units, however, face challenges exchanging infor-
mation and are more likely to encounter motivational and relational problems than
collocated units (Cramton, 2001). Relative to geographically distributed unit,
geographically collocated units are more likely to develop “common ground”
(Fussell & Krauss, 1992) or shared understandings that facilitate information
exchange and the interpretation of experience.
2.4.6 Timing of Experience
Experience can be characterized along several temporal dimensions, including its
timing and recency. Experience can be acquired before doing, through activities
such as training or experimentation (Carrillo & Gaimon, 2000; Pisano, 1994).
Experience can be acquired during task performance through learning by doing.
Experience can also be acquired after task performance through “after action”
reviews (Ellis & Davidi, 2005).
The most effective timing of experience depends on the extent to which cause–
effect relationships are understood and the knowledge base in an area is developed.
Pisano (1994) found that if the knowledge base was well understood, experimenta-
tion and learning before doing contributed to more rapid product development. By
contrast, if the knowledge base was not well understood, laboratory experimenta-
tion did not advance product development. Similarly, Eisenhardt and Tabrizi (1995)
found that learning by doing was more effective for launching new computer prod-
ucts than planning or learning before doing was.
Recency is another dimension along which experience can vary. A unit of task
experience could have been acquired recently or it could have been acquired in the
distant past. There is considerable evidence that recent experience is more valuable
than experience acquired in the distant past. That is, experience appears to decay or
depreciate (Argote, Beckman, & Epple, 1990; Benkard, 2000; Darr et al., 1995).
Further, the rate of depreciation varies across organizations with some organizations
showing rapid deprecation and others showing little or no deprecation. The causes
of depreciation are discussed in Chap. 3.
2.4.7 Rareness of Experience
Experience can vary in its frequency (Herriott, Levinthal, & March, 1985; Levinthal
& March, 1981). Experience that occurs rarely or infrequently is hard to interpret
and thus poses challenges to learning (Lampel, Shamsie, & Shapira, 2009; March,
9. 392.4 Organizational Experience
Sproull, & Tamuz, 1991). Rare experience can lead organizations to draw the wrong
inferences from experience and engage in superstitious learning (Zollo, 2009).
Organizations, however, can realize significant benefits from learning from rare
events (Starbuck, 2009), especially when they invest in developing lessons to
improve how they respond to rare events in the future (Rerup, 2009). Further, rare
events can interrupt routine activity and extend an organization’s understanding of
its capabilities and identity (Christianson, Farkas, Sutcliffe, & Weick, 2009).
2.4.8 Simulation of Experience
A dimension related to the timing of experience is the extent to which the experi-
ence is simulated. Simulated experience typically occurs after or before—but not
during—task performance. Simulated experience might occur before performing
the task through “preparedness drills” in which members practice their roles.
Computational models that simulate how members and tools interact to perform
tasks under various contextual conditions can also be used to facilitate learning
before doing the task. Another form of simulated experience is produced through
counterfactual thinking (Morris & Moore, 2000; Roese & Olson, 1995).
Counterfactual thinking, which typically occurs after doing, involves reconstruction
of past events and consideration of alternatives that might have occurred.
The usefulness of simulated experience depends on the extent to which it captures
relevant features of the task performance context. Simulated experience can be a
valuable complement to real experience, especially when that experience is sparse
and/or the stakes are high. For example, disaster drills are conducted at hospitals to
enable staff to handle real disasters effectively. Simulations can be especially valu-
able in revealing relationships and interactions among the elements of a task perfor-
mance system.
The dimensions of experience discussed thus far can refer to a particular unit of
experience or can refer to the overall distribution of experience when aggregated.
For example, a particular unit of experience can be acquired in a collocated or geo-
graphically distributed fashion and the overall spatial distribution of cumulative
experience can be obtained by aggregating the experience of particular units. Other
dimensions, such as heterogeneity, make sense only as characterizations of cumula-
tive experience. These dimensions are now discussed.
