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Knowledge Management COMS 380

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Inter-firm networking; strategic alliances; craft practices. KM: how did we get here? ... the introduction of craft practices, as well as by workers' and suppliers' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Knowledge Management COMS 380


1
Knowledge ManagementCOMS 380 April 9
Mark Wolfe, PhD Candidate Senior Research
Associate Alberta SuperNet Research
Alliance University of Calgary
2
What is knowledge?
Knowledge is neither data nor information, though
it is related to both, and the differences
between these terms are often a matter of degree.
We start with those more familiar terms both
because they are more familiar and because we can
understand knowledge best with reference to them.
Confusion about what data, information, and
knowledge are -- how they differ, what those
words mean -- has resulted in enormous
expenditures on technology initiatives that
rarely deliver what the firms spending the money
needed or thought they were getting. Often firms
don't understand what they need until they invest
heavily in a system that fails to provide it.
Davenport, Thomas H. and Prusak, Laurence.
(1997). Working Knowledge How Organizations
Manage What They Know . Boston Harvard Business
School Press
3
What is knowledge?
  • Data -- static facts raw inputs
  • No inherent meaning in data
  • Information -- data that is structured has
    meaning
  • Sender/receiver aim is to reduce uncertainty
    data that makes a difference (Bateson)
  • Knowledge -- information that is acted upon
  • Knowledge arises from minds at work

4
What is knowledge?
Knowledge is a fluid mix of framed experience,
values, contextual information, and expert
insight that provides a framework for evaluating
and incorporating new experiences and
information. It originates and is applied in the
minds of knowers. In organizations, it often
becomes embedded not only in documents or
repositories but also in organizational routines,
processes, practices, and norms.
5
KM where does it come from?
  • The computer era (1950s/60s)
  • Centralized stage activity focused on the
    technology itself.
  • Efforts within the nascent field of Information
    Systems (IS) were directed to making refinements
    to the base technology.
  • The emphasis was on large computer installations
    housed in a central location and managed as a
    non-distributed technology.
  • http//foodman123.com/s2000.htm

6
KM where does it come from?
  • The information era (1970s/80s)
  • Distributed stage first localization of
    computing as a distributed resource
  • Microcomputers first supercomputers
  • End users beginning to exert pressure on
    applications and use
  • Growth of IS as a strategic function of the
    organization

7
KM where does it come from?
  • The information utility era (late 1980s)
  • Diffusion stage Information is now ubiquitous,
    a corporate resource that dramatically alters
    not only the manner in which organizations
    function, but also in the way they compete
  • Responsibility shifts to the line (but autonomy
    slow to follow)
  • Organizational change is rapid downsizing
    begins.

8
KM where does it come from?
  • The Knowledge Management era (1990s)
  • Social context stage Loss of middle management
    through corporate downsizing in recessionary
    period of 1991-95 lobotomizes most organizations
    (knowledge loss)
  • Employee contract re-written workers
    responsible for their own careers and future
  • Commercialization of the internet dot-com
    explosion

9
KM where does it come from?
The Knowledge Management era (1990s)
10
KM where does it come from?
11
KM where are we now?
  • The network era (2000)
  • The collaboration stage advanced broadband
    development enhancing distance work/training/educa
    tion
  • Emphasis on virtual workteams heightened by
    world events
  • Computerization under pressure through demand
    and fast-approaching limits of current
    miniaturization (enter quantum computing and
    nanotechnology)

12
COMS 380 KM how did we get here?
  • Castells from industrialism to
    informationalism
  • Exhaustion of the mass production model
  • Linear processes inadequate to manage complexity
    of expanded (global) markets
  • Horizontal integration displacing vertical
    integration (multinational conglomerates)
  • Crisis and then reinvention of the large firm
  • Toyotism flexible processes through emphasis on
    people autonomy
  • Inter-firm networking strategic alliances craft
    practices

13
KM how did we get here?
  • Castells from industrialism to
    informationalism
  • These shifts are independent, and their timing
    differs, but all represent
  • The process of disintegration of the
    organizational model of vertical, rational
    bureaucracies, characteristic of the large
    corporation under the conditions of standardized
    mass production and oligopolistic markets . . .
    Toyotism is a transitional model of between
    standardized, mass production and a more
    efficient work organization characterized by the
    introduction of craft practices, as well as by
    workers and suppliers involvement, in an
    assembly-line based, industrial model.

14
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