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Thursday, November 13, 2014

Smoke on the water

The river, as it meanders through the plains gathers momentum, and then falls from great heights crashing down on the rocks below creating a misty spray; this process effectively transforms a small part of the gushing river to its almost elemental state of water droplets. They soon gather themselves and continue their journey downstream.
Observing this phenomenon at Hogenakkal, I was reminded of a question someone asked me recently, on how tacit knowledge becomes explicit in an organization? In other words, when does personal knowledge of an individual become organizational knowledge? In his magnum opus, Personal KnowledgePolanyi talks about the 'knowledge continuum' between tacit knowledge and explicit knowledge.
Knowledge can be categorized into three broad categories based on how it impacts business:
  • Process-related
  • Organization and Culture-related
  • Tools (Information technology)
Broadly speaking, all business performance is streamlined into tasks, procedures, processes with measures to determine how it is impacting the business. For example, revenue v/s target is an indication of how close the business is towards achieving its sales objectives. The underlying processes provide the mechanism to achieve that, which in today's world, for the most part is executed through tools (CRM / ERP, etc). So, we also measure process performance to assess the efficiency or effectiveness of the process. The productivity of the personnel who execute these processes are also measured to enable improvement in their performance.
The second aspect relating to organization and culture is largely defined by:
  • Skills and level of mastery
  • Work environment
  • Training and Development
  • Motivation factors
Post-industrial era has seen a large change in the work environment, and the behavioral characteristics of the workforce. A recent Gallup report described the current workforce to consist of more than 40% of knowledge workers, which is growing every year. The standard motivational factors that motivated industrial era workers do not work in this environment any longer. Daniel Pink, in his book A Whole New Mind, talks of the death of Management principles that were based on Taylor's measurement techniques, largely because there is less and less work that is monotonous and requires just a pair or arms or legs.

As we have seen, culture has also been significantly influenced by Technology and tools that have helped in breaking silos and bridging chasms - creating the ability to collaborate across boundaries. Tools come with integral collaboration capability and workflows that support seamless involvement of people across tasks. 

So, how can the impact of KM be measured on the organization?
  • The impact of Knowledge on the business process, as measured by metrics which determine underlying causes for the change in business measures
  • The inter-relation of these underlying causes which can be attributed to change in skills, work environment, learning and motivation factors
  • The impact of tools in enabling change in culture - creating a collaborative and connected community
In the absence of clear metrics that link business performance to changes in process, the impact of implementing Knowledge Management in an organization on creating greater cohesion, collaboration and ability to reach out to a larger community will have to be used as an indirect measure on the overall improvement in the business.

For example:
  • How can we relate activities at the two ends of the knowledge spectrum - a user accessing a procedure document or content in the knowledge repository to tacit knowledge which is measured as conversations that occur in the collaborative work-space;
  • Or the ability of the Knowledge environment to bridge the transition from personal knowledge to organizational knowledge by connecting a seeker of knowledge to an expert on the subject
  • measuring the decibel levels in a community or discussion forum to associated change in processes - which result from the community making innovative changes in the way the business process is executed
These by themselves will have no direct impact on business performance. However, they are the cogs in the wheels which turn bigger wheels which result in generating huge momentum and force. Viewed in isolation, it may not be possible to determine their end impact, but recognizing the role in the overall work environment will definitely help in ensuring that organizations organize themselves towards a knowledge-driven strategy for growth and sustainability.
So back to my original question: at what point does personal knowledge become organizational knowledge? I think the SECI model proposed by Nonaka provides a framework in which to understand this transformation. Technology and the rapid adoption of social media tools in the work-place has enabled us understand this phenomenon better.
What do you think?

Sunday, August 17, 2014

It’s (knowledge about) the Customer, Stupid!


 

"Salesforce CEO admits 'social enterprise' pitch didn't work. Apparently no one knew what 'social enterprise' meant – not even the guys who coined the term." (http://www.zdnet.com/salesforce-ceo-admits-social-enterprise-pitch-didnt-work-7000023336/)

This article by Rachel King for Between the Lines
caught my attention for its validation of a fundamental premise – that the much-hyped term would do little to push the case for business unless it could deliver value in tangible terms. A tool's value would be determined by whether it was fit-for-purpose. The problem with most "me"-centric terms is that they get caught up in the narcissistic web of looking at how they become the centre of attention. And in the process fail to meet their raison d'ĂȘtre – to serve the customer.

Marc Benioff has moved on to a new term – the Internet of Customers. And at least this time, the focus is on the customer – and hopefully, this coinage will probably have a longer and more useful lifespan than the declaration at Dreamforce 2011. It has become quite clear that collaboration and social media tools without any specific purpose do not really end up being very useful knowledge tools. While there may be traction in terms of getting people to create some chatter, the real value that one gets from providing direction to the conversation is missing.