2.4.9 Heterogeneity of Experience
An organization’s overall distribution of task experience can be characterized in
terms of its heterogeneity. Organizations performing similar tasks would be low
in heterogeneity while organizations performing varied tasks would be high in
heterogeneity. Several studies suggest that some heterogeneity or diversity in task
10. 40 2 Organization Learning: A Theoretical Framework
experience facilitates organizational learning. Littlepage, Robison, and Reddington
(1997) found that experience on related tasks enhanced group learning by increas-
ing individual members’ proficiency, while experience on comparable but not
related tasks enhanced learning by increasing members’ knowledge of who was
good at which tasks. Similarly, Schilling, Vidal, Ployhart, and Marangoni (2003)
found that related task experience improved learning to a greater extent than either
identical or unrelated task experience. Boh, Slaughter, and Espinosa (2007) found
that diverse experience in related systems improved the performance of software
teams. Heterogeneity appears to be most valuable when it is introduced slowly so
that members have time to master the different tasks (Pisano, Bohmer, &
Edmondson, 2001).
Focusing on heterogeneity of outcomes, Haunschild and Sullivan (2002) found
that heterogeneous accident experience was more conducive to organizational learn-
ing than homogeneous experience for specialized airlines. Kim et al. (2009) found
that success and failure experience enhanced each other’s effect on learning. Zollo
(2009) found in a study of corporate acquisitions that heterogeneous acquisition
experience weakened the negative effect of past success on the performance of a
focal acquisition. Thus, heterogeneous experience reduced the likelihood of super-
stitious learning. Some degree of heterogeneity in task outcomes enhances learning
by providing organizational members with a deeper understanding of what contrib-
uted to successful task performance.
2.4.10 Pace of Experience
Another temporal dimension along which experience can vary is its pace.
Organizations can acquire experience at a steady rate or they can acquire experience
at an uneven rate, with interruptions in production. Interruptions can lead to knowl-
edge decay or depreciation (Argote et al., 1990; Benkard, 2000). Interruptions also
provide opportunities for knowledge transfer (Zellmer-Bruhn, 2003).
2.5 The Organizational Context
As noted previously, Argote and Miron-Spektor (2011) developed a conception of
the organizational context that includes latent and active components. The latent or
background context affects learning through its effects on the active components of
members, tasks, and tools. The background context determines the organization’s
task and the tools available to perform its task. The background context also affects
members’ abilities, motivations, and opportunities. For example, members’ abilities
are affected by contextual factors such as selection methods, training programs, and
performance feedback. Members’ motivations are affected by contextual factors
including rewards, feedback, job design, and the organizational culture. Members’
opportunities are affected by the organization’s structure and social network.
11. 412.5 The Organizational Context
Contextual factors that have been studied in relationship to organizational learning
from direct experience are discussed in this chapter. These include the organiza-
tion’s specialization, its culture, its structure, the performance feedback it provides,
its training practices, resources, and power distribution. Contextual factors related
to knowledge retention are discussed in Chap. 4 and those related to knowledge
transfer are described in Chap. 6.
2.5.1 Specialist Versus Generalist Organizations
A dimension of the context that has been empirically examined in relationship to
organizational learning is whether the organization is a specialist or generalist.
Specialist organizations have been found to learn more from experience than gener-
alist organizations (Haunschild & Sullivan, 2002; Ingram & Baum, 1997). For
example, Barnett, Greve, and Park (1994) found that specialist banks had higher
returns on assets as a function of experience than generalist banks and further that
generalist banks did not evidence performance increases as a function of experi-
ence. Similarly, Ingram and Baum (1997) found that “geographic generalists” that
operated over a large physical area were less affected by their own experience than
specialists that concentrated in a smaller number of areas. Thus, generalist organi-
zations benefited less from experience than specialist organizations.
