The basic components of
knowledge management
The
basic components of KM include people, processes, technology (or) culture,
structure, technology, depending on the specific perspective. Different schools
of thought KM includes different lens through which KM can be viewed and
explained, to include:
• Community of Practice (Wenger, McDermott
& Synder 2001);
•
Social-network analysis; • Intellectual capital (Bontis & Choo 2002);
•
Information theory (McInerney 2002);
•
Complexity science;
•
Constructivism (Nanjappa & Grant 2003).
Most
research suggested that a successful KM effort is needed to convert
internalized tacit knowledge into explicit knowledge, so as to share, but the
same effort must allow also for individuals to internalize and make any
significant personnel Retrieved from codified knowledge KM effort. KM
subsequent research has suggested that a distinction between tacit knowledge
and explicit knowledge represented a simplification and that the notion of
explicit knowledge is self-contradictory. Specifically, for knowledge to be
made explicit, it must be translated into information.
The central goal of Knowledge Management:
The
need and desire to gain new experiences and perspectives from within the problems
seen professionals as well as best practices on a topic or a specific field,
using common rules and processes. Naturally, the members have their own
roadmaps within the projects and their expected results in their professional
work. Organizational learning process is the main instrument of knowledge
management. Organizational learning, management measuring knowledge and
intellectual capital are related and complementary concepts. In short, the
underlying organizational learning knowledge management and knowledge
management is the basis from which to generate intellectual capital.
Proposed frameworks:
A
first proposed framework mentions knowledge as a cycle in which implicit
knowledge is "extracted" to become explicit knowledge and explicit
knowledge is re-internalized "the implicit knowledge. A second proposed
framework for categorizing the dimensions of knowledge to distinguish between
knowledge of a system built out of a human individual (eg an information system
can be incorporated into the design knowledge) and knowledge embedded
representing a capacity to learn from one human body nervous and endocrine
systems (Sensky 2002). A third proposed framework for categorizing the
dimensions of knowledge creation distinguish between the exploration of "new
knowledge" (innovation) vs. the transfer or use of "established
knowledge" within a group, organization or community.
Collaboration
environments, such as communities of practice or the use of social computing
tools can be used for knowledge creation and transfer. Knowledge can be viewed
in three stages: before, during or after KM-related activities. Different
organizations have tried various knowledge capture incentives, including making
content submission mandatory and incorporating rewards into performance
measurement plans. There is considerable controversy over whether incentives
work or not in this area and there has been a consensus. A KM strategy involves
active management of knowledge (push strategy). In one example, individuals
strive to explicitly encode their knowledge common knowledge in a repository
such as a database and recovery knowledge they need other people who provided
deposit. This is also known as coding approach to KM. Another KM strategy to
involve people who are expert knowledge claims associated with a specific topic
on an ad-hoc (pull strategy). In one example, an individual expert can offer
their perspectives on some person or persons who need it (Snowden 2002). This
is also known as Custom approach to KM.
Other knowledge management
strategies and tools for companies include:
•
Awards (as a means of motivation for knowledge sharing);
•
Tell a story (as a means of transferring tacit knowledge);
•
Transfer of best practices;
•
Knowledge fairs
•
Management skills (planning and systematic evaluation of individual skills
organization members);
•
Cross-learning project;
•
After-action reviews;
•
Knowledge-mapping (a map of knowledge within a company archives accessible to
all;)
•
Communities of practice;
•
Guidelines-Expert (to allow the applicant to reach knowledge experts);
•
Proximity and architecture (physical situation may be conducive or obstructive
employees to share knowledge);
•
Master-disciple relationship;
• Collaboration technologies (groupware,
etc.);
•
Social-software (wikis, social bookmarking, blogs, etc.).
A number of applications exist as the main
motivations of organizations to conduct a management considerations effort. Typical KM effort includes:
•
Making knowledge available content has increased in developing and delivering
products and services;
•
Making new shorter cycles of product development;
•
Facilitating and managing innovation and organizational learning;
•
Leverage the expertise of people throughout the organization;
•
Increasing network connectivity between internal and external individuals;
•
Managing business environments and allowing employees to obtain relevant
insights and ideas appropriate for their work;
• Solving intractable problems or bad;
•
Managing intellectual capital and intellectual assets in the workforce (such as
expertise and know-how possessed by key individuals).
Earlier
KM technologies include online corporate yellow pages of expertise locators and
document management systems. Combined with the early development of
collaborative technologies (in particular Lotus Notes), KM technologies
expanded in the mid 1990s. Subsequent efforts to leverage KM technologies
semantic search and retrieval and the development of e-learning communities of
practice (Capozzi 2007). More recently, the development of social computing
tools (such as bookmarks, blogs and wikis) have allowed more structured
approach, ecosystem self-governance or transfer, capture and creation of
knowledge, including the development of new forms of community networks, or
matrixes organizations. However such tools for the most part still rely on text
and code, and thus represent explicit knowledge transfer. These tools face
challenges in distilling meaningful reusable knowledge and ensuring that their
content is transmissible through diverse channels (Andrus 2005).
Software
tools in knowledge management are a collection of technologies and are not
necessarily purchased as a single software solution. Moreover, this management
software tools knowledge have the advantage of using the organization's
existing information infrastructure technology. Organizations and business
decision makers spend a great deal of resources and to make significant
investments in the latest technologies, systems and infrastructure to support
knowledge management. It is imperative that these investments are properly
validated, made wisely and that the most appropriate technologies and software
tools are selected or combined to facilitate knowledge management.
