Feature
posted 1 Feb 2000 in Volume 3 Issue 5
Faros, a
light in the darkness
In the first of a series of three articles, Ove
Rustung Hjelmervik sets
the scene for Statoil's journey towards creating a practical knowledge
management system. The Faros Knowledge Management System (KMS) was completed in
July 1999 after close to a four-year development period. Throughout the process,
the Faros multi-discipline team was closely integrated with the users. This was
of particular importance when facilitating the mapping and verification of a
Business Unit's 'as is' work processes - the heart of the Faros concept.
Brief
history of Statoil
In 1972 the Norwegian Government
decided to establish its own oil company in order to participate directly in the
oil industry unfolding on the Norwegian continental shelf. The company's
objective is, (either by itself or through participation in, or together with
other companies), to carry out exploration, production, transportation, refining
and marketing of petroleum and petroleum-derived products, as well as other
business. In 1998 Statoil's share of produced hydrocarbons from own and partner
operated fields was 148 million barrels of oil and 6.5 billion Sm3 of gas. With
close to 19,000 employees, the company is present in several of the global oil
fields, like the Caspian Sea, offshore Angola, and in Venezuela. In Norway it
operates several fields, such as Statfjord and Troll, which are among the
largest offshore oil and gas fields in the world. The company's net operating
revenue for 1998 was USD 14.1 billion.
In this article, I will discuss the
experience of building a KMS within Statoil. Our aim has been to create a system
capable of managing a company's intellectual capital, leading to improved value
creation in a changing environment. The core of all Knowledge Management (KM)
initiatives is to create competitive advantages benefiting all stakeholders1, not to introduce more information
technology (IT). For a company to become a learning organisation, the management
intention must be to treat all human capital as intellectual capital, and to
make provision for meeting such an intention. By acting as a learning
organisation, the employees will apply their intellectual capital in a
continuing search for new, or improved value creating opportunities through
investing in the relevant knowledge and capabilities needed for the company to
succeed. A learning organisation will most likely avoid the Damocles' sword of
re-engineering every time the market is in turmoil. Such organisations will
continue to find ways for it to grow and prosper organically, as can be seen
from the evolution of the Finnish rubber-to-mobile phone company Nokia.
KM is not an IT system
to be bought from the local IT shop and dropped down on some employees for
instant application. I hold that its users must build a well functioning system
over time. The Faros meta system is the formula and recipe for engaging the
Business Units' employees in shaping its own KMS, and securing a more robust
organisation. The organisation's culture, and its senior management's backing,
are two essential ingredients for KM to succeed. Unless the initiative is backed
by management, the Machiavellian king-makers will start their scheming. The
Faros example, therefore, is about building a long lasting competitive advantage
through communicating, connecting, sharing, collaborating, transacting,
accessing, capturing and improving value-creating activities. Through the
system's navigational capabilities, integrated with the use of multimedia
learning support, the company's employees will be able to create a learning
organisation.
A
company has to learn better than its competitors, and apply that knowledge
throughout its business faster and more widely than the competitors do.
John Browne, CEO, BP-Amoco
A cartoon depicts the Chief Dinosaur
addressing his subordinates. The text reads: "The future looks bleak. The world
is in chaos, and we all have a specialised brain the size of a walnut." This is
exactly what happened to the retailing organisation Woolworth, founded 1879 in
the UK. Its last store was closed in 1997 in the US. According to Professor
Peter Williamson of INSEAD, Woolworth "had refined and polished its economic
engine and deepened its narrow range of competence into almost perfect
extinction".2
Archimedes believed he could move the world
through a fixed point, given a stick long enough to get a firm grip. This is
called levering. Although Archimedes may have been able to move the world, few
other "world size" feats have ever been accomplished by a single individual. Most
major achievements, barring individual competition, are a result of teamwork.
The core of teamwork is co-operation and sharing of information, experience,
etc., in order to reach a common goal while defending one's own territory.
While Archimedes used a stick as a lever, learning organisations are using
knowledge management for this purpose. The stick was to Archimedes as the knowledge
management system is to the learning organisation. Leveraging your knowledge
is the essence of knowledge management. It is the ability to lever one's
knowledge that distinguishes the learning organisations from the 'also ran'
. By using a knowledge management system as a lever, one secures an
effective operation as well as strengthening the ability for innovation and
growth. Unfortunately for the dinosaurs, they did not know of Faros. Faros
(Pharos) comes from the Greek word Pyr, meaning fire. In 288 BC a more than 100
meter, and three-storey, high lighthouse was built on the island Pyr outside the
Mediterranean Sea port of Alexandria. Pharos is considered one of the eight
wonders of the world.) Faros purpose is to offer an empowering knowledge
system, enabling the employees to build a learning organisation with the goal to
strengthen Statoil as a leading, profitable, energy company capable of serving
all its stakeholders in a more competitive environment.