2.5.2 Organizational Culture
Another characteristic of the context that has received considerable research
attention is the culture. A culture of psychological safety (Edmondson, 1999) that
lacks defensive routines (Argyris & Schon, 1978) has been found to facilitate learning.
When members feel psychologically safe and free to express their ideas, organiza-
tions are more likely to learn from experience than when members do not feel safe.
A “learning” orientation has also been shown to facilitate the relationship between
experience and performance outcomes (Bunderson & Sutcliffe, 2003). When team
members emphasize learning in their unit rather than comparing their unit’s perfor-
mance to other units, they are more likely to learn from their experience. The shared
language that members who work together develop enables the interpretation of
experience (Weber & Camerer, 2003). Cohesion or liking among group members
can also facilitate organizational learning (Wong, 2004).
2.5.3 Organizational Structure
The extent of decentralization in an organization has been theorized to affect orga-
nizational learning. Decentralization enables an organization to explore solutions
12. 42 2 Organization Learning: A Theoretical Framework
and thereby prevents it from prematurely converging on suboptimal solutions, which
is especially valuable in uncertain environments (Ethiraj & Levinthal, 2004;
Siggelkow & Levinthal, 2003; Siggelkow & Rivkin, 2005). Jansen, Van Den Bosch,
and Volberda (2006) found in an empirical study that decentralization increased
explorative innovation and had no effect on exploitative innovation.
Investigating different structures, Fang, Lee, and Schilling (2010) determined in
a simulation that semi-isolated subgroups with moderate cross-group linkages
promoted the greatest organizational learning. The semi-isolation of the subgroups
fostered the diversity of ideas while the connections between groups fostered knowl-
edge transfer across them. Bunderson and Boumgarden (2010) found that team
structures characterized by specialization, formalization, and hierarchy increased
team learning because they increased information sharing and reduced conflict.
Jansen et al. (2006) found that formalization enhanced a unit’s exploitative innova-
tion and had no effect on explorative innovation, while densely connected social
relations within units enhanced both explorative and exploitative innovation.
Sorenson (2003) found that interdependence engendered by vertical integration
slowed the rate of learning in firms in stable environments and speeded learning in
volatile environments.
2.5.4 Performance Feedback
Research on the effects of performance feedback (Greve, 2003) on organizational
learning has yielded somewhat mixed results. Several researchers have documented
or theorized about the positive effects of feedback. Delays in feedback have been
found to hinder learning from experience (Diehl & Sterman, 1995; Gibson, 2000;
Rahmandad, 2008). When members’ actions do not receive immediate rewards but
occur in a sequence with an overall reward, learning can also be impaired, especially
when turnover occurs (Denrell, Fang, & Levinthal, 2004). Although high-feedback
specificity has been found to improve learning initially, high-feedback specificity
dampens exploratory behavior over the long run (Goodman, Wood, & Hendrickx,
2004). Individual feedback has been found to amplify the negative effects of power
differences on learning (Edmondson, 2002); group feedback has been found to turn
the negative effects of power differences into opportunities for learning (Van Der
Vegt, de Jong, Bunderson, & Molleman, 2010). In contrast to studies finding positive
effects of feedback, Rick and Weber (2010) found that withholding feedback led to
deeper deliberation and greater learning than providing feedback.
2.5.5 Training
Training structures and processes in organizations also affect learning (Bell &
Kozlowski,2008;Ford&Kozlowski,1996;Grossman&Salas,2011).Twodimensions
13. 432.5 The Organizational Context
of training are especially relevant for organizational learning. One dimension is
whether the training is conducted individually or in a group. Research has shown
that group training is more beneficial for collective learning than individual training
(Hollingshead, 1998; Liang, Moreland, & Argote, 1995). Training members of a
group together promotes the development of a “transactive memory system”
(Wegner, 1986), a collective system for encoding, storing, and retrieving informa-
tion. Colloquially referred to as knowledge of who knows what, transactive memory
systems enable the creation (Gino et al., 2010), retention (Liang et al., 1995), and
transfer of knowledge (Lewis, Lange, & Gillis, 2005).