I think it is this perspective that Marc Benioff seems to have gotten right the second time around, with the launch Salesforce One, and the "Internet of Customers" pitch. Here, clearly, the focus is away from product-centric statements that highlight messaging prowess, and instead focuses on what it can do for the customer. This was highlighted during a recent conversation with my good friend Sukumar Rajagopal, when he spoke about bringing "purpose" into the equation when implementing KM initiatives at Cognizant. From the initial thrust of generating a buzz – primarily through getting people to participate in social media, the focus shifted towards innovation as the reason for KM activities. This clearly ups the ante in terms of engaging people in conversations that have a clear purpose. What also becomes apparent is that it is not about the tool or the employee – it is about his participation in making a difference to the customer. The interesting aspect is that this also enables performance measurement. We are able to clearly identify if the KM initiative is headed in the right direction.

How well-defined is the purpose of your KM initiative? Share your feedback.

 

Monday, July 7, 2014

Making Organizational Learning stick

This post has been stuck for a while in the space between the keyboard and the fingers…more out of inertial than anything else.

How can a learning organization ensure that its organization learning methodologies are being put to good use? In an organization that is steadily climbing up the knowledge maturity curve, chances are that they will have a very structured knowledge repository and processes that enable this knowledge repository to get populated with content periodically. It is also highly likely that they have the tools and mechanisms in place for knowledge exchange on a social platform. And most definitely, they will have a formal learning program in place that enables employees continuously upgrade their skills and competencies.

How does one put all of this in perspective, such that each of the programs feeds the other, and there is tangible evidence of social learning that is occurring in the organization?

When enterprises are able to integrate formal e-learning methodologies with social collaboration, a social learning platform emerges. What this means is that the e-learning tool becomes an integral part of the social collaboration environment. For example, if it were possible for me:

  1. to follow up a post with a short quiz
  2. or conduct a survey

It would enable the organization get a sense of the level of understanding of the context and concepts underlying the article.

In a dynamic learning environment, I would be able to :

  • Discover similar stories and notes
  • Manage an ordered list of similar topics
  • Test my understanding by taking tests or quizzes
  • Look up a hint or follow a link in response to a question that I got wrong
  • Read up content for more insight into a particular topic
  • Identify an expert on the subject and get into a private conversation
  • Join a discussion forum or a Community of practice in this domain

From an organization perspective, this kind of a learning environment would enable the organization:

  • To go beyond structured learning methodologies
  • Discover topics and subjects that are of interest to a larger section of the organization
  • Identify niche subjects where expertise is scarce and develop a Community of Practice around that
  • Discover experts in the organization and make them available to a larger group of people

Such a tool would have the following capabilities:

  • Provide the capability to frame questions around a topic
  • Enable objective and subjective responses to a question
  • Provide the capability to conduct a survey or a poll
  • Allow users to discover related topics to a response
  • Provide valuable insights into organizational learning capabilities based on the responses

NEPHILA, integrated with marksplus has the ability to integrate Organizational learning to Knowledge Management thus enabling the enterprise become a learning organization.

 

Saturday, June 28, 2014

Camel or horse: Wisdom of the crowds


"A Camel is a horse designed by a committee" – so goes the old saying. However, Gen Y believes differently; with online communities becoming a powerful way of sourcing information, collaboration and co-creation is becoming the preferred way of working. In 2005, the word "Crowdsourcing" was coined – a portmanteau word originating from "Crowd" and "Outsourcing".
"Crowdsourcing is the process of obtaining needed services, ideas or content, by soliciting from a large group of people, and especially from an online community."
~Source: Wikipedia
In his book, Crowdsourcing, Brabham classified crowdsourcing into the following types:
  • Knowledge Discovery and Management: Where an online community is tasked with the responsibility of collecting and collating information relating to a particular topic. For example, when I put out an online question asking people of a Knowledge community for their definition of knowledge management, I am collating the different responses from group members, identifying key words used in the definition, the frequency of occurrence of specific key words, to come up with a definition that best expresses Knowledge Management.
    Interdisciplinary annotations and trends are yet another example of using the crowdsourcing approach to emergent semantic networks (a network that represents relationships between two concepts – for example, ontology and taxonomy, knowledge and intelligence)
  • Distributed Human Intelligence Tasking: This is actually more of micro-task management. A large task is split up into smaller components and distributed across several people. This is then assembled to arrive at the final objective. Analysis of large data sets is usually carried out this way. Large projects which can be deconstructed into micro-projects are also usually crowd-sourced, with people bidding for the smaller projects. Organizations which have formal tie-ups with Universities as part of their University-Industry Linkage, have been known to adopt this approach.
  • Broadcast Search: Ideation problems typically fall into this category. This is also what we usually find in online communities and forums. When people have a specific problem, they broadcast their question to the online community, for example, StackOverFlow, and then review the results to decide on the best result. This kind of problem usually has a definite answer – for example, "Why does 'Tour De Flex' show I am not connected to the internet, although I am online".
  • Creative Production: The most famous example is possibly Threadless (https://www.threadless.com/make/submit/). This company encourages you to submit designs for t-shirts, and you get paid whenever a t-shirt manufacturing company selects your design for mass production. This is usually done when we need a creative design, not necessarily a single correct answer, and we end up asking the community for ideas. When Lays reached a plateau in sales, they turned to crowdsourcing ideas for new flavors – a competition resulted in several ideas for new flavors coming up from amateur flavor experts – housewives and children – reviving flagging sales by introduction of new flavors.
So, is all social collaboration Crowdsourcing. In a very loose manner of speaking, any collaboration that involves people outside a formally defined team can be called crowdsourcing. However, where the results cannot be quantified or substantiated as having been derived specifically as a result of participation of external resources, it cannot be called Crowdsourcing.
What are the characteristics of a Social Collaboration tool that supports Crowdsourcing?
  • Online participation: The most fundamental aspect of course, is that the participation happens beyond the borders of an organization (or a business unit, in the case of very large organizations).
  • Context: Crowdsourcing is most effective when there is a definite context in which participation occurs. Examples are:
    • A problem or issue that requires resolution, and internal sources may not have the requisite experience or know-how to address the issue
    • Data or Content Collection and collation: Used for obtaining data from a large group of people, which is collated. For example, research citations and profiling
    • Survey: Polls or surveys conducted to obtain data from a large source of people which is then used for research and analysis
  • Platform: Ideation or Innovation platforms – this is usually organized around a domain or topic – where idea generation is the objective. The idea generation can take many forms – suggestion box, prototype presentations, contests – the platform usually supports reward and recognition mechanisms
  • Micro-tasking – This is usually a specific configuration of generic crowd-sourcing tools – where the key functionality of project or task management will exist. However, the focus is on being able to generate participation externally, and the task is of a nature where it can be distributed.

