Feature
posted 1 May 2000 in Volume 3 Issue 8
The
knowledge management system
This month's Your Say section
focuses on the KMS; what are the factors that make one knowledge management
system more effective than another?
Accounting for knowledge
When you say the
word 'system' to a group of people, a good proportion of them will interpret the word
as meaning an IT system. But a knowledge management system is far more than an
IT solution. It is about a way of working; a way of working systematically, to
deliver the value tied up in the knowledge of your staff, your teams, your
suppliers and your customers. It's also a way of being, it's the core of your
belief system.
Let's take an analogy for working systematically to deliver value, by
looking at the management of one of your other assets. Lets look at money. Now I
know money is not a strong analogy for knowledge. It is a lot more tangible for
a start, and a lot more measurable, and everyone relates to it. But let's ignore
for a moment the differences between the two, and instead compare the management
systems that businesses apply. One reason that I pick money for the analogy is
that you don't mess about with it. My HR colleagues tell me money doesn't
motivate, but people still don't take chances with it.
The systematic
management of money requires a combination of people, processes, technology and
culture. You will need people such as accountants, financial planners,
commercial managers. You have a whole range of business processes like
budgeting, financial tracking, auditing of accounts. No doubt you have software technology
you use; from base-level spreadsheets to more elaborate
enterprise-wide accounting solutions. You may be moving into e-commerce, and investing in technology
to move money electronically. Finally you have a money-savvy culture.
Your people understand that 'money counts', they 'watch the bottom line', they look for 'bang for the
buck'. They know the value of a dollar, and if times are tight, they watch what
they spend. Your money management system works, because it is a holistic
integration of people, process, technology and culture. These things have been
about for so long we sometimes don't recognise them as being components in the
money system.
What about your knowledge management system? Do you have the people? Do
you have knowledge accountants, knowledge planners, knowledge managers? Do you
have processes for knowledge tracking, or knowledge auditing? Do you budget for
knowledge at the start of a project, in the same way you budget for money? Do
you have the technologies you need at a local and enterprise-wide scale? What
about your culture? Do people keep as close an eye on knowledge as they do on
money? They may know what they earn, but do they know what they learn?
Analogies can be pushed
too far, but I think in this case a comparison of the two shows that a knowledge
management system, if it is to succeed, needs to look at the holistic
integration of people, process, technology and culture issues. Part of the
success of the BP Amoco programme (a detailed case study appears on page 7 of
this magazine) was the close attention we paid to this integration. We created
knowledge roles, we introduced knowledge processes, and we brought in knowledge
technology. The result has been a deep and lasting change in the culture, and
the delivery of real tangible business benefit. It didn't happen by accident,
but as a result of creating a system to manage our knowledge in the same
systematic fashion that we manage our money.
Nick Milton is the managing
director of Knowledge Transform(SM) International. He can be contacted at:nick_milton@ktransform.com
The knowledge
audit
To all
who are searching for the knowledge management system that will increase the
bottom line, make productivity skyrocket, and clearly demonstrate the value of
knowledge sharing to the organisation, I offer this advise: Don't focus on the
end result. Set your sights higher, to the strategic planning level. Companies
that have achieved the greatest success in their efforts to create knowledge
enterprises are those that began with an inward focus. A good knowledge
management system is not simply a matter of the right technology. Those who are
successful today began with an assessment of the knowledge environment of their
organisation. That is the function of the knowledge audit.
The knowledge audit provides a 5,000ft
view across the entire company and enables the astute observer to home in on any
anomalies for further analysis. Groups will stand out because they exhibit
positive or negative variances in the factors you are measuring. Good audit data
shows how staff accesses, uses, shares and stores the information and knowledge
needed to do their jobs. It uncovers organisational and cultural inducements and
barriers to knowledge use and transfer, and highlights the best practices and
lessons learned that often becomes useful across the business. Most importantly,
it provides the basis for system design and the data for establishing ROI
targets.
While
in and of itself, the knowledge audit won't immediately translate to the
bottom line, it does guarantee that your organisation is moving in the right
direction, so its knowledge efforts are expended wisely and in a targeted manner. This
can be seen in the turnaround in the R&D department of a major
petrochemical company I recently worked with. This department had embarked on
several knowledge-based initiatives, each of which had full upper management
support. Despite this, the company's reuse of acquired know-how and expertise had
not been impacted. Our knowledge audit uncovered several obstacles that the
efforts to date had ignored: Cultural differences across various geographic
locations, discrepancies in 'management speak' versus 'management action', and process
realities completely contrary to established knowledge sharing practices. We
also uncovered a cultural approach to team building, which had been virtually
untapped by the previous knowledge initiatives. Once we clearly saw these
strengths and weaknesses we were able to develop an action plan that exploited
them. Amazingly, minor modifications to existing systems brought about major
changes and a floundering knowledge initiative was turned into the desired
killer application.
The most effective knowledge audits are not narrowly focused to a
specific department or group, but administered throughout the organisation. Once
you involve the entire company, you will find points of view which are
frequently overlooked, but which become critical success factors in managing and
sharing knowledge. As part of the analysis, it is important to assess the
internal factors that potentially inhibit or promote knowledge sharing in the
organisation. Thus the causal effect between these critical elements and the
reality of how the business is functioning from a knowledge-sharing standpoint
can be empirically tested.
Assessing the knowledge
potential
An
organisation that has little in the way of formal KM technology or practices,
may still demonstrate an ideal environment for leveraging KM practices and
technologies. Similarly, an organisation that has KM technology and practices,
may nevertheless demonstrate an organisational environment that undermines its
KM efforts. Neither situation is ideal. Understanding where and how to overcome
the inadequacies of each is the purpose of a knowledge audit.
