Knowledge Creation and knowledge management architecture
What is knowledge creation?
ü Knowledge
creation is dynamic, a daily basis activity. It is responsible for the
enhancement of success of an organization.
ü Maturation:
Translate experience into knowledge.
Learning
and innovation at work in organizations is a social phenomenon that requires
communication across individual and organizational boundaries, collaboration,
and knowledge and information transfer within and across organizational
structures In
organizational
theory,
knowledge transfer is the
practical problem of transferring knowledge from one part of the organization
to another. Like knowledge management, knowledge transfer
seeks to organize, create, capture or distribute knowledge and ensure its
availability for future users.
Knowledge Creation and Transfer via Teams:
- Knowledge update can mean creating new knowledge based on ongoing experience in a specific domain and then using the new knowledge in combination with the existing knowledge to come up with updated knowledge for knowledge sharing.
- Knowledge can be created through teamwork
- A team can commit to perform a job over a specific period of time.
- A job can be regarded as a series of specific tasks carried out in a specific order.
- When the job is completed, then the team compares the experience it had initially (while starting the job) to the outcome (successful/disappointing).
- This comparison translates experience into knowledge.
- While performing the same job in future, the team can take corrective steps and/or modify the actions based on the new knowledge they have acquired.
- Over time, experience usually leads to expertise where one team (or individual) can be known for handling a complex problem very well.
- This knowledge can be transferred to others in a reusable format.
SECI Model of Knowledge Creation:
Four modes of knowledge conversion were identified:
o
Tacit
to tacit(Socialization);
o
Tacit
to explicit (Externalization);
o explicit to explicit(Combination),
o explicit to tacit (Internalization).
o explicit to explicit(Combination),
o explicit to tacit (Internalization).
Socialization
Sharing tacit knowledge through face-to-face communication or shared
experience. Informal social intercourse and teaching by practical examples. An
example is an apprenticeship.
Externalization:
Trying to convert tacit
knowledge to explicit knowledge by developing concepts and models. In this
phase tacit knowledge is converted to understandable and interpretable form, so
it can be also used by others. Externalized and theoretical knowledge is a base
for creating new knowledge.
CombinationCompiling externalized explicit knowledge to broader entities and concept systems. When knowledge is in explicit form it can be combined with the knowledge that has been filed earlier. In this phase knowledge is also analyzed and organized.
Internalization
Internalization means understanding explicit knowledge. It happens when explicit knowledge transforms to tacit and becomes a part of individual’s basic information. Cycle continues now in the spiral of knowledge back to socialization when individual shares his tacit knowledge silently. This is how amount of knowledge grows and the previous conceptions might change.
The creation of knowledge is a continuous process of dynamic interactions between tacit and explicit knowledge. The four modes of knowledge conversion interact in the spiral of knowledge creation. The spiral becomes larger in scale as it moves up through organizational levels, and can trigger new spirals of knowledge creation.
Benefits of the SECI model
- Appreciates the dynamic nature of knowledge and knowledge creation.
- Provides a framework for management of the relevant processes.
Knowledge
Management Architecture:
- Knowledge
architecture can be regarded as a prerequisite to knowledge sharing.
- The
infrastructure can be viewed as a combination of people, content, and
technology.
- These
components are inseparable and interdependent
User Interface Layer
- Usually a web
browser represents the interface between the user and the KM system.
- It is the top
layer in the KM system architecture.
- The way the
text, graphics, tables etc are displayed on the screen tends to simplify
the technology for the user.
- The user
interface layer should provide a way for the proper flow of tacit and
explicit knowledge.
- The necessary
knowledge transfer between people and technology involves capturing tacit
knowledge from experts, storing it in knowledge base, and making it
available to people for solving complex problems.
- Features to be
considered in case of user interface design:
- Consistency
- Relevancy
- Visual clarity
- Usability
- Ease of
Navigation
Mehwish Shehzad !
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