Monday, June 23, 2014

Managing knowledge through Communities of Practice

A Community is defined as a social or other group sharing common characteristics or interests, and perceived or perceiving itself as distinct in some respect from the larger society within which it exists. In the organizational context, a Community of Practice (CoP) is a group sharing common interests or profession in a particular domain. The community evolves through the sharing of knowledge and experiences, learning from each other, and building tight bonds as a community on account of such shared interests. Of course, some organizations create these communities (as a task force) with a specific objective of gaining knowledge in a specific domain.

The key characteristics of a Community of Practice are:

  • The domain in which the CoP situates itself
  • The members of the community
  • The practice

Domain is defined by who participates and who is a member; participation evolves over time through engagement and is further refined by alignment to a common shared vision. Some communities are self-organizing – it evolves based on the level of engagement and participation, the relationships it develops, and the shared experiences that become part of the way it works over a period of time. In some cases, they work within a framework or structure, and build their network of relationships along the way. A central organizing body usually formed from among the community members itself, defines the broad framework within which they operate, and define the vision for the community.

The practice itself defines what the community does, the value it creates, the actual practice it sustains and develops, and how it grows through the development of these practices. A community distinguishes itself from the larger society within which they operate by the boundaries they create – usually defined by relationships, connections and artefacts that they develop. It therefore stands to reason that for a Community of Practice to be successful, it has to develop around a common agenda, be able to engage and participate through shared experiences, and members need to develop a sense of accountability towards the community. Each community develops its own mechanism and process for knowledge creation and transfer; a community lacking foundational knowledge in its domain is likely to be able to sustain itself, since the concept of shared knowledge or experiences will be minimal or non-existent.

How can organizations empower strong and meaningful communities of practice that will be sustainable and create value?

  • A Community of practice is based on shared experiences. This will essentially come from participation of its members. Recognition of member's participation will encourage active involvement which eventually will help build relationships across the community. An active community is able to draw in more members to its fold, enhance the level of participation, capture and build its repository of shared experiences, which eventually becomes the knowledge that the community shares with the rest of the organization.
  • A community that has greater locality – not necessarily geographically, but in terms of shared interests, is more likely to sustain itself because of the sharper focus of the mutuality of their engagement. The commonality of beliefs and values, and the knowledge thus generated will carry more meaning for the community which set itself on a self-sustaining cycle.
  • Learning and passing on common memories is essential to the power of practice. Community members become invested in other members through this common learning activity. Some examples of such learning are:
    • Codified knowledge in the form of user manuals, processes and written procedures
    • Rituals and shared beliefs which may even be part of the culture. For example, Friday 'brown-bag lunches' is a common ritual carried out in some organizations where members of the community get together, away from the work environment, to share their experiences and learn from each other.
    • Teaching and structured content which is prepared and delivered to members. In the technology-driven world, webinars are a means of engaging the community through structured presentations.
    • Everyday practice by the members – Members of the community develop a strong sense of bonding by actively engaging themselves in the code they have formed within themselves. For example, a CoP that prides itself on developing clear coding standards, diligently applies the learning and rules evolved by the community. This eventually leads to organizational level standards – sometimes extending to an international standard itself.
    • Enterprise activity that engages the members on a daily basis – this is usually driven by the enterprise itself to engage the members in an active manner. It could mean creation of surveys, polls, quizzes and other activities that will draw out participation and make the community a vibrant organism that is able to interact and contribute to the larger society in which it exists in a very dynamic environment.

