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Knowledge Sharing in Virtual Environments

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Title: Knowledge Sharing in Virtual Environments


1
Knowledge Sharing in Virtual Environments
  • From a cross-cultural perspective
  • provided by you, the audience

2
Contents
  • Knowledge Management/Sharing
  • Knowledge Sharing in Virtual Environments
  • Virtual Teams
  • Communities of Practice
  • Research Communities

3
What is Knowledge Management (KM)
  • Broad KM is the systematic and explicit
    management of knowledge related activities,
    practices, programs and policies within the
    enterprise (Wiig, 2001, p. 6), or
  • Knowledge management is the process by which the
    organization generates wealth from its knowledge
    or intellectual capital (Bukowitz Williams,
    2000), or..
  • In June 1995, a health worker in Kamana, Zambia,
    logged on to the CDC Web site in Atlanta and got
    the answer to a question on how to treat Malaria
    (Denning, 2001), or,.

4
and a virtual ad hoc, one-off, emergency response
team
  • A New Zealand company with international offices
    had a one-month deadline to supply a South-east
    Asian government ministry with a strategic
    business plan. The project leader in Wellington
    accessed company expertise in New Zealand,
    Australia and on location in Asia and was able to
    complete the project on time. She said
  • While it is good to have people by your side,
    if we had tried to get all these people up to
    Asia, we probably would never have met the
    deadline.

5
Davenport and Prusak, in Working Knowledge (1997)
define knowledge as
  • a fluid mix of framed experience, values,
    contextual information, and expert insight that
    provides a framework for evaluating and
    incorporating new experiences and information

6
What is Knowledge from a Chinese Perspective?
  • the Chinese philosopher Fung Yu-Lan stated
  • "Epistemology has never developed in Chinese
    philosophy. Whether the table that I see before
    me is real or illusory, and whether it is only a
    idea in my mind or is occupying objective space,
    was never seriously considered by Chinese
    philosophers. No such epistemological problems
    are to be found in Chinese philosophy (save in
    Buddhism, which came from India), since
    epistemological problems arise only when a
    demarcation between the subject and the object is
    emphasized. And in the aesthetic continuum,
    there is no such demarcation. In it the knower
    and the known is one whole. ref Yu-Lan, F.
    (1948). A short history of Chinese philosophy A
    Systematic account of Chinese thought from its
    origins to present day.

7
History of KM
  • KM has been an important matter from the
    beginning even one of life and death
  • Then a religious and philosophical matter
  • Then an economic matter, e.g.Crafts Guilds
  • No overarching theory of KM, yet.
  • KM is rooted in a variety of disciplines

8
Recent KM Roots
  • Organizational Management
  • Rationalization of work - Taylorism, TQM
  • The importance of information and explicit
    knowledge as organizational resources Drucker
  • The cultural dimension of KM the learning
    organization Senge
  • Innovation diffusion and information and
    technology transfer

9
Information and Communications Technology (ICT)
  • Dealing with exponential increases in the amount
    of available knowledge and increasingly complex
    products and processes
  • Early groupware and hypertext applications
    Engelbart, 1978 McCraken
  • Artificial Intelligence and expert systems
  • CSCW (computer-supported collaborative work),
    Decision Support Systems, Workflow, Document
    Management, Relational and object databases
  • Records Management

10
Other
  • Psychology
  • The role of knowledge in behavior
  • Library and information science
  • Cognitive sciences
  • How we learn and know to improve tools and
    techniques for gathering and transferring
    knowledge
  • Economics
  • Social Sciences

11
  • 1980s Knowledge Management enters business
    vocabulary
  • To provide a technological base, the Initiative
    for Managing Knowledge Assets was started in 1989
  • KM articles begin appearing in journals
  • 1990s
  • Management consulting companies begin in-house
    knowledge management training programs
  • 1991 Brainpower article in Fortune magazine
  • 1995 - The Knowledge-Creating Company How
    Japanese Companies Create the Dynamics of
    Innovation (1995), Ikujiro Nonaka Hirotaka
    Takeuchi
  • By mid-90s KM initiatives are flourishing
    OECD, World Bank, etc
  • Became a big business for the likes of Ernst
    Young, Arthur Anderson, Booz-Allen Hamilton

12
Driving Forces
  • Competitive environment/knowledge economy
  • Knowledge is often the only advantage
  • Globalization
  • Technology
  • Information management
  • communications
  • The knowledge worker
  • Changing/mobile workplace

13
Status
  • Categorization of KM Approaches (Sveiby)
  • Management of Information
  • Knowledge objects and can be handled by
    information management systems
  • Management of People
  • Knowledge processes, a complex set of dynamic
    skills, know-how, etc that is constantly
    changing.

