Knowledge Management
Knowledge Management
UNIT 1
Knowledge Management
Knowledge management (KM) comprises a range of strategies and practices used in an organization to identify, create, represent, distribute, and enable adoption of insights and experiences. Such insights and experiences comprise knowledge, either embodied in individuals or embedded in organizations as processes or practices. Knowledge management efforts typically focus on organizational objectives such as improved performance, competitive advantage, innovation, the sharing of lessons learned, integration and continuous improvement of the organization
"Knowledge management is the process of capturing, distributing, and effectively using knowledge. "Knowledge management is a discipline that promotes an integrated approach to identifying, capturing, evaluating, retrieving, and sharing all of an enterprise's information assets. These assets may include databases, documents, policies, procedures, and previously un-captured expertise and experience in individual workers. - Duhon, 1998
Knowledge management (KM) cannot be achieved with a single definite activity. It involves an assortment of activities. These are usually referred to be knowledge activities. The utilization of the knowledge activities at the resources connected to knowledge which is limited and assisted through an extensive choice of aspects will result in KM. KM supports & coordinates the creation, transfer & application of individual knowledge into value creation process.
HISTORY
KM efforts have a long history, to include on-the-job discussions, formal apprenticeship, discussion forums, corporate libraries, professional training and mentoring programs. More recently, with increased use of computers in the second half of the 20th century, specific adaptations of technologies such as knowledge bases, expert systems, knowledge repositories, group decision support systems, intranets, and computer-supported cooperative work have been introduced to further enhance such efforts
In 1999, the term personal knowledge management was introduced which refers to the management of knowledge at the individual level (Wright 2005). More recently with the advent of the Web, the concept of Knowledge Management has evolved towards a vision more based on people participation and emergence
Information
Bits of facts that have been provided about something or someone. Data and facts that we know are there The raw data collected through observations General data expressed by numbers, words, images and sounds Can be shared, much more easily understood by everyone Provided information
TYPES OF KNOWLEDGE
Knowledge is intangible, dynamic, and difficult to measure, but without it no organization can survive. Tacit: or unarticulated knowledge is more personal, experiential, context specific, and hard to formalize; is difficult to communicate or share with others; and is generally in the heads of individuals and teams. Explicit: explicit knowledge can easily be written down and codified.
Explicit Knowledge is knowledge that is consciously understood & can be articulated. In other words, knowledge the knower is aware of & can talk about. Explicit knowledge Objective, rational, technical Policies, goals, strategies, papers, reports Codified Leaky knowledge
Tacit Knowledge is knowledge that knower is not aware about. Tacit knowledge Subjective, cognitive, experiential learning Highly personalized Difficult to formalize Sticky knowledge
KNOWLEDGE ASSET
A Knowledge Asset is any type of knowledge held or in use by an organization. Knowledge Assets are related to but distinct from tangible assets, monetary assets, and the traditional accounting concept of intangible assets. These assets may include stakeholder relationships, customer loyalty, know-how, employee competency, trust, and experience.
Knowledge Base: Computing the underlying set of facts, assumptions and inference rules which a computer system has available to solve a problem: a set of database. Knowledge Box: The head knowledge factory, a university college etc; which places emphasis on vocational training or which overemphasizes factual knowledge. Knowledge Industry: The development and use of knowledge in universities, polytechnics etc.
Knowledge Economy
The knowledge economy is the use of knowledge technologies to produce economic benefits as well as job creation. It can be defined as " The concept that supports creation of knowledge by organizational employees and helps and encourages them to transfer and better utilize their knowledge that is in line with company/organization goals The global economy is in transition to a "knowledge economy," as an extension of an "information society.
The transition requires that the rules and practices that determined success in the industrial economy need rewriting in an interconnected, globalized economy where knowledge resources such as know-how and expertise are as critical as other economic resources. These rules need to be rewritten at the levels of firms and industries in terms of knowledge management and at the level of public policy as knowledge policy or knowledge-related policy.
The new source of wealth is knowledge, and not labor, land, or financial capital. It is the intangible, intellectual assets that must be managed. The key challenge of the knowledge-based economy is to foster innovation. For several decades the world's best-known forecasters of societal change have predicted the emergence of a new economy in which brainpower, not machine power, is the critical resource. But the future has already turned into the present, and the era of knowledge has arrived.
The knowledge economy rests on three pillars: The role that knowledge plays in transactions: it is what is being bought and sold; both the raw materials and the finished goods The concurrent rise in importance of knowledge assets, which transform and add value to knowledge products The emergence of ways to manage these materials and assets, or KM
If your department wants to stop constantly reengineering and downsizing: talented people are assets to be developed for a global 21st Century If you are interested in the Knowledge Grid If you understand that reuse of knowledge saves work, reduces communication costs, and allows a company to take on more projects
Knowledge Sharing: Another type of KM that is attracting attention is knowledge sharing. A growing number of firms use Intranets and online forums to spread knowledge. Competitive Knowledge Management -- yet another area of knowledge management blends competency management and knowledge sharing. Since Arthur Andersen's Atlanta-based business consulting division established an Intranet two years ago, consultants at the firm post knowledge work plans, methodologies, research, proposals and resumes, so that others in the organization can tap into high-level expertise on an asneeded basis.