Post on 18-Jan-2016
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Strategic Knowledge Mapping:Advances in KM Practice
IS6600-5
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Introductory Thoughts
Social computing enables us to regain the conversation in our work The conversation is critical, as the knowledge is
embedded into a live context that serves to explain and illustrate how the knowledge is applied
Knowledge that is distilled, squeezed, extracted out of stories is much less useful!
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Cooking is a Good Metaphor Chefs use many different ingredients to create a
tasty meal There is an almost infinite variety of combinations Chefs “know” what goes well together, and what
doesn’t Herbs and spices Wine, vinegar, salt Meat, vegetables, …
Chefs may also experiment so as to create new dishes – e.g. fusion cuisine.
They need to listen to and learn from their taste-buds! Cooking is a dynamic process that involves knowledge
creation
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Creative Knowledge Chefs We need to learn how to be good
knowledge chefs Creating knowledge-based solutions with the
same ingredients Contextually unique solutions
Rather than replicable best practices To promote creativity and innovation, not
sclerosis and stagnation 3M abandoned Six Sigma when they found it
destroyed their ability to innovate. You must *interpret* what you hear/read and
*create* knowledge that you can use.
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What’s Wrong with Best Practices? They tie us down to one ‘best’ solution They don’t encourage us to innovate They shrink our capacity for imagination They become part of the ‘status quo’,
atrophying our future capacity & development Einstein:
“Imagination is more important than Knowledge”
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So, What is the Fundamental Process? Sensemaking
In contextually specific ways From conversations, we learn the ingredients of
what worked and what didn’t, what is feasible/plausible/acceptable, and what is not
We mentally assimilate those ingredients As knowledge chefs, we make sense of the
world, and create (new) (not necessarily ‘perfect’) solutions
In principled ways…
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Seven Principles of Knowledge1
1. Knowledge is voluntary
2. We know what we know when we need to know it
3. Conversation not codification
4. Knowledge is fragmented
5. Avoiding failure is better than replicating success
6. The way we know things is not the way we report we know things
7. We know more, say less and write least
Adapted from Snowden, 2008
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1. Knowledge is Voluntary
Knowledge cannot be conscripted You can’t force people to share (useful)
knowledge If you try to, the quality will be variable/unreliable
So, Knowledge must be offered freely Better still, knowledge is offered
unconsciously – as a natural component of organisational culture
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2. We know what we know when we need to know it All knowledge has a context – and it is valid
in that context The context incorporates space, time and
human elements However, does the knowledge retain its validity
out of context? If not, is there any point in distilling ‘nuggets’ of
knowledge from broader cases, scenarios, experiences,…?
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3. Conversation not Codification Historically, KM techniques have moved from
Collection to Connection to Conversation Collecting and Codifying knowledge Connecting people – to share Engaging people in conversation
Conversation is seen as more valid because it preserves the (live) narrative context wherein knowledge
has validity it can be a natural part of a knowledge culture it enables a focus on networks of people (guanxi), not the
knowledge itself conversation implies not simplex, unidirectional sharing but
a duplex, two-way, meeting of minds – a creative and learning process
But Remote Conversations May Not be Sufficient Consider an outsourcing project between headquarters
(in HK) and a software development partner in India Communication and conversation using non face-to-face media Multiple projects in the last 7 years with suboptimal results Problems in knowledge exchange
What are the possible causes of the problem? Language, comprehension, culture, power distance, politeness
(say yes but not mean yes), …
Would inviting the India team to Hong Kong help improve the situation?
A short visit? To hire them to work for 6 months in Hong Kong?
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4. Knowledge is Fragmented In our brains, knowledge is scattered across
memories of experiences; tacitly Our brains process, integrate and blend these
scattered fragments into new forms – on demand A KMS is likely to be much less sophisticated than
a human brain – so its capability to process in human-like ways is greatly restricted. The usefulness of KMS output is quite limited
Conversations involve not only sharing, but also creation – new knowledge is created out of shared experiences and discussion
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5. Avoiding Failure is Better than Success! We learn from both failures and successes
Hopefully we learn to avoid future failure Eastwei: failing once is good, failing twice is not.
Too much success makes people complacent Even a little failure can be a strong stimulus
to do better So, failures can generate valuable knowledge
– if we know how to listen and learn
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6. What we Know is not How We Report What we Know Our brains are rather good at blending
Heuristics Pattern-matching Extrapolation (and Interpolation) Previously successful techniques Experiences (Knowledge)
…in nano seconds. But if you ask someone to write down how s/he
reached a decision, …. So, does writing it down really help?
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7. We Know More than we Say, More than we Write We retain the most detail in our heads We can report some of it, perhaps
inaccurately We can write much less – and what we write
retains little of the contextual detail The more we rely on ‘codified’ knowledge
and the less context that is available, so the less useful is the knowledge.
Of course, there are some people who talk or write a lot but know very little / nothing!
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New Knowledge Tools Strategic Knowledge Expert Network Maps
Formalised by 3M as a way of identifying who knows what and where people are located
Used as a way to identify organisational strengths and weaknesses
particularly after a merger/acquisition process redundancies, opportunities and vulnerabilities
More obviously relevant to larger organisations A number of analyses possible
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A Simple Example,…
A
B
C
D
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Network Centrality How central are you (or is your unit) in the
organisation? How integrated? Who do you talk to? Who talks to you? How often? What about? How many opportunities are there to learn from
others – through conversation? Cross-pollination of ideas >> innovation!