Another dimension of training systems is whether they include opportunities for
members to observe experts performing tasks. Training through observing experi-
enced members has been found to be more effective than training through lectures
(Nadler, Thompson, & Van Boven, 2003). Through observing experts perform tasks,
trainees can acquire tacit or difficult-to-articulate knowledge (Nonaka, 1991).
Trainees also become members of a community and learn norms of behavior (Brown &
Duguid, 1991). These advantages of observational methods contribute to the use of
apprenticeship programs in a variety of professions, such as manufacturing and
medicine.
2.5.6 Absorptive Capacity
Organizations that are high in “absorptive capacity” are able to recognize the value
of external information, assimilate it, and apply it to develop innovations (Cohen &
Levinthal, 1990). Absorptive capacity is facilitated by Research and Development
activities that provide organizations with the background knowledge necessary to
recognize and exploit external information (Cohen & Levinthal, 1990). Volberda,
Foss, and Lyles (2010) reviewed the vast literature on absorptive capacity.
Not only do Research and Development activities facilitate learning from the
experience of sources external to an organization, the activities facilitate learning
from an organization’s own direct experience. Lieberman (1984) found that invest-
ment in Research and Development increased the rate of learning among firms in
the chemical processing industry. Similarly, Sinclair, Klepper, and Cohen (2000)
found that Research and Development contributed to the productivity gains observed
in a chemical firm.
2.5.7 Aspiration Levels
Aspiration levels affect organizational learning. Cyert and March (1963) theorized
that when organizational performance falls below the organization’s aspiration
level, search occurs and organizational change is likely. This problemistic search is
typically myopic so changes resulting from it occur near the problem. Considerable
14. 44 2 Organization Learning: A Theoretical Framework
empirical research has found support for the prediction that performance below the
aspiration level leads to problemistic search (see Argote & Greve, 2007, for a
review). Cyert and March (1963) further theorized that organizational aspiration
levels adapt to the organization’s own past experience and the experience of other
comparable organizations. Many empirical studies have found support for this pre-
diction (Lant, 1992). Baum and Dahlin (2007) extended the behavioral theory of
Cyert and March (1963) and found in their study of accidents in US railroads that as
performance deviated from aspiration levels, the organizations benefited less from
their own direct experience and more from the indirect experience of other firms in
the industry. Desai (2008) further elaborated the behavioral theory and predicted
and found that risk taking after poor performance was low when organizations had
low levels of experience and poor legitimacy.
2.5.8 Slack Resources
Slack search has been theorized to affect learning and innovation as a complement to
problemistic search (Cyert & March, 1963). Several empirical studies have found the
predicted positive association between organizational slack and organizational learn-
ing (e.g., Wiersma, 2007). Other researchers have found an inverted U-shaped rela-
tionship between slack resources and innovation or exploratory search: increases in
slack initially increased innovation but too much slack reduced the discipline neces-
sary to produce innovations (Gulati & Nohria, 1996). Combining problemistic search
and slack search, Greve (2003) found that problemistic search was more effective
when organizations had a buffer of innovations generated through slack search.
2.5.9 Power and Status
Power relations within a social unit affect learning (Contu & Willmott, 2003).
Bunderson and Reagans (2011) reviewed research on the effect of power and status
differences on group and organizational learning and concluded that the negative
effects of such differences were due to the dampening effect they had on experimen-
tation, knowledge sharing, and the development of shared goals. Bunderson and
Reagans (2011) further concluded that the negative effects of power and status dif-
ferences could be mitigated when individuals high in the hierarchy were collectively
oriented and used their power for the benefit of the group or organization.
2.5.10 Social Networks
Social networks facilitate both the search for information and its interpretation.
