Feature
posted 1 Jul 2000 in Volume 3 Issue 10
Faros, the learning effect
In the final article
in the Faros series, Ove Rustung Hjelmervik draws together the lessons Statoil
has learned over the last four years in developing the Faros knowledge
management system.
“We must not be afraid of taking a big leap from time to time. One
does not reach across the abyss in two short jumps.“
David Lloyd
George
“There is no limit to the supply of money. The bottleneck is in the
supply of good ideas and sound projects. That is what we need in order to
sustain the ability to create value in our society.”
This statement was made by Percy
Barnevik, at the time CEO of the Swedish/Swiss ABB Corporation, during his stay
as our guest and keynote speaker at the first Norwegian Entrepreneurship
conference in Stavanger, in 1988.
Knowledge management is not about
quick fixes or mathematics. Both the head and the heart must be involved in the
process of building a successful knowledge management system. KM has become a
hot issue over the last year or two. When we started out searching for clues
about how to proceed, in the autumn of 1995, I could find no Internet sites
offering articles on the subject. Today, one University of Texas site alone has
over one hundred articles on knowledge management. The concept has many facets
to it. However, unless your system is able to assist the users in creating new
knowledge, as well as in their ability to transfer and combine experience, draw
out new knowledge, and disperse that new knowledge among the members of a
community of practice, you don’t have a KMS. We must avoid the pitfalls of TQM,
BPR, and many other good concepts that have entered the business arena, but
which were hyped up to be ‘quick-fix’ solutions. Building a KMS takes time and
effort from the people involved.
Knowledge management is not just about
Information Technology, although IT is of course a vital tool. KM is something
much more. If properly structured and used, KM has the potential to become a
tool for unlocking the power of the brain for the benefit of global business. KM
may become to the business world what the Manhattan project was to the Second
World War. The possibility of being able to harness the power of the
organisation’s collective brain, and combine the results in neural networks
among the COPs is a simply mind boggling prospect.
But KM thinking is in its embryonic
beginning, and the primary issue is how the company is going to benefit from
such a creative avalanche; should it attempt to build a KMS? As the Austrian
economist, Joseph Schumpeter(1), pointed out, any organisation should engage in
creative destruction. If we don’t improve ourselves, our competitors will beat
us to it. Make sure your organisation does not become an ‘also ran’.
Human beings, operating
in airtight compartments, not talking to each other and minding their own
business, has thus far been the established way of organising intellectual
capital. The controller at the top of the pyramid is the one who sets the
conditions, and secures the commanding height. Mistakes are made, and made over
again without anyone reacting to them. The valuable asset of human capital is
wasted, by not securing and converting tacit into explicit knowledge. Faros was
born as a result of many frustrating episodes that took place in the company
back in the early 1990s. The company’s structure was thrown in the melting pot,
as were our policies and procedures. As a meta system for KM, Faros has been
able to answer some of the needs identified by the users at the time.
While the
original idea was to match visualised instructions to the actual work processes,
and to train people to do a job right before carrying it out, we realised that
this was not enough to create a comprehensive KMS. As we continued to develop
the concept, new groups of employees saw possibilities in using it and offered
their feedback. The demands on our work increased steadily. Creating Faros has
certainly been a challenging process. We had to beat our own path, as nobody had
been there before us. It was a steep learning curve, as the users always wanted
to see results yesterday. Then we had to establish the arena and the local
communities of practice – piece by piece. Finally we had to ensure the employees
actually used the system, and then wait for their judgement. When it came, it
was like an avalanche of happiness, and pride.
Basing our navigation on the intranet,
as Statoil had no plans for introducing it at the time, was one of the more
difficult decisions. However, had we not decided on the use of the web, we would
not have been able to build the functionality we can offer today. Likewise, we
had to create the symbolism for designing work processes, to be agreed to by
other communities in Statoil. As we succeeded with one area, we moved on to the
next challenge. We practised experience transfer as we created new solutions,
through copying a solution made for one business unit over to the next. We also
developed a feedback system for the communities to share experiences and develop
new and smarter ways of working.
We had to develop a new vocabulary,
such as the Knowledge Room, Work Process Navigation, and JIT-JE. This gave us a
language of communication while we were developing the concept. We learned to
use many techniques for quick results. There were so many things to be done, and
we were constantly fighting the clock.
Focusing on the Faros Work Processes
Navigation as the common structure, and the main arena for finding relevant
information for the users, we were able to create strong user participation.
This was due to the following aspects:
We created knowledge
rooms for both operational and functional communities of practice, creating a
seamless and transparent way of navigating for information between them. The
value to the organisation, and the individual employee, has been confirmed by
the feedback that we have received. Through this novel system of navigation we
discovered how users could co-operate through a common concept, making it a
fully integrated KMS. This has immense possibilities for a company with both
functional and operational activities. That, of course, does not bar a company
with only one community of practice from building a Faros-type system. We wanted
our colleagues to be masters of IT, not servants to it.