    While the core principles that drive a Community of Practice are very much culture oriented, technology can play an important role in making it sustainable and available beyond geographic limitations. Active participation, however, will depend on how dynamic and participatory the individual members are.


     

    How do Communities of Practice operate in your organization? How effective are they in driving strategy?

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Meaningful measures for managing knowledge

"Peter Brand: Billy, this is Chad Bradford. He's a relief pitcher. He is one of the most undervalued players in baseball. His defect is that he throws funny. Nobody in the big leagues cares about him because he looks funny. This guy could be not just the best pitcher in our bullpen, but one of the most effective relief pitchers in all of baseball."

~From the movie "Moneyball" (2011)

I was reminded of the movie during a recent conversation when someone asked me "Will a CEO be happy implementing a large scale solution to know that "nn" documents were shared in a group"? Measurement myopia leads us quickly to the maxim "What you can measure you can manage". However, as Einstein said" Not everything you count, counts; not everything that counts is counted". In knowledge management especially, establishing a relationship between business growth (and profitability) and organizational knowledge, is at best tenuous. While there are several research papers to establish that knowledge leadership has a definite impact on sustainable competitive advantage, growth, profitability, innovation and several other business performance attributes, it would be foolhardy to attempt to establish a formulaic method to arrive at this conclusion. Study of several organizations that have implemented knowledge management systems, and have progressed along the knowledge maturity path demonstrate empirically, that an organization that is able to leverage its intellectual capital is definitely better off than an organization that is struggling to get its thoughts organized. Enterprises with a higher level of knowledge management maturity have a higher potentiality to strategize and innovate. (Hagel et al, 2002)

That said, meaningful measures of knowledge management definitely have their place under the sun. It allows the organization insight into behavioural, cultural and aspects of organizational dynamics that facilitate or hinder collaboration, sharing of knowledge and therefore the capability to innovate. More importantly, it provides an anchor to correlate organizational performance to knowledge management, thereby enhancing the ability of the organization to improve business performance, by enhancing its capability to organize its knowledge management competencies. What then are some of the measures
(*)
that will eventually help link up to business performance?

  • Number of sharing relationships resulting from exchange of knowledge (especially when it is across boundaries) – an indicator of innovation
  • Re-use rate of frequently accessed content – an indicator for improvement in efficiency and quality
  • Competency enhancement – A measurement of conversion of tacit to explicit knowledge evidenced from the conversion of online content into process / knowledge repository
  • Lessons learned and Best practices implemented

At higher levels of maturity, organizations even go on to discover the accuracy of knowledge dissemination – the number of times a knowledge nugget reached / or was discovered by the right person at the right time. This along with other metrics like number of new ideas that translated into innovative products, practices or services, and so on provide valuable clues to the organization on the impact of knowledge on the organization's ability to lead them on a path of growth and sustainable competitive advantage.

Personally, I don't believe it is possible, as yet, to establish with any level of accuracy that sharing "nn" documents resulted in a $yy savings to the company. However, I think it will be possible to empirically show that such a relationship does exist. Knowledge Management is no longer that "leap of faith". In fact, with an ageing population, rapid change in technology and various other parameters, it is fast becoming a resource that no organization can do without.

How did your organization take its decision to implement a KM system? Write in with your feedback and comments.

(*)Adapted from the Knowledge Management Handbook – Edited by Jay Liebowitz.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Making sense of everyday chatter


"Benioff explained on Monday's call that Salesforce reps took the social enterprise mantra to customers, but "couldn't find the buyers," suggesting even Salesforce.com didn't exactly understand what it meant." After all the hype during the launch of the "Social Enterprise" in 2011, it was time for a new mantra "The Internet of customers". And as we hop from one jargon to another, customers are left pondering on what exactly they wanted when they bought what they did! (http://www.zdnet.com/salesforce-ceo-admits-social-enterprise-pitch-didnt-work-7000023336/)

Recent articles point to the growing disenchantment with social media tools as a powerful way of capturing knowledge. While they still may be a good medium to stay connected within the enterprise, there is growing realization that they do not exactly contribute to enterprise knowledge 
(http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/tech-decision-maker/how-yammer-is-killing-enterprise-social-networking/). One of the reasons for this has been the absence of a definitive context – one of the key strands in the DNA of a Knowledge Management System. While most social collaboration tools advertise themselves as KM tools, the ability to transform chatter to tacit knowledge (one that gets embedded in the DNA of the enterprise) is still some distance away. It is just not sufficient to say that it has been captured in the knowledge repository of the organization, and therefore the knowledge now exists in an explicit form.