Researchers have investigated the effects of network position, network structure,
15. 452.5 The Organizational Context
and tie strength. Ties that bridge “structural holes” or otherwise unconnected parts
of a network increase exposure to information (Burt, 2004). Further, bridging ties
that span structural holes are especially conducive to developing new knowledge
when individuals who bridge boundaries share common third-party ties (Tortoriello &
Krackhardt, 2010).
Focusing on network structures, Reagans and Zuckerman (2001) found that
dense internal network structures fostered knowledge creation and transfer, espe-
cially when members had specialized expertise (see also Rulke & Galaskiewicz,
2000). Focusing on network strength, Hansen (1999) found that weak ties between
members facilitated the transfer of explicit knowledge, while strong ties enabled the
transfer of tacit knowledge. Reagans and McEvily (2003) found that dense internal
networks with links to external networks facilitated transfer over and above the
effect of tie strength. Phelps, Heidl, and Wadhwa (2012) reviewed the burgeoning
literature on social networks and knowledge transfer, identifying points of conver-
gence and divergence.
2.5.11 Member Diversity and Stability
Two characteristics of members have been investigated in relationship to organiza-
tional learning: member diversity and team stability. Several studies have examined
the effect of diversity of members on organizational learning. Macher and Mowery
(2003) found that team diversity moderated the relationship between experience and
organizational performance in the semiconductor industry such that functionally
diverse teams learned more from their experience than functionally homogeneous
teams. By contrast, Ophir, Ingram, and Argote (1998) found that member diversity
hindered organizational learning in Israeli Kibbutzim: diverse teams learned less
from their experience than teams composed of similar members.
Several studies have examined the effect of team stability on organizational
learning. Reagans, Argote, and Brooks (2005) found that team stability (the average
number of times team members worked together) contributed positively to the per-
formance of surgical teams. Similarly, Huckman, Staats, and Upton (2009) found
that team stability was positively associated with the performance of software teams.
Further, role stability or how long individuals remained in particular roles was also
positively associated with the performance of software teams.
2.5.12 Tools
Tools can enable learning by facilitating the acquisition, storage, and sharing of
information. Research on tools and organizational learning has primarily focused
on information technology or knowledge management systems. Focusing on infor-
mation technology, Boland, Tenkasi, and Te’eni (1994) described an information
16. 46 2 Organization Learning: A Theoretical Framework
system that facilitated idea exchange in organizations. Ashworth, Mukhopadhyay,
and Argote (2004) found that the introduction of an information system in a bank
increased organizational learning.
Focusing on a knowledge management system, Kane and Alavi (2007) used a
simulation to examine the effect of knowledge management tools, such as electronic
communities of practice or knowledge repositories, on organizational learning. The
researchers found that the performance of electronic communities of practice was
low initially but subsequently surpassed the performance of other tools.
Empirical studies on the effect of various knowledge management systems have
yielded mixed results. Based on a study of consulting teams, Haas and Hansen
(2005) found a negative effect of using a knowledge management system on team
performance. The more documents from a knowledge management system teams
used, the worse their performance. The negative effect was stronger for experienced
teams than for teams with less experience working together and stronger for teams
with many rather than few competitors. By contrast, in a study of retail grocery
stores, Kim (2008) found a generally positive effect of using a knowledge
management system. The positive effect was particularly strong for employees in
remote locations, for employees with few alternative sources of knowledge and for
employees who dealt with products that did not become obsolete quickly. Thus, the
repositories in knowledge management systems seem more valuable when the task
is routine and employees do not have other sources of knowledge than when the
task is uncertain and employees have other sources of knowledge.
New generations of knowledge management systems enabled by Web 2.0 tech-
nologies have more affordances (Zammuto, Griffith, Majchrzak, Dougherty, &
Faraj, 2007) than previous generations that were primarily document repositories.
The knowledge that can be stored in document repositories is explicit knowledge.
