Feature
posted 1 Feb 1998 in Volume 1 Issue 4
Integrating Knowledge Management
and the Business
Thomas H Davenport, University of Texas examines
strategies to develop integration between knowledge management and the
fundamental attributes of the business environment such as its strategy and
objectives, Organizational structures, employee behaviours, knowledge work
processes, and the information technology architecture.
Any time a new management concept
arises in organizations, it frequently begins life as a somewhat separate entity
from the mainstream of the business. This separateness is necessary in order to
demonstrate to members of the organisation that the concept is truly new and
different from the activities pursued in the past. But the separation ultimately
leads to problems; the overall performance of the business is less likely to be
improved when the improvement approach is viewed as separate from the work and
the organisation. While there is no clear or preferred pattern for the lifespan
of a management concept, it would seem desirable for the notion to first
establish an independent identity, and then later to be incorporated into the
day-to-day work of the organisation. It is only through such integration that
the on-going strategic objectives, work processes, and behaviours and attitudes
of employees will be permanently influenced by the new idea.
Like its predecessors
total quality management, re-engineering, and electronic commerce, knowledge
management today is characterised by terminology, approaches, methods, and
Organizational units that are consciously separate from the organizations served
by the concept. Such sub-concepts as “communities of practice”, “knowledge
sharing”, “Organizational learning”, and “knowledge representation” have been
advanced by academics, consultants, and leading practitioners, but have yet to
enter the realm of regular and mundane work activities. Many knowledge
management efforts are thriving in terms of resource use, the amount of
knowledge captured and distributed, and even the breadth of visibility and
acceptance, but many also remain somewhat isolated from the broader
Organizational context.
In those companies where knowledge management (KM) has already carved
out its own identity, what we need now are closer linkages to such fundamental
attributes of the business environment as its strategy and objectives,
Organizational structures, employee behaviours, knowledge work processes, and
the information technology architecture. I will examine each of these attributes
with regard to how knowledge management can be more effectively integrated
within them.
Linking to Strategy
KM needs a stronger link to the
fundamental strategy of companies. In a recent study of more than 30 knowledge
management projects (described in a Winter 1998 Sloan Management Review article)
most of the initiatives were growing and prospering, but I and my co-researchers
concluded that less than 10% were likely to have an important impact on the
overall business. The projects improved the efficiency or effectiveness of
individual departments or business processes, but stockholders would have little
about which to get excited. The three firms that did have highly strategic
knowledge applications were a consulting firm, a research organisation, and a
firm that provided knowledge services - all, in other words, in the knowledge
business. There are few examples of companies where the product isn’t knowledge
and knowledge management really matters to long-term success.
So how can KM be linked
to strategy? Assuming your company has a well-defined strategy, the trick is to
figure out how to support it through knowledge management. If your company is
driven by new products and services, then your strongest KM efforts should
probably be devoted to managing research knowledge. If marketing primarily makes
the cash register ring, then you should be thinking about how to manage pricing,
promotion, product location, etc., or turning customer data into customer
knowledge. If you’re a fast-food firm with relatively autonomous franchises, you
should be facilitating the exchange of knowledge between franchisees. There is
plenty of cheap advice in books and articles about how to determine your core
competencies, capabilities, and so forth. You just need to convert that focus
into what it means for knowledge.
Linking knowledge to strategy probably
requires some sort of implicit or explicit “knowledge strategy”, although until
the concept of knowledge management is well understood it may be better to keep
the strategy implicit. A knowledge strategy would specify not only how knowledge
management will support the organisation’s business strategy, but also on what
specific knowledge domains the organisation will focus, how knowledge links to
better business performance, and how the benefits of knowledge management can be
measured.
Linking to Organizational Structure
Today’s Organizational structure has
little to do with knowledge or its management. The fact that someone is
relatively high in the Organizational hierarchy does not necessarily indicate
that he or she is the most knowledgeable about any area. The fact that two
people are close to each other on the Organizational chart does not mean that
they share knowledge frequently. In fact, the Organizational structure was never
intended to address knowledge; it deals with power, responsibility,
accountability, and governance relationships. These are important concepts to be
structured and managed in organizations, but they are not the only important
ones.
