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Knowledge Management Chapters 7-8

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Knowledge Management Chapters 7-8 By: Mikhail Averbukh Scott Brown Brian Chase Pitfalls of Social Networking The desire to protect Personal Intellectual Property ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Knowledge Management Chapters 7-8


1
Knowledge ManagementChapters 7-8
  • By
  • Mikhail Averbukh
  • Scott Brown
  • Brian Chase

2
Outline
  • Chapter 7
  • Research that Reinvents the Corporation
  • Chapter 8
  • Managing Professional Intellect
  • Additional Research
  • Toyota Case
  • Pitfalls of Social Networking
  • Biotech Case

3
Chapter 7 Outline
  • Pioneering Research
  • Technology Gets Out Of The Way
  • Harvesting Local Innovation
  • Coproducing Innovation
  • Innovating with the Customer
  • PARC Seedbed of the Computer Revolution
  • How Xerox Redesigned Its Copiers

4
Research that Reinvents the Corporation
  • Published in 1991
  • By John Seely Brown
  • Former Director of Xerox Research Center, PARC
    (Palo Alto Research Center)
  • Real case study example
  • The most important invention that will come out
    of the corporate research lab in the future will
    be the corporation itself.

5
Pioneering Research
  • The Corporation Invention created by PARC
  • Pioneering Research Principles
  • New work practices is as important as new
    products
  • Ubiquitous computing- Information technology
    used in a broad range of everyday objects.

6
Pioneering Research
  • Learning from innovation 
  • Cant just produce innovation
  • Ultimate innovation partner is the customer
  • Tailoring innovation to the needs of the
    customers.

7
Technology Gets Out of the Way
  • Remote Interactive Communication (RIC)
  • ITs transformation of the copier
  • Complex computing and communication devices-
    Sensors that collect information
  • Artificial intelligence techniques
  • Customer - never see the machine fail
  • Xerox - way to listen to the customer

8
Technology Gets Out of the Way
  • The technology itself will become invisible
  • Example Photocopier
  • Example GPS devices in cars
  • Example Fujis interactive photo editing machine
    at Walgreens
  • A flexible, versatile device that is able to
    meet many different customer needs

9
Harvesting Local Innovation
  • Getting involved in the anthropology of work
  • PARC was studying work practices throughout
    companies (Ex. Payroll)
  • Employees were inventing innovative work
    practices, while not even realizing it, to reach
    their goals

10
Harvesting Local Innovation
  • Customized user-system program (CUSP)
  • Allows users to modify the system themselves
  • Buttons - people without a lot of training in
    computers can make modifications
  • Xerox tech reps learn most out in the field

11
Coproducing Innovation
  • Communicate fresh insights so that others can
    grasp their significance - tech transfer
  • Uncover features that need to change
  • Conceptual envisioning environment
  • Envision new products before they are actually
    built
  • Share understanding with partners to coproduce
    new technologies and practices

12
Coproducing Innovation
  • Help employees grind a new set of eyeglasses so
    they can see the world in a new way
  • You cant just tell people about a new insight,
    you have to let them experience it.

13
Coproducing Innovation
  • Innovating with the Customer
  • Researchs ultimate partner in coproduction is
    the customer
  • Customers may be unaware of their needs
  • Product may not yet exist

14
PARC Seedbed of the Computer Revolution
  • Basic research in computing and electronics
  • How complex organizations use information
  • Throughout the 1970s PARC innovations
  • Bit map - display with easy interface
  • LAN - distributed computing
  • Overlapping screen windows
  • Point and click editing
  • Smalltalk - first object oriented programming
    language
  • Laser printing prototype - billion dollar
    business (1990)

15
How Xerox Redesigned Its Copiers
  • In the early 1980s users were finding their
    Xerox copiers extremely difficult to use
  • Unreliability was not the real problem
  • Knowing that trouble was inevitable
  • Now the new copiers have enough technology to
    where the functions of the copiers are put into
    the context of the task the user is trying to
    accomplish

16
Chapter 8
  • Managing Professional Intellect
  • Making the most of the best
  • James Brian Quinn, Tuck School of Business
  • Philip Anderson, INSEAD
  • Sydney Finkelstein , Tuck School of Business

17
Managing Professional Intellect
  • In the post-industrial era, the success of a
    corporation lies more in its intellectual and
    systems capabilities than in its physical assets
  • Critical skill managing human intellect and
    converting it into useful products and services