Individuals (or units) with a high “index centrality score” may be in a better position to learn, to acquire intellectual resources.
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The Theory of Weak Ties
Is it more useful to receive ideas from people you don’t know – because it is more likely that they know things that you don’t? You can learn more
Sounds nice, but it is almost the opposite of guanxi – where people prefer to share with and receive from others with whom they have a strong relationship. Even though you may learn less
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Weak and Strong Ties: Which are Better for Valuable Knowledge Exchange? Do we acquire more useful/unique
knowledge from people with whom We have closer relationships? We trust more? We share knowledge regularly?
Or from people with whom: We are more distant? We seldom contact? We share little in terms of day to day work?
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Balancing Guanxi and Weak Ties Can they be balanced? How? Is there room for compromise? Can you develop guanxi with weakly-tied
people? People you may never meet? People with whom you have nothing in
common – except the desire to learn?
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Tie Strength and Knowledge
Strong
Weak
LowHigh
Strong Ties and Useful Knowledge
Weak Ties and Useful Knowledge
American Theory of W
eak Ties
Chinese Theory of Strong Ties!
Tie
Str
eng
th
Knowledge Usefulness
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3M
3M has over 60,000 products in a wide variety of areas abrasives and biotechnology, medical care and adhesives, solar energy and mining, electricity and drug delivery, light management and acoustics
These are all different, yet can they be combined?
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Knowledge & Innovation
“Innovation is a must to survive in our environment.…All of my [executive] colleagues understand the need for innovation and are 100% supportive of employees who innovate.…Yet, I cannot say that we have an organizational process for innovation… Innovation happens, but I cannot outline the process to you because I do not think we have one.” CEO, Information Technology Organization
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Innovation
However, innovation can be stimulated through the cross-pollination of ideas… Getting people who don’t work in the same areas
to talk to each other Getting them to be creative Assessing their ‘risky’ ideas Identifying possible new products that combine
knowledge from different areas
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The Critical Role of Boundary Spanners People who either
Have knowledge that crosses topic or organisational boundaries
Or Know people located on the other side of a topic or
organisational boundary Such ‘boundary spanners’ are extremely valuable
because they enable new learning activities, new product development, new innovation and creativity
However, the ‘trick’ is to know what to do with boundary spanning…
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Connectivity & Integration Fails without Effective Site Leaders and Leader-Networks
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Post-acquisition Knowledge Integration A bird’s eye view of
skills and knowledge inventory Easy identification of
knowledge overlaps (A) Opportunity to leverage
knowledge synergies (B) by connecting people who may not know about each other
Align human resources and business needs across a combined enterprise
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New Product Opportunity???
Adhesive Technologies Sticky – but non-sticky Sterile and hygienic
Medical Technologies Bandages Non- drip, leak, abrasive
Materials Technology Absorptive Self-dissolving
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What You Can Imagine, You Can Achieve Einstein (again):
“The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them”.
So, how do we reach a new level of thinking? One way is through mental experimentation,
brainstorming, conversation – between experts from different topics – just as 3M is trying to do.
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It is not just Integration. Learning & Capacity are also Important Much of 3M’s focus has been on network
analysis. Who is where, who talks to whom, who is / not
connected, where are the mismatches. There may even be an (invalid) assumption that
network positioning is all that matters. But what about the ability of individual people to
learn, to develop new skills, to engage in experiences and acquire knowledge? Could we measure that too, and map it? Implications?
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Matrix Analysis (Individual)
Skill & Level
Creativity Negotiation Product Development
Project Management
Basic X
Medium X X
Advanced X X
Expert X
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Turnover, Retention and Succession Who are the top 5% of people whose
knowledge (if not bodies) we must retain? Think of ‘Bob’.
What knowledge do they have? With whom do they work? Can we ‘develop’ other ‘nearby’ people so
as to reduce reliance on them? Who are the quick learners?
We also want to retain them, promote them, and get them to network with critical others.
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Who/what Should We Try to Retain?Who/what Should We Try to Let Go?
People? Knowledge? Networks? Connectivities? Synergies?
Overlaps? Discontinuities? Knowledge? Maintenance Costs? Skills?
Can we overcome vulnerabilities?
Can we enable career development?
Can we prepare for the future?
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Strategic Account Management Assess the extent to which we have coverage
in the following aspects Geographical, Product, Functional
Do we have the knowledge resources to create a new product? Could we sell it to a new customer? What resources do we need? How could we develop them?
Internal development or external hiring/headhunting?
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Problems with this Technique Which topics should we focus on? How fine a degree of granularity of knowledge do
we want to represent? Can we collect all the necessary data to make this
strategic mapping possible? Will top management champion this new idea, this
new way of representing knowledge? Is it too transparent? Are individuals too empowered to search for new
opportunities – loss of central control?
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Discussion How do you think knowledge management
will develop in global organisations? How should global organisations try to
manage their knowledge resources? Do you want to promote standards and
stability, or something more dynamic and risky?
Pick an industry and …