If
knowledge is the only sustainable competitive advantage, then it would seem to
be important resource to link to Organizational structure. This can be
accomplished in several ways. First, and perhaps most traditionally, the
knowledge and skills required for certain job titles and levels can be clearly
enumerated. Those at the top of the organisation may not necessarily have the
most knowledge, but they might have the broadest combination of knowledge and
skills. Several consulting firms, including Andersen Consulting, already have
this sort of evaluation built into their performance review structures. At other
firms, e.g. Federal Express, an employee can advance to a higher job level by
proving mastery of the knowledge and skills needed for that level - and receive
an immediate pay rise.
Another way to link knowledge to Organizational structures would be to
clearly specify “who knows what” within the current structure. In addition to
the obvious virtue of enabling personnel to locate needed knowledge easily, such
an “expertise map” or “knowledge yellow pages” would also allow employees to
translate between the names who are incumbents of a position in the structure
and the knowledge that the person needed - or at least possessed - to get the
job. GE Lighting, for example, has for several years maintained an expertise map
for its employees; the company’s primary orientation is to technical expertise,
but the same concept has also been applied by other firms to business-oriented
knowledge.
Perhaps the most advanced linkages between knowledge and Organizational
structure involve the active management of Organizational networks and the
relationships between possessors of knowledge. Some business units or
departments have knowledge that would be valuable to other units; other pairs of
units would have less knowledge in common. Research by Morten Hansen, a
professor at Harvard Business School, at a high-technology firm has suggested
that the speed and success of new product development can be considerably
enhanced when there are strong, frequent communications between business units
that have knowledge and those that need it. A long series of research projects
at MIT have also suggested that communications between scientists and engineers
are greatly affected by the physical proximity of offices. Therefore, the
knowledge manager whose work is closely aligned with Organizational structure
topics might try to facilitate at least temporary proximity among the creators
and users of certain forms of knowledge.
Linking to Behaviours
Knowledge management
also needs a stronger linkage to the actual behaviours of knowers. Too many
knowledge projects focus only on “stocking the shelves” with knowledge, with
little regard for why or how users might be motivated to withdraw a piece of
knowledge from the shelf. Indeed, we know very little about the circumstances
under which people in organizations create, share, or apply knowledge. Our first
step should be to begin observing key knowledge workers to learn more about
their knowledge behaviours. How important is it, for example, to measure
knowledge-oriented behaviours in formal evaluation and reward systems? Are
intellectually curious workers born that way (or at least created before they
enter our organizations as workers), or can they be created? Until we understand
better the factors that drive knowledge behaviours, we won’t have effective
knowledge environments. For example, Roche, the Swiss pharmaceutical firm,
closely observed the behaviours of knowledge workers in the new drug development
process in order to better understand how they dealt with knowledge.
The most obvious
knowledge behaviours involve the creation, sharing and use of knowledge.
Organizations need to devote considerable thought to which of their personnel
should be employing each of these behaviours, and to what degree. They should
also identify ways to facilitate the desired behaviours, measure their
performance at an individual and Organizational level, and remove barriers to
those behaviours. The barriers to sharing may involve lack of trust or time; the
barriers to knowledge use may involve lack of access or lack or interest. A good
example of the facilitation of knowledge creation behaviours can be found within
research universities. For all their faults, the universities do manage to
incentivise research and publishing activities through various reward and
cultural approaches, including the “publish or perish” mentality.
Another key behaviour
that our knowledge management approaches must begin to take into account is
information and knowledge overload. As Chuck Sieloff of Hewlett-Packard has
pointed out in a recent paper, “…the central problem of knowledge management
facing most of our large corporations is not the creation of new knowledge, or
even the capture of existing knowledge, it is managing the flow of knowledge
through and around the critical bottleneck of personal attention and learning
capacity.” Unless we link our efforts to manage knowledge to programs designed
to maximise individual attention and minimise information and knowledge junk,
we’ll never succeed.
