Lecture 7 Knowledge Management
Lecture 7 Knowledge Management
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The Knowledge Management Landscape
• Explicit Knowledge
– Objective, rational and technical knowledge
– E.g. data, policies, procedures, software, documents, etc.
– Leaky knowledge: Ease with which it can leave an individual, document or the
organization
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The Knowledge Management Landscape
Important dimensions of knowledge..
Knowledge has a location
Cognitive event
Both social and individual
“Sticky” (hard to move), situated (enmeshed in firm’s culture),
contextual (works only in certain situations)
Knowledge is situational
Conditional: Knowing when to apply procedure
Contextual: Knowing circumstances to use certain tool
• To transform information into knowledge, firm must expend
additional resources to discover patterns, rules, and contexts
where knowledge works
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The Knowledge Management Landscape
Wisdom: Collective and individual experience of applying knowledge
to solve problems
Involves where, when, and how to apply knowledge
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Knowledge Management Value Chain
Knowledge Management
Set of business processes developed in an organization to
create, store, transfer, and apply knowledge
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Knowledge Management Value Chain
1. Knowledge Acquisition
Documenting tacit and explicit knowledge
○ Storing documents, reports, presentations, and best practices
○ Unstructured documents (e.g. e-mails)
○ Developing online expert networks
Creating knowledge
○ Tracking data from TPS and external sources
2. Knowledge Storage
Databases and document management systems
Role of management:
○ Support development of planned knowledge storage systems
○ Encourage development of corporate-wide schemas for indexing documents
○ Reward employees for taking time to update and store documents properly
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Knowledge Management Value Chain
3. Knowledge Dissemination
Portals; Push e-mail reports; Search engines; and Collaboration tools
A deluge of information?
○ Training programs, informal networks, and shared management experience
help managers focus attention on important information
4. Knowledge Application
To provide return on investment, organizational knowledge must become
systematic part of management decision making and become situated in
decision-support systems
○ New business practices
○ New products and services
○ New markets
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Knowledge Management Value Chain
KM Systems, Value Chain and Organizational Activities
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The Knowledge Management Landscape
New organizational roles and responsibilities
Chief Knowledge Officer
Dedicated staff / knowledge managers
Communities of practice (COPs)
Informal social networks of professionals and employees within and outside
firm who have similar work-related activities and interests
Activities include education, online newsletters, sharing experiences and
techniques
Facilitate reuse of knowledge, discussion
Reduce learning curves of new employees
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The Knowledge Management Landscape
Communities of Practice
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The Knowledge Management Landscape
Knowledge Management System Cycle
Creates knowledge through new
ways of doing things or develop
know-how
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Knowledge Management Systems
Knowledge Management Systems:
- three major types
Enterprise-wide knowledge management systems
General-purpose firm-wide efforts to collect, store, distribute, and apply
digital content and knowledge
Knowledge work systems (KWS)
Specialized systems built for engineers, scientists, other knowledge workers
charged with discovering and creating new knowledge
Intelligent techniques
Diverse group of techniques such as data mining used for various goals:
discovering knowledge, distilling knowledge, discovering optimal solutions
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Knowledge Management Systems
Major Types of Knowledge Management Systems
These three categories can be broken down further into more specialized types of
knowledge management systems
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Knowledge Management Systems
• Knowledge management system is a methodology applied to
business practices than a technology or product
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Enterprise-Wide Knowledge Management
Systems
Three major types of knowledge in enterprise:
Structured documents
Reports, presentations
Formal rules
Semi-structured documents
E-mails, videos
Unstructured, tacit knowledge
80% of an organization’s business content is semi-structured or
unstructured
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Enterprise-Wide Knowledge Management
Systems
Enterprise Content Management Systems
Capture, store, retrieve, distribute, preserve
Documents, reports, best practices
Semi-structured knowledge (e-mails)
Tools for communication and collaboration
Bring in external sources
News feeds, research
• Knowledge workers
Researchers, designers, architects, scientists, engineers who
create knowledge for the organization
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Knowledge Work Systems
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Knowledge Work Systems
Requirements of Knowledge Work Systems
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Knowledge Work Systems
Examples of knowledge work systems
CAD (computer-aided design):
Creation of engineering or architectural designs
Virtual reality systems:
– Simulate real-life environments
– 3-D medical modeling for surgeons
– Augmented reality (AR) systems
Investment workstations:
Streamline investment process and consolidate internal, external data
for brokers, traders, portfolio managers
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Intelligent Techniques
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Intelligent Techniques
Expert Systems:
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Intelligent Techniques
Rules in an Expert System
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Intelligent Techniques
How expert systems work
Knowledge base: Set of hundreds or thousands of rules
Inference engine: Strategy used to search knowledge base
Forward chaining: Inference engine begins with information entered by user
and searches knowledge base to arrive at conclusion
Backward chaining: Begins with hypothesis and asks user questions until
hypothesis is confirmed or disproved
• Successful expert systems
Con-Way Transportation built expert system to automate and optimize
planning of overnight shipment routes for nationwide freight-trucking business
• Most expert systems deal with problems of classification
Have relatively few alternative outcomes
Possible outcomes are known in advance
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Intelligent Techniques
Inference Engines in Expert Systems
• An inference engine works by searching through the rules and “firing” those rules that are triggered by
facts gathered and entered by the user.
• Basically, a collection of rules is similar to a series of nested IF statements in a traditional software
program; however, the magnitude of the statements and degree of nesting are much greater in an expert
system.
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Intelligent Techniques
Case-Based Reasoning (CBR)
Descriptions of past experiences
of human specialists (cases),
stored in knowledge base
System searches for cases with
problem characteristics similar to
new one, finds closest fit, and
applies solutions of old case to
new case
CBR applications:
- Medical diagnostic systems
- Customer support
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Intelligent Techniques
Neural Networks
Find patterns and relationships in massive amounts of data too
complicated for humans to analyze
Humans “train” network by feeding it data inputs for which outputs are
known, to help neural network learn solution by example
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Intelligent Techniques
Genetic Algorithms
Useful for finding optimal solution for specific problem by examining
very large number of possible solutions for that problem
Search among solution variables by changing and reorganizing component parts using
processes such as inheritance, mutation, and selection
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Intelligent Techniques
Intelligent Agents
Work in background to carry out specific, repetitive, and predictable
tasks for user, process, or application
Use limited built-in or learned knowledge base to accomplish tasks or
make decisions on user‟s behalf
Deleting junk e-mail
Finding cheapest airfare
Agent-based modeling applications:
Systems of autonomous agents
Model behavior of consumers, stock markets, and supply chains; used to
predict spread of epidemics
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Intelligent Techniques
Intelligent Agents in P&G‟s Supply Chain Network
Intelligent agents are helping P&G shorten the replenishment cycles for products,
such as a box of Tide
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Thank You!