This knowledge can serve as pointers to who knows what, and thereby enable con-
nections between members that facilitate the transfer of tacit knowledge. The con-
nections, however, happen outside of the knowledge management system. Newer
generations of knowledge management systems enabled by Web 2.0 technologies
facilitate connections and interactions among individuals within the system through
blogs and forums. These new technologies have greater affordances for transferring
tacit knowledge than previous generations of knowledge management systems that
primarily were document repositories. The realization of the affordances of these
new technologies, however, is not automatic but rather depends on how they are
used and supported in organizations.
2.6 Organizational Learning Processes
Organizational learning processes are represented by the curved arrows in Fig. 2.1.
When knowledge is created from a unit’s own direct experience, the learning sub-
process is knowledge creation. When knowledge is developed from the experience
of another unit, the learning subprocess is knowledge transfer. Thus, the curved
17. 472.6 Organizational Learning Processes
arrow at the bottom of the figure depicts either the knowledge creation or knowl-
edge transfer subprocess. A third subprocess, retaining knowledge, is depicted by
the curved arrow in the upper right quadrant of Fig. 2.1 that flows from knowledge
to the context. It is through this process that knowledge is retained in the organiza-
tion. Thus, organizational learning is conceived as having three interrelated subpro-
cesses: creating, retaining, and transferring knowledge. These subprocesses are
related. For example, some degree of knowledge persistence is required for its trans-
fer. New knowledge is often created during knowledge transfer attempts (Miller,
Fern, & Cardinal, 2007).
Several researchers have conceived of search as another organizational learning
subprocess (Huber, 1991). In our framework, the curved arrow in the upper left
quadrant of Fig. 2.1 represents search. The arrow shows that the active context of
members and tools affects task performance experience. For example, members can
choose to search in local or distant areas and search for novel or known experience
(Katila & Ahuja, 2002; Rosenkopf & Almedia, 2003; Sidhu, Commandeur, &
Volberda, 2007). A transactive memory system facilitates search by providing infor-
mation about who knows what and who is good at what.
2.6.1 Mindfulness of Organizational Learning Processes
The subprocesses can be characterized along several dimensions. The dimension of
learning processes that has received the most attention is their “mindfulness.”
Learning processes can vary from mindful or attentive (Weick & Sutcliffe, 2006) to
less mindful or routine (Levinthal & Rerup, 2006). The former are what psycholo-
gists have termed controlled processes while the latter are more automatic (Shiffrin
& Schneider, 1977). Mindful processes include dialogic practices (Tsoukas, 2009)
and analogical reasoning, which involves the comparison of cases and the abstrac-
tion of common principles (Gentner, 1983; Gick & Holyoak, 1983). Less mindful
processes include stimulus–response learning in which responses that are reinforced
increase in frequency. Levinthal and Rerup (2006) described how mindful and less
mindful processes can complement each other with mindful processes enabling the
organization to shift between more automatic routines and routines embedding past
experience and conserving cognitive capacity for greater mindfulness.
Most discussions of mindful processes have explicitly or implicitly focused on
the learning subprocess of creating knowledge. The subprocess of retaining knowl-
edge can also vary in the extent of mindfulness. For example, Zollo and Winter
(2002) studied deliberate approaches to codifying knowledge, which would be
examples of mindful retention processes (see also Zollo, 2009). Similarly the sub-
process of transferring knowledge can also vary in mindfulness. “Copy exactly”
approaches or replications without understanding the underlying causal processes
would be examples of less mindful transfer processes while knowledge transfer
attempts that adapt the knowledge to the new context (Williams, 2007) would be
examples of more mindful approaches.
18. 48 2 Organization Learning: A Theoretical Framework
2.6.2 Distribution of Organizational Learning Processes
A learning process dimension that is especially important in organizations is the
extent to which the learning processes are distributed across organizational mem-
bers. For example, organizations can develop a transactive memory or collective
system for remembering, retrieving, and distributing information (Brandon &
Hollingshead, 2004; Ren & Argote, 2011; Wegner, 1986). In organizations with a
well-developed transactive memory system, members specialize in learning differ-
ent pieces of information. Thus, learning processes would be distributed in organi-
zations with well-developed transactive memory systems.