During early experimentation with
computer-based learning through the Internet, we linked the concept to the work
process structure, and saw what creative powers developed in the intersection
between this medium and the work processes. It will lead to the creation of new
knowledge and give unlimited opportunities for life-long learning. The result
will permeate the organisation for absorbing, sharing and utilising new
information in the creation of a more competitive organisation.
While
experimenting, we have also been building. As Faros has been tested and tried by
the users, we have received positive feedback. This has encouraged us to persist
with our work. Faros has been shown to people belonging to many categories, both
inside and outside the organisation. When Faros is demonstrated to people
outside our work environment, we encounter the following reactions:
This demonstrates a clear indication of a general, and generic, system
that is not oil and gas industry specific.
Statoil, as most other companies do,
has a jungle of Internet sites and thousands of web pages. Finding your way
about is at times very difficult. Faros is the only system that has an embracing
structure for easy retrieval of any information. We believe Faros’ novel method
of knowledge mapping, capturing, creation, dissemination, and sharing, has
enhanced the functionality of the virtual organisation. Based on Faros’
deployment and usage to date, it is possible to conclude that this has been
achieved.
Nevertheless, we are at the very beginning of the journey exploring the
matter of knowledge. I do believe our economic system will continue to prosper
through some degree of specialisation. However, companies must not place
themselves in the position where, like the dinosaurs, they specialise themselves
to extinction. This is where the Knowledge Management System comes in. We have
to stop talking, and start acting.
Implication and
challenges
The experience drawn from the Faros case is of some importance to the
implementation of knowledge management in organisations, both commercial and
non-profit based.
Discovery of the web technology was a watershed in terms of being able
to find relevant information. For KM, however, it turned out to be a
double-edged sword. As more and more people got involved in the web, learning
the technique of designing their own home page, they started to question the
need for a knowledge navigator. Why should their business unit develop a KMS
when all they had to do was to develop their own home pages, and in a couple of
days create their own ‘knowledge system’? Did they really believe that linking
thousands of home pages made a knowledge management system? KM is, after all,
more than organising the existing repository of information stored in the
corporate data banks.
I have divided the major issues to be addressed into two. The first
issue is what a KM system is about: Intellectual Capital; web pages; data
warehousing; ERP; these are but a few ideas of what people believe knowledge
management to be. In our view, these examples are both shallow and incorrect.
Another is technology. Is the present Information Technology standard sufficient
to support the needs of the KM company?
1. KM’s human aspect: Concept,
implementation and benefit
Creating a KM concept
Operationalise KM
Exploiting the benefits
of KM
2.
KM’s technology aspect: We must strive to embed IT without IT being seen by the
user as a barrier
Further work
If I were to start a new
project, what would I want to improve upon? Improvements must always benefit the
user; it is, and must always be, the user who is the focus of any knowledge
management programme. Room for improvements can be found in the following
elements:
‘Technology’ concerns IT’s technical elements, in relation to the
template and technological platform, while ‘methodology’ relates to building
navigational structures, meta systems and methods for implementation. But it is
in the ‘human relations’ element, how the idiosyncratic web of human links,
behaviours, opportunities and threats for the individual employee, and each
community, is cared for in respect of the organisation, that we find the key to
real success in tapping the intellectual capital of the business. Succeeding
here will really mean prosperity.
If you cannot actively relate to a
KMS, you are out of business! KM
Reference
1. Joseph Schumpeter,
Business Cycles: A Theoretical, Historical and Statistical Analysis of the
Capitalist Process New York, (McGraw Hill, 1939). See also James M. Utterback,
Mastering the Dynamics of Innovation, (Boston, Harvard Business School Press,
1996)
Appendices
The Faros Team (Appendix 1)
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. Some of the Statoil employees have since left the
company. Below is a partial list of the participants:
Project manager and initiator: Ove
Rustung Hjelmervik (TEK).
From Statoil:
The user group: Kjell Erik Drevdal, (B&B), Per
Bjørnland (Åsgard), Hans Petter Fredriksen (Troll). Later participants: Tor Hoås
(Statfjord), Gunnar Kjærland (DVM), Hanne Lekva (S&P), Terje Palmesen
(Mongstad), Jan Henrik Lund (DVM), Tore Husby (Åsgard).