The Faros
concept
The purpose of all organisations is to achieve wanted objectives. If it
is your desired goal to harvest the elk population in your area, then you set up
a hunting party, with dedicated tasks for each member. The most experienced or
best hunter gets to shoot. Before the shooting can take place, one has to
retrieve information as to the whereabouts of the animals. The most intelligent
information is that which leads you to achieving your goal faster than your
competitors. The hunting party is organised as a flat network organisation for
quick decisions towards securing the stated goal.
In today's international business
community, information is trusted around the world with an escalating speed. The
hierarchical structure is less applicable for today's business activities and
has thus had to yield to a flatter structure. The progress of a business does
not hinge on one man making strategic decisions, but on many smaller or larger
decisions made by all of the employees along the company's value chain. For this
to happen, it is crucial that the information reaches the right person, closest
to where the decision will be made and implemented, without undue delays. The
consequence of this is that added responsibility is given to the individual
employee, resulting in more employees reporting to the individual manager. The
need for a large middle management tier has been removed.
The self-imposed task of the Faros
team, therefore, was to create a knowledge concept capable of delivering to the
employees all information relevant to a given activity or decision. The concept
should identify and develop core technology for easy access to information and
multimedia elements, and a navigating concept for the information search. We
wanted to combine the written word with a multimedia impact in order to create a
stronger basis for improvement, innovation and learning. After debating these
issues during 1996, we ended up formulating the following hypothesis:
'Learning takes place in the work process'
The hypothesis became Faros
cornerstone for formulating Its vision, goals and product.
We ended up with the Faros "Knowledge
Room", a starting point for navigation towards all required information. This
created a generic and transparent knowledge structure where the knowledge
repositories between the many Communities of Practices (COP)3 could be compared. Through many avenues,
such as linking our multimedia learning lab to the work process, we wanted to
secure visual support related to the task at hand. Furthermore, we wanted good
experiences to be shared. An important part of a KMS is the ability to share
experience. Through an experience transfer system we wanted to ensure that
users' experience was sent, not just to a "data bucket" where it would be stored
never again to be "touched" by a human brain, but to the responsible process
owners for further kneading into Good Practice (GP) 4descriptions. Our experience transfer
system was to result in the reuse of information, as well as a collaborative
system for developing new GP based on information with the same relevance.
Building on our
own experience of searching in vain for information, as well as discussions with
experts, we decided that Faros needed more than one entrance for finding stored
information. This reflects the brain's capacity to handle fuzzy concepts and the
many alternative ways of remembering and retrieving specific data.
Furthermore, both
searching for, and securing relevant information is a challenge for the
operational as well as the professional communities (main process owners).
Through combining the two communities in a seamless and transparent structure,
we expected both groups to tap into each other's activities, and thus benefit by
being connected into a unified system. Below is a list of challenges for both
professional and operational COPs in Statoil:
Challenges of professional
COPs
|
Communicate position,
role and mandate within the Statoil community, |
|
Visualise goals,
tasks, work processes, responsibility and authority within the various
process networks in Statoil |
|
Entry point for
finding expertise and best practice |
|
Experience transfer
across organisational borders |
|
Develop GP based on
experience |
|
Continuous improvement
and innovation based on cross border comparison with the various operating
units. |
Challenges of operational
COPs
|
Work processes (SAP
and Business Unit-specific) |
|
Strategic, operational
and procedural documents |
|
Technical
documentation |
|
Learning and
visualisation |
|
Functional network
connections |
|
Systematic collection
and processing of experience |
|
Experience transfer
across organisational barriers |
|
Develop good practice
from experience |
|
Continuous improvement
in cross fertilisation between the various operating COPs
|
|
The business situation
in the functional networks (ability to supply JIT-JE services).
|
Organising information
Since the introduction of the WWW in
1994, we have learned to browse through information aimlessly, much like
wandering around a huge shopping mall. The Faros team felt that the time had
come for someone to focus on navigation. To navigate is "to steer, or
direct.... or to plot the course for (travelling)" according to Webster's
dictionary. Thus, while browsing is an aimless search, navigation is the
purposeful search for information relevant to a given task. In our zest for IT
simplicity we created the Faros Work Process Navigation5 concept. We believe that this way of
applying the Web has formed a new school in utilising IT for a more effective
execution of the relevant business goal.
We wanted to create an arena for
capturing, sharing and dispersing knowledge creating information. We wanted the
arena to be transparent, both for operational and professional Communities of
Practice, in order to create a common ground for a co-operative work system. All
relevant information for users needed to be only one or two clicks away from a
work process. The work process, thus, became the focal point when seeking
relevant information.
Employees, it turned out, often did not check for relevant information
on a subject before executing a task, and thus risked failing to follow current
policies, or GP. When we realised that not seeking information was the norm
rather than the exception, we confronted the employees with their practice.
Their explanation for not searching relevant information was twofold: Not only
did they have problems using the data systems (IT) required to find such
information, but also they did not know which data bases to search (out of more
than a thousand!). An intelligent search could reveal the existence of a policy
document, or a similar task that had been done before. Such a search could yield
added value in the form of an improved GP, leading to reduced maintenance costs
or even a value creating innovation.