Why is this so? Knowledge is an active process of knowing, the processes and results of participation in organizational practices. At one end of the spectrum we have technical knowledge – knowledge relating to skills and expertise required to perform tasks. At the other end of the spectrum, is the knowledge required for strategy and innovation – the translation of experience and expertise into actions that promote sustainable competitive advantage and growth. While to a large extent the knowledge required to perform tasks can be codified, stored and retrieved, the other kind of knowledge is mostly tacit. The success of any knowledge initiative will depend on how well this tacit knowledge is elicited and used. Such knowledge in action results in new products and processes which are then institutionalized and become new explicit knowledge.

So, if we were to consider an oft-quoted statement "Knowledge walks out when your employee leaves the organization"… it is true only to the extent of social collective practices that the organization engages in. So, the real question that the organization needs to deal with is on how to create the context in which social engagement takes place. Social media cannot do this…it is only a facilitator for recording the process. Social tools can enable this process effectively if they are grounded in the context where participation results in exploiting the weak ties and enabling greater collaboration, outside the circle of influence. For example, induction programs in many organizations is merely a set of PowerPoint presentations and canned lectures that purportedly gives the new hires a bird's eye view of the organization. However, engaging the new hires in conversations that relate to real-world problems exposes them to the organization in a manner that no induction program can achieve; more importantly, the organization gets to benefit from the experience of the new hires from day one. How can a social collaboration tool enable this? This, I believe is the challenge that social media tools need to surmount.

Conversations need to connect people to people, people to content, or content to content, for it to be actionable. When this happens the tacit nature of knowledge lends itself to transformation – to becoming assimilated by others in the enterprise, and thereon to getting embedded in the organization's way of working. This sharing of experience that occurs results in higher forms of learning – those that can impact more than just transaction-level activities; resulting in the manner in which an organization innovates and strategizes.

Collaboration goes beyond just working together on a project; in today's world, where technology has made the world smaller, it means a whole lot more. Social learning, Communities of Practice, and the good old chatter we see on social media all contribute to some form of collaboration. In fact, social media has almost become synonymous with social collaboration in the enterprise. Yet, how much of this actually adds up to enterprise knowledge is anybody's guess.
What has been your experience with the use of social media tools in your organization?

Saturday, June 7, 2014

Social Learning: Bandura and beyond

Social Learning theory postulates that learning is a cognitive process that takes place in the social context and can occur purely through observation or direct instruction, even in the absence of motor reproduction or direct reinforcement (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_learning_theory). Albert Bandura is credited with making significant contribution to this theory which integrated behavioural and cognitive theories of learning in order to provide a comprehensive model for the wide range of learning experiences that occur in the real world. However, Bandura's theory is quite different from how the term "Social learning" is being used today. With the advent of the digital age and social media, social learning has acquired a new flavour – one influenced by learning that occurs assisted by social media and collaboration. As a means of knowledge acquisition, learning from peers and through interaction has always been a considered a key component of the process of imbibing knowledge. So, social learning by itself, is not very new; the technology has however changed. It has become ubiquitous and with social media becoming a key element in almost every aspect of work life today, it is inevitable that learning would remain unaffected by it.

In the context of the enterprise, learning is an invaluable tool – one that ensures productivity and helps sustain competitive advantage. From Peter Senge who popularized the term "Learning Organization" to Berger and Luckman who brought social learning theory into Organizational Learning literature, there have been several proponents of the concept that an organization that is able to learn continuously is the one that will have a sustainable competitive advantage. Over the years, this has been implemented in several ways in organizations:

  • Structured learning through formal training programs
  • Apprenticeship and Internship which allowed employees to learn on the job
  • Post-situational learning – learning from mistakes / introducing changes based on experience
  • Collaborative learning – Learning through sharing insights and experience with colleagues and others

The internet and collaborative technologies have given rise to newer methodologies to implement these age-old practices viz. e-learning, blended learning models, Communities of Practice and so on. With Social Media taking centre-stage we are also witnessing an attempt to use social media tools for organization learning. Discussion Forums, Communities of Practice and other collaborative learning models have been on the rise. Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC) is yet another term that has gained popularity – structured learning programs have now been blended with a collaborative tool giving rise to several streams of discussions, insights and opinions becoming available on a single subject. While these have benefited the users by making available content, the likes of which we have never seen before, a concomitant headache has been the information overload that has accompanied this. How do we separate the wheat from the chaff? With nearly a million voices speaking at the same time, how do we identify what is valuable for us, in the current context?

What does Organization learning mean in the context of your enterprise? How close would you say your organization is to becoming a Learning Organization?


 

 

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Knowledge Management – Defies definition

"There are many words and definitions I have never lost. But some I am only just beginning to truly understand"

~Mary E Pearson

How often have we used words fully comprehending the context in which we are using it, yet when asked the meaning of the word we would be stumped to give an accurate definition? Knowledge is apparently one such word; and when that becomes "Knowledge Management" you could actually end up writing a book of definitions.