Linking to Processes
Several astute analysts of knowledge
management have correctly observed that the concept won’t take off if knowledge
activities are simply added onto existing work processes. Everyone today is
already too busy; we don’t have time to add knowledge management to our existing
activities. Therefore, the knowledge management process has to be effectively
linked to the redesign of knowledge work processes. How companies create,
gather, store, share and apply knowledge must link to how market researchers,
scientists, consultants, engineers, and managers work on a daily basis. The
linkages must specify how knowledge is to be imported to and exported from the
process, when and how in the process it should be used, and what difference it
should make in the outcome.
For an example, take what General
Motors has been trying to do for several years. One of its most critical
knowledge work processes is new car development. GM managers have been working
for several years to specify the role of knowledge in the development process -
when, for example, it makes sense to pull in some focus group knowledge, and
when it makes sense to assess what a development team has learned. GM has done
so primarily through process, i.e., specifications of the development process
that include knowledge activities. Another way to make this linkage is through
people; Ernst & Young, for example, includes “knowledge stewards” on its
large consulting projects to bring in knowledge and capture what the firm has
learned on the project. A third “P-word” for linking knowledge management and
knowledge work involves project management; pharmaceutical firms regularly
assess at each “gate review” of a drug development project what knowledge was
gained in the last phase, and what knowledge might be acquired by funding the
next one. As is usually the case, the method of linkage is probably less
important than the attempt to link.
Linking Technologies
This form of integration
may be difficult for companies that just want to manage their own knowledge to
undertake; rather, it’s more often the province of vendors of knowledge-oriented
software. But user companies would benefit greatly if it were realised. Today, a
knowledge manager who wants to support knowledge work with technology has to
integrate multiple applications and technologies: search tools, case-based
reasoning systems, distribution infrastructures, modelling and simulation, etc.
This takes a lot of time and effort. It is a mystery to me why some relatively
large IT firm - Lotus/IBM and Netscape come to mind - hasn’t taken a broad set
of knowledge tools and integrated them into a coherent package. Such an
out-of-the-box solution would let a firm realise at least 90% of its knowledge
management technology ambitions, and would allow it to get up and running almost
immediately.
This
might be called an “SAP for knowledge”, referring to the leading vendor of
broad, integrated “enterprise resource planning” (ERP) systems. Perhaps SAP
itself is working on something like this; the term “knowledge” was mentioned
several times at its most recent SAPPHIRE user group meeting. If the company is
not pursuing such functionality, it wouldn’t be terribly expensive to acquire
some sophisticated knowledge tools and string them together. Of course, at some
later point firms will want to integrate their back-office ERP systems such as
SAP with their more text and graphically-oriented knowledge architectures, but
this is not yet feasible other than for links between ERP packages and a few
document management systems.
Some of the most ambitious firms at
knowledge management - mostly large professional services firms such as Andersen
Consulting or Ernst & Young - have created such integrated environments for
their own use. These firms typically employ a “knowledge backbone” such as Lotus
Notes or an intranet Web, and then add other knowledge-oriented tools to the
architecture. It has taken them several years and millions of dollars to create
such integrated technology environments, however. Of course, the firms will
create versions of their own knowledge architectures for clients on a consulting
basis.
These five
variations on the linkage theme are thus a potential set of directions for the
firms that are relatively advanced and sophisticated in managing knowledge.
Integration of knowledge with the rest of the business may be a second-order
problem, but every firm that is successful in knowledge management will
eventually run up against it. As with some firms’ experiences with total quality
management, we may only know that knowledge management has succeeded fully when
it is no longer discussed as a separate entity.
Thomas H. Davenport is Professor
and Director of the Information Management MBA program at the University of
Texas in Austin.
His new book Working Knowledge: How Organizations Manage What
They Know (co-authored with Larry Prusak) has just been published by Harvard
Business School Press
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