Feature
posted 1 Mar 2000 in Volume 3 Issue 6
Your Say: Past, present &
future...
There
is a clear line of sight from the development of learning organisations a decade
ago towards today's active interest in the application of knowledge. Then, we
stopped talking about 'training' and started using the terms 'learning' and
development'. Our point of view has also developed to include organisational
learning. Today, we shift our focus from managing information to managing the
context in which we process information. A decade ago, Peter Senge inspired a
cadre of systems thinkers and activists from the human potential movement at the
same time as capturing the attention of the executive suite by highlighting the
simple fact that organisations that don't learn, die. Senge identified five
critical 'disciplines' for a learning organisation, and he and his extended team
continue to develop tools and practices that support organisations who have
adopted continuous learning as an operational principle.
The disciplines and practices
associated with learning organisations translate without loss of meaning into
the mental models of knowledge management.
For example:
Ten years ago, technology to support polymorphous communication required
for learning organisations was not universally available in corporations. The
World Wide Web, though, acted as a catalyst for the necessary technological
developments. This was accompanied by attendant breakthroughs in the technology
of networking, enabling applications and structures only dreamed of a decade
ago. For example:
- Intranets that provide a tangible ongoing medium to create and maintain a
shared organisational context
- Distance learning - the ability to access courses, instructors, mentors,
from anywhere in the world at any time
- True collaboration of virtual teams, through email, in live
video-conferences
- Instantaneous global communications
- Individual access to the wealth of knowledge in an organisation.
Mental models
The web is a publishing medium that
enables individuals, groups, organisations and bodies politic to make their
points of view, operational norms, rules and processes explicit in an unfettered
environment. The method they choose to publish i.e. graphic style, lead
articles, key menus - represents the organisation's mental model of itself and
its relationships. The challenge is to acknowledge this power of representation
and to use it to orchestrate the diverse collection of talents, knowledge and
views required for innovation.
Personal mastery is enabled not just
by the seemingly infinite web of information and knowledge bases on a corporate
intranet, but through integrated links within the world wide web. This
unstructured exploration is coupled with formalised web-based course curricula
that support just-in-time learning for rapid response to new market demands. The
challenge for corporations is to provide a rich learning environment for
employees that supports corporate goals while enabling its people to stretch -
and stay.
Team
learning
Learning in teams occurs through collaboration and conversation. It is a
simple fact of our global environment of today that problems are best solved and
new opportunities are best met by fielding the right set of people regardless of
their geographical and time constraints. We now have (almost) the technologies
for real-time computer supported collaboration, for capturing and storing
questions, notes and interactions. The challenge is to improve the speed and
usability of the technologies while adapting the culture to balance individuals'
needs for privacy and recognition with the accelerated demands of
sharing.
Shared vision
Technology provides no insights into
what makes a leader capable of creating and sustaining a vision for an
organisation, but it does provide such leaders with a powerful tool for
communicating their vision. Email messages that address everyone in an
organisation, thematic and consistent messages on an intranet, congruence of
internal communications with external communications are all important tools for
a leader. The challenge is to maintain sufficient meaningful public events for
employees and the extended organisation to connect personally, to validate the
congruence between published words and the leaders' impact.
Systems thinking
The 'fifth discipline' is the one that speaks to the heart of managing knowledge in
an organisation as if it is the true wealth. It is about knowing patterns and
relationships - what we already know and what we must know in order to survive and grow.
All the technologies - for communication, publishing, distance learning
and collaboration - are the infrastructure for providing access, in the appropriate
context, for individuals, teams, groups, and organisations to develop and
practice systemic knowledge management.
Patti Anklam is Technology Group
Knowledge Manager at Compaq. She can be contacted at:
patti.anklam@compaq.com
denotes premium content | Nov 18 2008 