Evolution of knowledge
management
Knowledge
management has become a cornerstone in the emerging business strategies, such
as Service Lifecycle Management (SLM), with companies increasingly turning to
software vendors to enhance their effectiveness in industries including, but
not limited to aviation. Knowledge has always operated, but not how to do today
perhaps its management will improve in the near future, but must not be made at
the individual level but at the corporate level. Knowledge management can be
defined as a strategically oriented, motivation and facilitation of employment
of members of the organization in developing and using their cognitive
capacities, by value, subject to its overall objectives, sources of information,
experience and skills of each applicant. Knowledge management as a new concept
disciplined knowledge economy is a method, a new concept of management that
aims to transform the intellectual qualities of organization staff in
competitive power and new value (Shanhong, 2000, p. 1).
Focusing
on the intellect in activities which use individual and external knowledge
management offers value to organizations, they customize. Going beyond simple
data collection and manipulation to obtain information, process knowledge
management refers to the acquisition, creation and application or reuse of
knowledge, its fundamental goal of knowledge resources and knowledge of the
organization's capacity to give it the opportunity to learn and adapt to
environmental its changing (Auster, 1999, p. 75). In management literature has
been proposed and used several methods to identify, structure and knowledge so
far, but remember the most important methods of assessing the classification
proposed by Sveiby (2001):
1.
Methods of market capitalization (Market Capitalization Methods-MCM) are those
methods that calculate the difference between the market capitalization of the
company and the book value of equity as the value of intangible assets of the
company.
2.
Estimation methods based on return on assets (Return on Assets Methods - ROA)
are those that determine the value of intangible assets of the enterprise
according to feature the industry average profitability. Thus, the average
profit before tax of the company are reported on a company's tangible assets,
determining the ROA (return on assets), which is comparable to the value the
industry average. Profits that it obtains from holding company intangible
assets are estimated by multiplying the difference between the two rates The
average value of tangible assets of the enterprise. The present value of all
future profits is the value of these intangible assets owned by it.
3.
Estimation methods Scorecard (SC) and direct methods of estimating intellectual
capital (Direct Intellectual Capital Methods - DIC). Given that both groups of
methods involve assessing the enterprise's intangible assets by identifying
each component, making their classification, we treat them together because
often the boundaries between the two are not clearly defined. The former are
used most often to identify the qualitative factors and calculation of
performance indicators to measure them. These indicators are used more for
medium-and long-term management of the undertaking, not estimating the value of
intangible assets held by it. Direct methods directly assess intangible assets,
individually or as an aggregated coefficient.
Functions undertaken by
KMC:
•
Transformation of local know-how accumulated in European or global information
of interest;
•
Promotion of improved standards of professional practice beyond the artificial
borders and geographical;
•
Identify converging interests profitable business relationships and the
foundation of cooperation that will generate wider social support, increasing
the enthusiasm of members and confirmation of personal expectations.
•
Support more effective communication between organizations / companies for the
origin of community members in their corporate strategies work and refining
their professional skills;
•
Reaction speed-increasing innovation and translation imposed by the new
Westernstyle leadership and positioning on the European Single Market (European
Single Market);
•
Integration in a real network of value-chain activities and organizations
inside the mother and the members themselves; KMC is a synthetic defines the
following special advantages:
•
Its influence is felt fully in the process of budgeting and planning of
projects / investments in ongoing or potential members;
•
Becomes an official source of undoubted authority in institutions or companies
who understand the power to base knowledge (KM) that creates and directs
through its projects.
Conclusions
In organizational context, KM is the process of managerial
organizational knowledge to create business value and generating competitive
advantage. Creating knowledge in an The new economy - the knowledge economy -
requires new forms of measurement of the assets of a company, taking into
account the fact that future benefits will be derived primarily from the sale
of intangible assets such as knowledge, and not those tangible. Knowledge
management has always been an important part of management in general, even if
it was not taken into account under that name. In fact, knowledge management is
a very difficult area to study. Knowledge management its, ultimately, generate
value for incorporable asset management organization. Most of these intangible
assets are linked to a form of abstraction, structure and knowledge transfer.
It is a system of indicators of intangible resources and activities to enable
providers of services and capital of the company to develop a firm estimate of
future benefits and possible risks. Although it is a statement on intellectual
capital in an organization, it is often used the term of knowledge resources,
the concept of intellectual capital and intangible resources appearing very
rarely in all document content.
I visited several web sites however the audio feature for audio songs present at this web site is
ReplyDeletegenuinely fabulous.
Thanks designed for sharing such a nice opinion, paragraph is
ReplyDeletenice, thats why i have read it entirely
Good way of describing, and nice paragraph to get information about my presentation focus,
ReplyDeletewhich i am going to convey in academy.
I simply couldn't go away your web site prior to suggesting
ReplyDeletethat I actually loved the usual information an individual supply on your
guests? Is going to be back incessantly to check up on new
posts
Hello, I enjoy reading through your post. I like to write a little comment
ReplyDeleteto support you.
Appreciating the time and energy you put into your site and in depth information you present.
ReplyDeleteIt's nice to come across a blog every once in a
while that isn't the same unwanted rehashed information. Great
read! I've bookmarked your site and I'm adding your RSS feeds to my Google account.