Feature
posted 1 Mar 2000 in Volume 3 Issue 6
Your Say: In praise of simple
questions
There
are currently two main tracks in knowledge management. One is the Artificial
Intelligence route, where programs are built to learn about hidden
relationships, contexts and patterns in large and ever increasing volumes of
data, thus allowing knowledge to be created about, for example, customer buying
behaviour. The second focus of knowledge management, and the subject of this
brief note, is the humanist-pragmatist view that the most useful knowledge
resides in individuals.
When this humanist knowledge management is used for business value,
the goals are to create both a learned organisation and a learning
organisation. 'Learned', here meaning that the organisation will build a fund of knowledge
that can be tapped into, both by newcomers for orientation via a fast-track
learning curve, and by existing team members to avoid re-inventing the wheel.
'Learning organisation' means instilling a culture that learns to pull whatever
knowledge is needed, and a culture that is oriented toward sharing.
If we assume that
a company has managed to create a sharing culture (not a trivial task) then
tools can be designed to make capture of tacit knowledge a daily event.
These 'trappers' can help to convert some of the tacit knowledge of individuals, to
explicit knowledge for group and business advantage.
In a business organisation, formal
explicit knowledge is predominantly created and passed around via
documents.
As an
example, imagine you are creating a document describing some part of a project
that is going wrong. Suppose, further that you are creating the report as a
contractual document as a basis for a legal claim against a supplier. Of course,
when you begin the report you have some goals in mind and you try to guide your
writing to cover those goals.
Once the first draft is in place, a
trapper system is designed to present a series of relevant questions to tease
out hidden assumptions and tacit knowledge.
Thus, you may re-read and edit the
document while being prompted to answer the following sample questions:
The system might also have been set up to ask:
- Will this document help/hinder progress on the project as a whole?
- What is the current state of the project as a whole?
A company-specific
structure (DTD) of the trapping questions can be held as XML tags for a range of
standard documents, enabling a powerful self-interview technique. The results
can be stored as metadata linked with the document.
This becomes extremely useful metadata
to enable colleagues (and the company's lawyers) to understand more about the
circumstances under which the document was originally written, especially if
considerable time elapses before the issue comes to negotiation.
Trappers can
thus form the foundation of a methodology to create a valuable
lessons-learned knowledge-base for the company - not bad for a collection of simple
questions!
Professor Wilf Greenwood is a business change programme manager who
lectures on the International MBA course at the Theseus Institute and CERAM
Management Research Centre, France. He can be contacted at:
wilf@monaco.mc
denotes premium content | May 17 2008 