This is how the Oxford English Dictionary defines knowledge. If so, how can knowledge be managed? Peter Drucker is credited with the quote "You can't manage knowledge. Knowledge is between two ears and only between two ears." And quite rightly so. If you were to manage the acquisition of skills through education, then that would be termed training and what is gained through experience can hardly be managed. An ancient Sanskrit text describes the process of how people acquire knowledge:

"Achaaryaath paadam aadatthe

paadam sishya swamedhayaa

paadam sa brahmachaaribhya

sesham kaala kramena
cha"

It explains:

From the teacher you receive a quarter of your knowledge
A quarter the disciple learns by his own efforts (practice)
A quarter he gains through interactions with his peers (fellow students)
The remaining comes only as time passes by (from experience)

I found this quite insightful, because it delineates the knowledge acquisition process and therefore gives us access to managing the acquisition process. It also appears that this could be equally effectively applied in the context of the organization. The organization, like the individual also learns in a similar manner; the only difference being that the teacher here might actually be the market place (in the case of organization's learning) and in some cases the market regulator.

Given this definition, I was trying to fit it into the current context of organizational knowledge and definitions by different leading knowledge management experts. Every organization which engages in some form of learning intervention, be it formal training and development programs or more unstructured learn-on-the-job forms, is providing employees with a "teacher" who imparts some learning. Similarly, as employees use their skills on a regular basis and learn from their experiences, they begin to know more than what they knew previously; the third kind of learning happens when employees engage in social interactions with other colleagues, customers, partners, suppliers etc. Every interaction will leave the employee enriched with a new learning and experience. The question then is, how can the organization manage these individual experiences and learning such that the sum total of this far exceeds the individual knowledge of each employee. And when this is put to use effectively, the organization benefits many fold than would be possible if each individual or group were to work in silos.

So, Knowledge Management then is the process by which an organization taps into the education and experience of individuals and makes it available in a manner that it can be used for the productivity and growth of the organization. This becomes possible by creating an ecosystem that fosters the creation, acquisition, collation and dissemination of knowledge. And we will know that such initiatives have been successful when we can measure the impact of this process on the ability of the organization to grow and profit from such knowledge.

With the advent of social collaboration and knowledge repositories, technology will also play a big role in enabling knowledge management by:

  1. Making it possible to have social interactions and capture such tacit knowledge
  2. Providing a structured and collaborative learning environment
  3. A mechanism to capture insights and share it with other employees
  4. And allowing people to benefit from the experience of others

While, seemingly it may not be possible to hasten the knowledge acquisition process, in an organizational context, what is important is how individual experiences can be collectively employed by the organization such that the organization's knowledge far exceeds its experience. Knowledge Management, then becomes a process of enabling individual skills and experiences to be gathered, collated and used contextually for enabling the organization progress in a sustainable manner.

A good knowledge management system would therefore have elements of collaboration and learning in order to be effective. By being able to integrate this to the performance of the organization it would enable the organization drive strategy and innovation.

When viewed from this perspective, we are able to appreciate the reason for Knowledge Management to exist as a strategic tool in organizations. We also realize the complexity of being able to gather such knowledge, process it in a meaningful manner, and share it with the entire organization such that it is available for use when needed. The challenges in enabling such a mechanism are multi-dimensional and involve people, processes, technology, organization structure, human behaviour and culture. When we look at the magnitude of activities that this will then encompass, it is quite easy to understand why a single definition eludes this subject.

Here are some definitions that are commonly used to define this subject:

  • Knowledge Management is a concept in which enterprises consciously and comprehensively gathers, organizes, shares and analyses its knowledge in terms of resources, documents and people skills
  • Knowledge Management is the process of applying a systematic approach to the capture, structuring, management and dissemination of knowledge throughout an organization to work faster, reuse best practices, and reduce costly rework.
  • Knowledge Management is the deliberate and systematic coordination of an organization's people, process, technology, and organizational structure in order to add value through reuse and innovation.
  • Strategies and processes designed to identify, capture, structure, leverage, value and share an organization's intellectual assets to enhance its performance and competitiveness
  • Knowledge Management is a collaborative and integrated approach to the creation, capture, organization, access and use of an enterprise's intellectual assets
  • Knowledge Management is understanding the organization's information flows and implementing learning practices which makes key aspects of its knowledge base available to the organization when required….

And so on it goes…

What is your definition of Knowledge Management? How would you go about explaining it?