The combination of not mastering IT
and not knowing where to search for information created a major strain on our
employees, resulting in information anorexia. Thus, it is not always a "Not
Invented Here" problem that causes people not to benefit from others' experience
or ideas. Despair, from searching in vain, can also be the result of not
finding, and thus avoiding to seek relevant and new information. They felt
victimised by the situation. To counter this we decided to turn the "burden
of proof" from the employees' responsibility for finding all relevant
information, to the company's responsibility for making available all data
relevant to a specific work process. We called this burden of proof a philosophy
for "Just-in-Time Just-Enough" (JIT-JE). In other words, the user should not be
blamed for failing to find a relevant item of information, out there in
cyberspace if the company had forgotten to inform them about it. The
burden-of-proof element does not remove the employees' responsibility for
looking up data they know exists. It does, however, secure a levelled playing
field, giving all employees the same possibility for performing well.
Through this method of
seeking information, the company has secured a vital relationship between the
employees' work arena and all necessary information the company says is relevant
to it. This way, we bring all known relevant information to the decision point,
be it the written word, pictures, animation or sound.
We have two types of information,
those being structured and unstructured.
Structure
information
Running a platform requires structured work processes. One example is a
process for preventive maintenance. In this job there are standard checkpoints
for identifying wear and tear, as well as replacing soon-to-break parts. By
building an operational work process in Faros, the Operator is provided with all
relevant links to stored data, knowledge of the equipment to be serviced and the
addresses of its suppliers.
The Faros Work Process Navigator makes
immediately available all relevant corporate policies, good practices,
visualised and textual learning elements, suppliers' information
(Internet/Extranet), technical documentation, 3rd party information, and other
information in a relationship which is seen as natural for the user in his work
situation. By both securing information directly (hierarchical search) or
indirectly (non-hierarchical), based on a 'natural relationship transverse' of
the information silos, all bits of relevant information can flow naturally to
the exact point in the process where the employee requires it.
Unstructured
information
Unstructured information, on the other hand, relates to activities which
cannot be anticipated in advance. Drilling a new production well requires the
drilling team to analyse the geology and hydrocarbons structure, and from the
analysis develop a strategy for producing the optimal amount of hydrocarbons.
Having planned the well, set the drill, and submerged it halfway down into the
geological structure the team runs into trouble. A shallow gas pocket is
encountered. The drilling is stopped, and the incident requires new information.
Information to solve the case can be anywhere, and must be sought based on the
current situation. This then becomes a search for unstructured
information.
Finding a methodology for searching unstructured information, we found,
can have a great effect on the learning aspect of working with uncertainty. By
giving predetermined links to relevant structured information, and an effective
search engine, such as CognIT's6
Corporum, for searching unstructured information, we may be able to guide
employees in the desired direction. Through a system of predetermined
subscriptions for leading sources of knowledge, such as a university, Knowledge
Community7 etc., the very source
searched for should be well within reach. I will discuss this further in the
next issue.
In
the March 2000 issue of Knowledge Management, Rustung Hjelmervik will describe
the evolution of the Knowledge Room and the various elements which make up each
employee's 'work process' area, from value chain portals to the knowledge
village.
The Faros Team
The Faros project has been staffed
by many people from various units within Statoil, as well as outside the
company, for shorter or longer periods. I would like to extend my thanks to the
hundreds of colleagues in Statoil's many operating and professional units who
have made Faros into a visionary, leading edge, knowledge system. Without the
team, and our many colleagues, the Faros product would not have been
built.
Ove
Rustung Hjelmervik is the Project manager of Faros knowledge management system.
He can be contacted at: hjel@statoil.com
| 1 Stakeholders: The term includes owners,
employees, customers, suppliers, competitors, authorities and
society. |
| 2 The Antidote, Issue 22, p.22. CSBS
Publication Inc. refers to Professor Williams article in the 1999 spring
issue of Sloan Management Review. |
| 3 A community of Practice is a term developed by
Institute for Research on Learning, and discussed later in this article.
Operational: the activity of operating and maintaining a production
facility of an operating Business Unit. Professional: The research,
development, engineering, maintenance and other support given to the
operating activities by a supporting Business Unit. Such support can
include Petroleum technology, Construction technology, Facilities
engineering, Catering services, etc. In Statoil the professional networks
are called "Process networks". |
| 4 After a discussion among international
organisations it was found that "Best Practice" for some could be "Worst
Practice" for others. Thus it was settled on "Good Practice" (GP), which I
have tried to apply thoughout this document. Statoil continues to refer to
the Industry's Best Operating Practice. |
| 5 Faros Work Process Navigation structures relevant
information around the work process. |
| 6 CognIT AS is a Norwegian Technology firm,
located in Halden, developing search engines and knowledge management
utilities based on ontological principles. |
| 7 Knowledge Community and Community of
Practice is considered by the author to be equal in
meaning. |