14
Issues
  • No shortage of issues
  • defining KM and related issues
  • determining organizational needs
  • getting people onside
  • selecting and implementing strategies
  • human resource issues
  • selecting and implementing technologies
  • measuring success (ROI)

15
KM Strategy
  • Knowledge has become the key economic resource
    and dominant and perhaps even the only source
    of competitive advantage
  • Peter Drucker
  • Managing in a time of great change
  • (1995, p.90)

16
Motivation for KM
  • Knowledge confers the ability to attain business
    goals
  • Knowledge is the only truly sustainable personal
    and organizational advantage
  • The knowledge worker
  • The most expensive resource is knowledgeable
    staff
  • Technology
  • Information management
  • communications

17
Three Levels of KM and Appropriate Technologies
(Allee, 2000)
  • What?
  • Operational
  • Connecting knowledge to people who need it
  • How?
  • Tactical
  • Connecting people to each other
  • Why?
  • Strategic
  • Connecting knowledge to the business model

18
Operational KMConnecting knowledge to those who
need it
  • How can we codify knowledge and share routine
    tasks?
  • e-learning tools
  • workflow software
  • knowledge repositories
  • best practice databases
  • knowledge engineering
  • imaging technologies
  • search engines
  • newsfeeds
  • What else?

19
Usefulness of Knowledge Automation
Technology advances help movemore complex work
to routine
Databases Job Aids Training IT Tools
Allee, 2000
Frequency of Work
Routine
Logical Variations
Unusual Variations
NonRoutine
New Innovation
Ack Karl Wiig
Complexity of Work
20
Tactical KM Connecting people to each other
  • How can we better create, share and apply our
    knowledge?
  • Communities of practice
  • collaborative tools
  • after action reviews
  • knowledge mapping
  • video-conferencing
  • project histories
  • personalization tools
  • social network analysis
  • virtual team tools
  • group processes

21
Usefulness of Knowledge Automation
Technology advances help movemore complex work
to routine
Databases Job Aids Training IT Tools
Allee, 2000
Frequency of Work
Routine
Logical Variations
Unusual Variations
NonRoutine
New Innovation
Ack Karl Wiig
Complexity of Work
22
Strategic KM Connecting knowledge to the
business model
  • How do we create business value?
  • Scorecards, business modeling
  • New modeling tools
  • Systems mapping
  • Scenario building
  • Network ethics
  • Collaborative cultures
  • Non-financial reporting
  • Partnering agreements
  • Dialogue
  • Open exchange

23
Knowledge Sharing in Virtual Environments
24
Virtual Teams
  • Cyber teams
  • E-teams
  • Distributed teams
  • (Temporary), culturally diverse, geographically
    dispersed, electronically communicating
    workgroups.
  • Business
  • Research
  • Education
  • Government
  • NGOs

25
A Virtual Scenario available now
London
New York
Wellington
Rio
Tokyo
Shared document, video and audio link, and
database
26
Factors driving virtual teams
  • Organizational structure changing to meet the
    demands of the fast-paced, dynamic global economy
  • Many organizations are moving from a
    systems-based organizational model to a
    collaborative, networked organizational model.

27
  • Practitioner-based literature on organizational
    virtual teams began in 1994 (OHara-Devereaux
    Johansen (1994), Grenier Metes (1995), Lipnack
    Stamps (1997) .
  • Academic studies on students date from about
    1997-98. (e.g., Cramton, 2001, Jarvenpaa, Knoll
    Leidner, 1998), Kayworth Leidner, 2000 Lau
    Sarker Sahay, 2000),
  • Published empirical research on organizational
    virtual teams began appearing in (in earnest) in
    1999-2000 Jackson, 1999 Vickery, Clark,
    Carlson, 1999), (Nandhakumar, 1999), (Maznevski
    Chudoba, 2000 .
  • Quite a popular subject now

28
Research Areas
  • Team Issues Issues of trust (Jarvenpaa et al,
    1998 Nandhakumar, 1999 Attribution bias
    (Cramton, 2001) Collaborative processes (Cramton
    Webber, 2000 Sahay et al 1999) Communication
    (Tan et al, 2000 Warkenten Beranek,
    1999).Virtual team dynamics and effectiveness
    (Maznevski Chudoba, 2000 Leadership (Kayworth
    Leidner, 2002)
  • Organizational aspects of virtual teams (Jackson,
    1999 Vickery, Clark, Carlson, 1999)
  • Boundary Issues Time, Distance, Organizational,
    Culture, etc Espinosa et al., 2002 OLeary
    Cummings, 2002 Montoya-Weiss et al., 2001
  • Knowledge Management Situated learning in virtual
    teams (Robey, Khoo Poers, 2000) Information
    Sharing in virtual teams (Crampton Orvis, 2001)
    Situated Knowledge and Learning (Sole
    Edmondson, 2002) Creation of Intellectual Capital
    (Majchrzak et al., 2002)
  • The Use of ICT Communication channels in building
    virtual relationships (Pauleen Yoong, 2001).
  • Theory-based studies Adaptive Structuration
    (Majchrzak et al., 2000)

29
What has the research looked at?
  • Creating social interaction, building trust,
    aligning and maintaining motivation
  • sharing tacit knowledge to maintain common
    understanding
  • choosing appropriate team management structures
  • making team member expectations explicit
  • Effective use of ICT