 


 


 


 

Friday, May 9, 2014

Knowledge Management - The hydra-headed jargon

“Knowledge is as old as the rocks and as changing as the sea, enmeshed inextricably in its ways. And you want a clear definition of Knowledge Management? You must be daft!”
                                                                                         ~Paraphrasing Bedford in “The Quality of Travel”
One of the biggest challenges I have faced, especially facing people from a non-IT background is to explain what I do! “Knowledge Management? What exactly does that mean?” is a question I frequently encounter.  This post is a result of my quest to come up with an answer that will get me past a response that I hear “That’s very interesting”…but which I know really means “ I haven’t got a clue what you’re talking about”!!! J
The reason for this ambiguity is not very hard to understand; Knowledge Management as a term entered the lexicons only about thirty years ago.  And even when it did, it came as an offshoot of an attempt to explain other terms like “knowledge acquisition”, “knowledge-base systems”, artificial intelligence, expert systems and computer-based ontologies – sort of a “basket-term” for all of these and much more.  Early management theorists like Peter Drucker, Paul Strassman and Peter Senge contributed to the growing understanding of knowledge as a key organizational resource with Senge contributing the cultural dimension with his seminal work “The Fifth Discipline” where he introduced the concept of “the learning organization”.  By the mid-1990s the word had become pretty much part of organization strategy with important contributions from researchers like Christopher Bartlett, Dorothy Leonard-Barton, Chris Agyris, Ikujiro Nonaka and Hirotaka Takeuchi…to name a few.
Knowledge Management became the new mantra for consulting companies; organizations that had not had much success with TQM and other business process re-engineering initiatives now embraced KM as the panacea for all their previous management blunders.  Along the way, the term came to acquire attributes of performance management, Quality management, Business Intelligence (the new Decision Support Systems), and what have you.
The rise of the digital age has added new flavours to knowledge management; Web 2.0 introduced social collaboration to the list of things that KM already stood for.  And with the number of social tools available in the market, and their attempts at capturing a slice of the enterprise space, Knowledge Management has never had it so good…in terms of popularity.  Never mind that people still are unable to define what it really means! J


Thursday, May 1, 2014

Cloudy with a chance of knowledge nuggets

Have you ever felt like you were a little bit different? Like you had something unique to offer the world, if you could just get people to see it. Then you know exactly how it felt to be me.”
 ~ Flint Lockwood (from the film: Cloudy with a chance of meatballs)

Knowledge Management has come to mean different things to different people.  Starting with a document management system to a social intranet, knowledge takes on various hues and shades depending on what organizations expect out of such a system.  There is no single definition of Knowledge Management.  However, what everyone does agree on is the fact that Knowledge Management is the process through which organizations generate value from intellectual and knowledge-based assets.  With “social” acquiring a new dimension in the digital world, the ability to transform tacit knowledge, which usually exists in conversations, into explicit knowledge has increased the value that KM systems are able to deliver to enterprises.

This has been further enhanced by making such knowledge available on the cloud.  Is knowledge on the cloud likely to be different? Different, that is, from what you might get served if you had it in your enterprise knowledge repository?

In common usage, the term “cloud” is essentially a metaphor for the internet.  This has further popularized the phrase “in the cloud” to refer to software platforms and infrastructure, that are sold as a service, i.e. remotely through the internet. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_computing)

What this essentially facilitates is the ability for end-users to simply log on to the network and start using an application without requiring them to install anything; it also enables device-independent access to the application. The core functionality will continue to remain the same.  However, with a lot of preference being given to mobile-only users, we now have a new jargon to contend with – mobile-first design.  Historically, most designs have started out with a web interface and then been down-sized for smaller viewports.  However, with an increasing number of mobile-only users, there is a growing need to design interfaces with these users primarily in mind.  This therefore calls for a progressive and responsive design – one that keeps the limited screen space and concomitant constraints in the forefront.  It also means that the way the users interact with the application cannot change drastically from one device to another.   
Irrespective of how the application is accessed the core functionality will essentially remain the same.  The user interface design will however, give priority to those interactions with the application that happen primarily through a mobile device; the interface will need to be device agnostic, nevertheless.  The features and functionalities which are more likely to be accessed from a desktop or laptop (read, larger viewport, lesser frequency, more analytical and less transactional) may or may not be available across all interface devices; some features – for example complex admin configurations, or large text manipulations are probably best left to devices with larger user interfaces, namely laptops or desktops.

What is significantly important, and cannot be compromised irrespective of the device is the actual value of content being delivered to the end user.  A cloud-based deployment, because of its ubiquitous nature, lends itself well to fulfil this important criteria.  It is therefore, more important to be able to deliver knowledge to the end user in an intuitive manner – one that will make knowledge itself omnipresent.  When these knowledge nuggets manifest themselves to users in a manner that makes it easy to apply them in day-to-day work, it is only then that a KM system, irrespective of where or how they are available, will actually transform the way an organization works.


NEPHILA™ (www.kriostechnologies.com) is uniquely positioned to access such knowledge nuggets from the corporate enterprise repository and deliver them to end users at the point of action.  Where a large field force is involved, the ability to deliver this at their workplace – which is usually outdoors, provides the critical leverage for successful usage of enterprise knowledge.

How does your KM deliver knowledge nuggets to your users?  