The latest research from
The Delphi Group, shows that within the next year, knowledge management
applications will be in use in every area of the organisation. Without insight
provided by a knowledge audit, you risk having opportunities go unnoticed and
thus under-utilised, and real obstacles go undetected. A word to the wise:
Forget about finding the 'killer' application. No application can reach critical
mass without first being strategically positioned.
Stacie Capshaw is a senior
consultant at The Delphi Group. She can be contacted at:sc@delphigroup.com
Three steps to success
Success stories abound
and often contain a plethora of 'micro level' issues such as training,
education, support, and so on, but at the macro level there are generally far
fewer components. The following three seem to be ëcommoní to most (reliable)
success stories and yet paradoxically missing in many modern, so-called
solutions. I submit them to you:
It's a 'personal thing'
A successful
KMS always contains the ability to enable one-to-one relationships, even where
users are numbered in hundreds of thousands, even millions. In other words,
it's a 'personal thing' regardless of the user's interests, location or role. Let me
be clear about my definition of 'personalisation' and 'relationships': The
retrieval of relevant and related information and data that is best suited to
the user's needs, and presented in way that adds value to the user's
relationship with the information, which in many cases involves other users. The
most effective solutions offer a choice between covertly or overtly measuring
and understanding the user's needs, a choice that must be controlled and
understood by the user.
If this objective is realisable, and I believe that it is, then
traditional methods of summarising data become much less important than many of
the traditional KMS applications claim. Unstructured and structured data is of
potentially equal importance and can be analysed simultaneously.
Timing
A second facet of a good
KMS process seems always to be able to deliver data and information to the user
proactively, at the right time, and 'in the face'. That is, without the user
being asked to engage with a cumbersome front end or specialist set of tools.
How many traditional KMS claim this feature? Not many, in my experience.
Right
information
Thirdly, personalised and correctly timed information must be the
right information, defined as: Relevant information or data, obtainable in source
or text formats, and in context with related information where required. Where
the information or data is pure ëpeople knowledge, (all right, I'll use
the terminology 'tacit') and unrecorded in textual form, then it must contain
sufficient contact personal details.
As I said in the introduction,
there are many 'micro issues' involved with a successful KMS, but the three listed
above appear in all the winning combinations I have reviewed or used. Knowledge
being what it is, I'm sure some of you will disagree!
Ian Black is the head of
communications and public affairs at BAe. He can be contacted at:ian@ianblack.org.uk
The future: Knowledge
fractals
Most
knowledge management systems are concerned with facilitating the effective
storage and retrieval of corporate knowledge to give everyone within an
organisation immediate access to relevant information, no matter where it
resides. These systems perform an invaluable function in today's knowledge-rich
environment, and in many cases have made significant contributions towards
elevating organisational performance. But these are early days, and many
significant improvements to knowledge management systems are still on the
horizon, one of which is the development of knowledge compression
techniques.
We are experiencing an exponential growth in the volume and therefore
the flow of information - broadband networks are now being installed world-wide,
and they promise to dramatically alter the way in which we communicate and
do business. However, the rate at which this growth continues to increase is
constrained by several factors, one of which is bandwidth. With the
currently available technologies for storing and processing digital
information, knowledge management systems are able to instantaneously retrieve knowledge
from vast repositories. Again, we seem only to be bounded by the rate at
which electronic storage and processing technologies continue to improve. Meanwhile,
we will carry on building our 'mountains of knowledge' to ensure that the 'right
knowledge can be made available to the right person at the right time'.
One way of tackling the
bandwidth constraint is data compression. Instead of trying to transmit the same
amount of data more quickly, the volume of data sent is very much reduced by
structuring it in a more efficient way. For example, when we receive large email
attachments, they are often 'zipped', which means that the original data has
been compressed, often by a factor of more than ten. In a similar way, it is
suggested that leading knowledge management systems should place a greater
emphasis on knowledge compression techniques, not only to improve storage and
retrieval efficiencies but more importantly to encourage a more profound
understanding of the knowledge contained within the system. In other words, to
combat the constant danger of knowledge overload, we should strive to do more
with less.
Within
the field of data compression, there is a relatively new method called fractal
compression. In this approach, repetitive patterns of an image or a graphic file
are identified and matched. Two patterns are considered the same, as long as one
can be stretched, squeezed, or rotated to match the other. This means that two
very different images may be created from one underlying set of patterns. And,
because patterns rather than pixels are viewed as the fundamental blocks of
image construction, the fractal algorithm can fill in missing detail during
decompression by mathematically scaling the pattern instead of just inserting
extra pixels. This results in a higher degree of accuracy for decompressed
images, which may be very important in multimedia, engineering and design
applications.
By analogy, leading knowledge management systems will be those which provide
a capability for developing the underlying frameworks or algorithms for 'knowledge
fractals', a term used to define a collection of different bodies of knowledge,
all of which have broadly similar underlying patterns. The result is that, in
addition to a much reduced volume of static knowledge, knowledge management
systems will contain a number of frameworks, which would dynamically 'create' or
'recreate' knowledge on demand.
To achieve this noble aim, the
main challenge lies in developing the frameworks that underpin the
knowledge fractals. In comparison to data compression, knowledge compression requires
much more intelligent and elaborate mechanisms for interpretation, a task that
will undoubtedly require human as well as machine intelligence. This final
point further highlights one of the fundamental truths with knowledge
management systems - it is the way in which people use knowledge management systems that
determines their success, and not the systems themselves.
John Cummins works for
AtomicTangerine, a venture consulting company. He can be reached at:jcummins@atomictangerine.com
If you would like to
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