30
Communities of practice
  • Groups of people informally bound together by
    shared expertise and passion for a joint
    enterprise.
  • Knowledge is not some substance that can be
    managed from a distance like an inventory. It is
    part of the shared practice of communities that
    need it, create it, use it, debate it, distribute
    it, adapt it, and transform it. (Despres
    Chauvel, p. 206)

31
Characteristics of Communities of Practice
  • Members choose to belong because they
  • Enjoy knowing each other
  • Find each other interesting
  • Respect each others perspectives

Peers in the execution of real work. What holds
them together is a common sense of purpose
andreal need to knowwhat each other knows. -
John Seely Brown, VP and Chief Scientist,Xerox
Corp
Verna Allee
32
3 Important Dimensions
  • Domain
  • A domain of common knowledgegives people a sense
    of jointenterprise that emerges fromtheir
    shared understanding.
  • Community
  • They function as a community through
    relationships of mutual engagement that build
    relationship and trust.
  • Practice
  • They build capacity by building a shared
    repertoire of resources, tools, and artifacts
    that support future learning.

Verna Allee
33
Communities of practice
  • are self-organising systems
  • cannot be started arbitrarily
  • thrive under the right conditions

As communities of practice generate knowledge,
they renew themselves. They give you both the
golden eggs and the goose that lays them (Wenger
and Snyder, 2001, p. 9)
34
Nurturing communities of practice requires paying
attention to
  • Knowledge strategy
  • Organisational orientation
  • Organisational systems
  • Organisational resources

35
Communities of practice add value to
organisations by
  • Helping drive strategy
  • Starting new lines of business
  • Solving problems quickly
  • Transferring best practice
  • Developing professional skills
  • Helping recruit and train new talent

36
Virtual Research Communities
  • Geographically distributed, work across time,
    dynamic, etc.
  • Benefits (Lewis, 1998)
  • Reduction in costs and risks
  • Access to expertise and knowledge especially
    tacit knowledge
  • Personal motivations
  • Enter new areas, be part of something bigger than
    otherwise possible

37
ICT- The driving factor in Virtual KS
  • ICT links people across functions, divisions, and
    organizations, as well as distance, time and
    culture.
  • ICT supports the use of virtual teams, CoPs and
    research communities

38
ICT Task /Communication-Mode Matrix
Types of Tasks
Communication Mode
Negotiating complex sits
Gen ideas/coll data
Routine Problems
Complex Problems
Audio
Poor fit
Good fit
Marginal fit
Good fit
Marginal fit
Marginal fit
Poor fit
Good fit
Video
Data only
Good fit
Marginal fit
Poor fit
Poor fit
F2F Marginal fit Marginal fit Good
fit Good fit
39
Any-time Any-Place Matrix (Johansen, 1991)
E-mail, Voice Mail, Usenet, Fax, Computer
conferencing
Application Sharing, Audio and Video
conferencing,
Different Time Different Place
Same Time Different Place
Electronic Whiteboards, Electronic Meeting Rooms,
Voting Tools
Desktop computers, Blackboards, Group rooms
Same Time Same Place
Different Time Same Place
40
Sharing and Distributing Knowledge Key Questions
  • Who needs to know?
  • What do they need to know?
  • How much do they need to know?
  • How can we facilitate that?
  • How to share across cultures?

41
In Teams
  • How to deal with issues? From a practitioner
    perspective
  • How to research these issues? From a researcher
    perspective
  • How to set up collaborative virtual research?

42
Four Premises
  • The most valuable knowledge is tacit
  • Show me and explain it to me are the best
    ways to share knowledge
  • Its not always in a persons best interest to
    share knowledge
  • Organizations do not support this kind of sharing

43
The Challenges to Creating Successful Virtual
knowledge Sharing Communities
  • Creating social interaction, building trust.
    Aligning and maintaining motivation
  • Sharing tacit knowledge to maintain common
    understanding
  • Choosing appropriate group management structures
  • Making community and member expectations explicit

44
World Bank
  • Case study

45
Knowledge Sharing at the World Bank
Present
Past
Knowledge
Help
manager
desk
What the client also needs .....
Briefing
Relevant polices, guidelines, procedures
Relevant bibliographyreference materials
Most frequently asked questions
materials
Relevant best practice
Country conditions, correspondence personae,
issues
Best analytical tools, e.g. economic, financial
analyses
Relevant
knowledge is
made available
just-in-time
Text of previous similar task outputs
Most knowledgeable gurus on key issues
Relevant country, sector data
Most frequently made mistakes in the past
46
Knowledge Sharing Organization
Task Teams and Thematic Groups
47
Knowledge Sharing Network Activities
  • Thematic Groups (communities of practice)
  • Advisory Services (help desk facilities)
  • Sector Knowledge Collections (Web)
  • Sector Statistics and Indicators
  • Project Databases - Directories of Expertise
  • Knowledge Packs (synthesis of experience)
  • Dissemination (formal/informal learning)

48
Knowledge Sharing Practice
University of Toronto
Retired
ECA Region
MNA Region
DEC
Indonesiafield office
Tax policy and administration Thematic Group
Public expenditure review Mission Madagascar
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