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Learning from Lessons Learned

In a recent post I had mentioned how lessons learned would become visibly useful when it became possible to substantiate the impact of lessons learned.  Where knowledge is closely integrated to business operations, it becomes easier to track the use of such knowledge and the impact it has had on the business – either in terms of improvement in business performance measures, a positive impact on process measures, or measurable impact on people metrics.  However, the challenge usually lies in the fact that lessons learned are seldom directly linked to performance measures.  More often than not, they remain as lessons identified in the knowledge repository, with no measurable or tangible evidence of such lessons actually being put in use.
With the proliferation of enterprise social collaboration, does it make the task of tracking the dissemination of lessons learned any easier?  Is there any way of finding out if the lesson learned from a previous project or experience has been implemented elsewhere?  Or has some similar work been carried out in any other part of the organization which is quite similar to the experience based on which this lesson was learned?  A community of practice is probably the first place one is likely to check for such instances.  When groups of people with similar interests share a platform in which discussions happen, it is quite likely that such topics are discussed, and more evidence can be gathered about such lessons.  Evidence of a lesson learned elsewhere which crops up in discussions in a community of practice is one of the first signals that a lesson is being taken seriously, and is likely to find implementation elsewhere in the organization. 
Tracking the network of people associated with a particular community of practice can provide pointers to how well the information has been dispersed across the organization.  Where formal learning structures are integrated as part of the enterprise social network, it is also possible to associate these lessons learned to the formal learning structures.  For example, a simple survey or a quiz usually evokes a lot of interest among the community; and the response can be an indicator of how well this lesson has been picked up across the network.  Further, a link to the lesson where the answers are incorrect, or even providing that as a reference is likely to increase the people who will get to read this.  However, this does not necessarily guarantee implementation of a lesson learned.  All we can inference from such statistics is that there has been sufficient dispersion of this message across the network.
The package of practice is the other likely place one can possibly evidence the impact of lessons learned.  Where a process or a procedure has been changed, being able to trace it to the influence of the community, and to the set of lessons learned that caused the change in process or procedure is not hard to trace.  More often than not, where there is sufficient automation of processes or where processes are executed through standard software, it is quite easy to track the change request and be able to associate it with the appropriate lessons learned.  In such cases, we have far more solid evidence that a particular change in the process or procedure was initiated because of the lessons learned.  The actual implementation is itself traceable.  A word of caution: since we haven’t linked it to actual business performance, we still don’t know whether this finally did result in some positive improvement to the business result.  Nevertheless, we are still ahead of the game in terms of at least being able to quantify the impact of lessons learned to process improvement and / or people improvement.
At the end of the day, the ability to influence a large section of the network is itself going to result in the creation of the tipping point where positive impact will automatically start to flow.  The key then remains as to how enterprise social collaboration can be made an effective tool of engagement such that it brings in more people to contribute and share knowledge.

Would love to hear about actual experiences in organizations where impact of social collaboration has had a positive impact on the business, and how it has been measured.

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Putting Lessons Learned into Action


Acronyms and jargon have a wonderful way of locomotion - especially around my being.  They manage to enter the ear and leave through the mouth, silently, stealthily without a trace.  And as I continue to struggle with AAR, LLR, RCA and the like, I came across yet another term - A3.  Fortunately, this time around it was not an acronym, but just a hook to hang a process on.  A3 is a process followed by Toyota to record process improvements, and the name is derived from the paper size they originally used to write these reports - they probably still do!

So, the topic is about how organizations learn from their mistakes, and ensure that these lessons stay with the organization.  Most quality programs statute an improvement process which usually starts with something called the Lessons Learned. This is usually a stand-alone document or gets associated with a Project Legacy Report or something similar.  The intention, of course, is to record the lessons learned during the execution of a project, or in the process of identification and resolution of a problem or issue the organization was faced with.  However, in most cases, this gets recorded more as a matter of following due process and usually gets stored in some remote location, never to be retrieved again.

In a "social enterprise" - one where people in an organization are networked, have easy access to each other, are able to have conversations on ideas, insights and issues and knowledge is easily transferred through people or content - making the switch from tacit to explicit rather effortlessly - it ought to be easier to make lessons learned available across a larger cross-section of people.  However, what is more important is to ensure that this lesson is put in action, institutionalized - either through a process improvement or a skill improvement program and results in tangible benefits to the organization.  This can happen only when knowledge (or rather the use of knowledge) can be measured.

Lesson Learned Reports also have a rather tedious method of being static and inhibiting exchange of ideas - even after the report has been prepared.  This can be avoided by making the report preparation itself a dynamic process - one which happens as the problem identification occurs and the solution is identified.  And when such a process becomes interactive, and happens in a collaborative environment, chances are that there are a lot more people following the progress, and therefore stickiness or ability to recall the lesson is higher.  Also, in the process of tracking progress, there are other teams of people who are simultaneously experimenting with the solution and coming up with modifications and suggestions.  The dynamic nature of such a solution has the ability to impact a practice (or a process) making the institutionalization of such a change much quicker.  The impact of such a change is also quickly shared across the organization and becomes measurable.

How are lessons learned (LLR) or After-Action-Reviews (AAR) conducted in your organization? Share your feedback on how good this tool is in causing business improvements.