Project members: Øivind Haugstad (IT),
Dag Sjong (R&D), Irene Herigstad (TEK), Arild Risebrobakken (LOK). Svend
Vihovde (IT), Arnt Vegard Espeland (IT) Marita Midthaug (IT), Knut Kirkemo
(TEK), Morten Fredhøy (LOK), Ulf Eide (B&B), Tore Johnsen (B&B), Terje
Stigen (LOK), Kjell Skjeggestad (DVM), Kjell A. Røysland (DVM), Per Arne Aasen
(Åsgard), Jon Magne Jakobsen (Mongstad), Mona M. Leikvoll (Mongstad), Torstein
A. Thorsen (Statfjord), Dagfinn W. Lorentzen (Statfjord), Anita Misje (Troll),
Hans Dreyer (GT).
Financial support: Øyvind Johnsen (Troll), Ola Krumsvik (Åsgard), Mads
Grinrød (B&B), Thore Langeland (TEK), Atle Grung Eide (LOK), A. Rune
Johansen (TEK).
External participants:
From NTNU: Professors Arthur Aune and
Rolf Lenschow, Associate Professor Dag Svanæs. Students: Kim Omar Johansen, Rune
Hollås, Stig Owe Olsen, Thomas Nesser.
From the University of Bergen:
Professor Kenneth Hugdahl. Students: Anne Marie Skjerven, Monica Gotteberg
Hansen..
External
consultants: AC: Christian Selmer, Mikkel Nielsen, Brita Kroslid, Paal Lysaker.
PDS: Steve Daum, Robin Getty. CognIT: Richard Jones, Bernt Bremdal.
The Statoil
family:
Hundreds
of our colleagues in Statoil’s many operating and professional units have
created the information making Faros into a visionary, cutting edge, knowledge
system. Without our many colleagues, the Faros product would not have been
built.
Thank
you.
Ove R. Hjelmervik
Stavanger, November 1999
People who have influenced my
thinking on Knowledge Managemen (Appendix 2)
When searching the Internet on
Knowledge Management in the autumn/winter of 1995/96 I found few examples of
computer based learning or knowledge management systems.
I learned of the emerging field of KM
through the embryonic Web, and what caught my attention was not KM, but rather
the works by thinkers such as Dee Dickinson "New Horizons for Learning", the
UK/US 21st Century Learning Initiative led by John Abbott, Howard Gardner,
Professor of Psychology and Neurology at Harvard University, Dr. Jim Botkin who
had co-authored "The Monster Under the Bed" with Stan Davis, and Peter Senge,
professor at MIT.
While attending a symposium at Stanford University in the summer of
1996, I had the good fortune to meet Xerox's chief scientist John Sealy Brown at
PARC, where we discussed his futuristic views of learning and use of technology.
Dee Dickinson is another visionary on learning. She was the primus inter pares
behind establishing the US learning initiative "New Horizons for Learning". She
also works with Peter Henschel at the IRL (Institute for Research on Leaning;
see separate frame in this article). I met both of them during my visit to the
U.S. in 1996. Ms Dickinson helped me get in touch with Jim Botkin, President of
Interclass, The International Corporate Learning Association, a knowledge
community of Fortune 500, and other international companies seeking to improve
its members' organisational learning and enhance their knowledge assets.
During 1996 I had
several meetings with Professor Tor G. Syvertsen, NTNU, where we discussed the
knowledge concept. In November 1996, Professor Syvertsen introduced me to his
partner at PACT, Professor Rolf Lenschow. He had been the Chancellor of Norway's
University of Technology in Trondheim, and is currently Professor of Civil
Engineering. He helped create Faros' virtual learning concept and is today in
the process of building Norway's Learning Lab in Trondheim.
In 1997, I had the opportunity to meet
Steven Denning, project manager for the World Bank's Knowledge Management
programme, one of the few organisations that had started building a KM concept
of great importance and social impact.
In August 1997, we organised a seminar
at Statoil, Agenda 21, where we invited Jim Botkin and Leif Edvinsson of Skandia
AFS. While Botkin talked about Knowledge and how to organise it, Edvinsson
presented his work on the "Intellectual Capital" statements he had developed
within Skandia. Later in 1997, and again in 1998, I was invited to the
InterClass group meetings, where I met KM people from many world class
organisations such as Albert Siu, Vice President of AT&T’s University, Mark
Schleicher, Director for KM at Motorola University, and Kate O'Keefe, Director,
Executive education, Honeywell Inc. Other comapnies in the association are GM
Saturn, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Volvo. In Jim Botkin’s is latest
book appeares several promising KM initiatives, among them the Faros project in
Statoil.
It was
among these leading thinkers on learning and the creation of knowledge that we
tested our ideas on the Faros Knowledge System, the Work Process Navigator and
the Work Process Model.
Feedback From Users of Faros (Appendix 3)
A selection of comments received from
employees in various Business Units:
1. Åsgard/Heidrun:
2. Statfjord:
3. Troll
4.
Functional units:
List of acronyms (Appendix
4)
Ove Rustung Hjelmervik is project
manager of the Faros knowledge management system. He can be contacted at: hjel@statoil.com
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