18
Outline
  • What is Professional Intellect?
  • Developing Professional Intellect
  • Leveraging Professional Intellect
  • Inverting organizations
  • Creating Intellectual webs

19
What is professional Intellect?
  • 4 levels
  • Cognitive Knowledge
  • Advanced Skills
  • Systems Understanding
  • Self-motivated Creativity

20
Level 1 of Professional Intellect
  • Cognitive Knowledge
  • Know-what
  • Mastery of a discipline
  • Achieved through extensive training
  • Essential, but not sufficient for success

21
Level 2 of Professional Intellect
  • Advanced Skills
  • Know - how
  • Ability to apply the rules of a discipline to
    complex problems
  • The most widespread value creating professional
    skill level

22
Level 3 of Professional Intellect
  • Systems Understanding
  • Know-why
  • Deep knowledge
  • Understanding cause-and-effect relationships
  • Move beyond the execution of tasks

23
Level 4 of Professional Intellect
  • Self-motivated creativity
  • Care-why
  • Consists of will, motivation, and adaptability to
    success
  • Not always necessary
  • Organizations that nurture care-whys thrive
  • Resides in the culture of an organization

24
Developing Professional Intellect
  • Recruit the best
  • the leverage of intellect
  • Force intensive early development
  • repeated exposure to the complex problems
  • Constantly increase professional challenges
  • push professional beyond the comfort zone
  • Evaluate the weed
  • internal competition and performance
    evaluations

25
Leveraging Professional Intellect
  • Boost problem-solving abilities by capturing
    knowledge
  • Merrill Lynch knowledge base
  • Overcome reluctance to share information
  • Offer incentives
  • Organize around intellect
  • ROI considerations

26
Inverting Organizations
  • Tailor solutions to the particular way intellect
    creates value
  • Example Nova Care
  • Critical professional intellect is in its
    therapists
  • NovaNet captures and enhances organizations
    system knowledge
  • Work is organized around therapists

27
Inverting Organizations
In Inverted organizations, field experts become
bosses
28
Creating Intellectual Webs
  • Spiders web self-organizing network
  • Brings people together to solve a particular
    problem
  • Many consulting firms, investment banks, research
    consortia and medical teams use this approach.

29
Creating Intellectual Webs
In Spiders Webs, a few experts team up to meet
a specific challenge
30
Managing Professional Intellect
  • Summary of the article
  • The success of a corporation lies more in its
    intellectual and systems capabilities than in its
    physical assets
  • The knowledge on how to manage human intellect
    and how to convert it into useful products and
    services is of great importance

31
Toyota Case
  • Created a knowledge network with suppliers
  • Faced several dilemmas
  • Motivate self-interested people to participate
  • Free Rider Problem
  • Maximize efficiency of knowledge transfers
  • How to effectively transfer tacit knowledge
  • How do you address these problems?

32
Toyota Case
33
Toyota Case
34
Pitfalls of Social Networking
  • The desire to protect Personal Intellectual
    Property
  • The need to maintain external professional
    networking
  • The social networking meme still need socializing
  • Meme cultural information that represent an
    idea that can be passed from one person to
    another.

35
Buckman Case
36
Buckman Case
  • Infrastructure hardware/software that enables
    communication
  • Infostructure formal rules that govern exchange
    on the network
  • Infoculture stock of background knowledge which
    is embedded in the social relations surrounding
    work group processes.

37
Buckman Case
  • Infrastructure
  • Used network for both intra and inter-company
    communication.
  • Contained virtual conference rooms, libraries,
    bulletin boards, etc.
  • Infostructure
  • Forum specialist organize and validate
    information before uploaded to knowledge base.
  • Region focused forums for each segment of
    business.

38
Buckman Case
  • Infoculture
  • Allow employees at all levels to use network to
    promote information sharing.
  • Employees who share the most become the most
    influential.
  • Managers looks for employees who share on the
    network.

39
Summary
40
Sources
  • Creating and Managing a High Performance
    Knowledge-Sharing Network The Toyota Case.
    Strategic Management Journal. By Jeffrey Dyer and
    Knetaro Nobeoka. Issue 21, year 2000.
  • Three Potential Pitfalls of Corporate Social
    Networking. Gartner Group, 4 December 2007. By
    Brian Prentice.
  • Knowledge management in practice An exploratory
    case study. Technology Analysis Strategic
    Management September 1999. By Shan Pan and Harry
    Scarbrough.
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