2.6.3 Improvisation of Organizational Learning Processes
Learning processes can also vary in the extent to which they are planned or impro-
vised. Planned learning occurs through structures such R&D programs or new prod-
uct development projects (Benner & Tushman, 2003; Lieberman, 1984; Sinclair
et al., 2000). Improvisation occurs during task performance and involves minimal
structures (Barrett, 1998; Miner, Bassoff, & Moorman, 2001). Vera and Crossan
(2005) identified conditions under which improvisation leads to learning. The con-
ditions included high-quality teamwork, high levels of expertise, communication,
training, and an experimental culture.
More research is needed on the organizational learning processes and their inter-
relationships. For example, there may be a relationship between the extent to which
learning processes are mindful and the extent to which they are planned. In addition,
the concept of mindful learning processes would benefit from further refinement.
The concept is used both in the sense of deliberate processes and in the sense of
processes that are in the moment and free from previous conceptions (or misconcep-
tions). Research on attention might be helpful in refining the concept of mindfulness
(Ocasio, 2011). Ideally, one would like to identify a parsimonious yet complete set
of learning processes and understand the conditions under which they are invoked
and their effects on learning outcomes.
2.7 Knowledge
Knowledge is the outcome of learning. Knowledge can manifest itself in changes in
cognitions or behavior. The knowledge can be explicit or tacit and difficult-to-
articulate. The knowledge includes both knowledge in the sense of a stock and
knowing in the sense of a process (Cook & Brown, 1999; Orlikowski, 2002).
Knowledge can be characterized along many dimensions (Alavi & Leidner, 2001).
For example, knowledge can vary from explicit knowledge that can be articulated to
19. 49References
tacit knowledge that is difficult to articulate (Kogut & Zander, 1992; Nonaka & von
Krogh, 2009; Polanyi, 1962). A related dimension of knowledge is whether it is
declarative or procedural (Singley & Anderson, 1989). Declarative knowledge is
knowledge about facts—what researchers have termed “know what” (Edmondson,
Winslow, Bohmer, & Pisano, 2003; Lapré, Mukherjee, & Van Wassenhove, 2000;
Tucker, 2007). Procedural knowledge is knowledge of procedures or “know-how.”
Knowledge can also vary in its “causal ambiguity” or extent to which cause–
effect relationships are understood (Szulanski, 1996). In addition, knowledge can
vary in its “demonstrability” or ease of showing its correctness and appropriateness
(Kane, 2010; Laughlin & Ellis, 1986). Further, knowledge can be codified or not
(Vaast & Levina, 2006; Zander & Kogut, 1995; Zollo & Winter, 2002).
Characteristics of knowledge affect its retention and transfer. These issues are
discussed in Chaps. 4 and 6. Managing knowledge is also a strategic issue for firms.
For example, a fundamental issue for-profit firms face is how to facilitate the inter-
nal transfer of knowledge while blocking its external transfer to competitors.
Strategic issues of knowledge management are discussed in Chap. 7.
2.8 Conclusion
The chapter presented a theoretical framework for analyzing organizational learning
and used the framework to provide an overview of research on organizational learn-
ing. According to the framework, organizational experience interacts with the con-
text to create knowledge. Because different types of experience affect organizational
learning processes and outcomes differently, a fine-grained characterization of experi-
ence was advocated. The context was conceived as having both a latent component
and an active component through which learning occurs. The latent component affects
the members and tools that perform the organization’s tasks and learn from task per-
formance experience. Knowledge results from the organizational learning processes
that interpret experience. These processes can vary in their “mindfulness,” in the
extent to which they are distributed over many organization members versus concen-
trated in a few, and in the extent to which they are planned or improvised. Knowledge
both flows out of the organization into the environment and also is embedded in the
organization. Knowledge embedded in the organization affects future learning.
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