Knowledge Management (KM) principles recognize that it is important for organizations to "know what they know." All institutions inherently store, access, and deliver knowledge in some manner. The question is what value is added to the products and services they deliver by the effective use of that knowledge capital.
"Almost any institution in this country will make reference to the capturing of knowledge, the sharing of knowledge and the delivery of knowledge from faculty to students," explains Stevenson. However, KM involves much more, going beyond the inherent knowledge industry of colleges and universities. In the EDUCAUSE Leadership Strategies volume entitled Information Alchemy: The Art and Science of Knowledge Management, Bernbom explains that KM involves the "discovery and capture of knowledge, the filtering and arrangement of this knowledge, and the value derived from sharing and using this knowledge throughout the organization" (2001, p. xiv). It is this "organized complexity" of collaborative work to share and use information across all aspects of an institution which marks the effective use of knowledge.
Higher education institutions have "significant opportunities to apply knowledge management practices to support every part of their mission," explains Kidwell et al (2001, p. 24). "Knowledge management should not strike higher education institutions as a radically new idea; rather it is a new spin on their raison d'etre" (p. 24). The problem is that it is such a "wide open area of study that it is difficult to understand the implications of knowledge management for an educational setting" (Thorn, 2001, p. 25). This digest offers a basic introduction to the potential of KM for higher education.
According to a survey conducted by Knowledge Management magazine and International Data Corporation (IDC) about the state of KM (Dyer and McDonough, 2001), the primary business uses or domains of KM are to:
--Capture and share best practices (77.7%)
--Provide training, corporate learning (62.4%)
--Manage customer relationships (58.0%)
--Deliver competitive intelligence (55.7%)
--Provide project workspace (31.4%)
--Manage legal, intellectual property (31.4%)
--Enhance web publishing (29.9%)
--Enhance supply chain management (20.1%)
--Other (5.5%)
E-learning is one of the most important KM practices, something which one would expect higher education institutions to have as an advantage. Yet these e-learning opportunities are geared most often to students as online customers, not to employees as part of capitalizing on their knowledge as an intellectual asset. The e-learning focus in KM is on "just-in-time knowledge," delivered anytime and anywhere, with the traditional "course" disaggregated into "knowledge chunks." Two-thirds of 700 companies polled in a Delphi Group study use online resources for training employees (Survey Tracks, 2001).
Data warehouses, data mining, and virtual reality modeling are used as new ways to visualize and transcend extraordinarily complex, transaction-based data (Knowledge Integrity, 2000; Nylund, 2000). The concept of the "executive information system" is taken much further with the use of digital dashboards for monitoring critical processes and performance measures (Angus, 1999a; Karlenzig, 1999; Microsoft, 2000, 2001).
The Microsoft White Paper entitled "Digital Dashboard Business Process Assessment Guide" provides a useful description of this tool:
A digital dashboard is a customized solution for knowledge workers that consolidates personal, team, corporate, and external information and provides single-click access to analytical and collaborative tools. It brings an integrated view of a company's knowledge sources to an individual's desktop, enabling better decision making by providing immediate access to key business information... (Microsoft, 2000, pp. 1-2).
The goals for the digital dashboard are to focus on critical information, integrate information from a variety of sources, use company knowledge fully, and work with the same information in the office or on the move. In addition, there is a special new focus on "attention management tools" that are designed to address the problem of information overload and help executives focus with personalized web portals to monitor their unique priorities and mission.
Finally, perhaps the most pervasive focus in KM is on being customer-centric, something shared with the TQM and CQI management philosophies but much more pragmatic and data-driven when approached within KM. Much of customer care is moved to the web, where this involves "improved customer satisfaction by meeting their needs at the first point of contact;" more efficient operations that combine call centers and the web; and increased site traffic "eyeballs" and "stickiness" that help build a cohesive online community (Ward, 2001).
The point of KM in customer relations is to retain "institutional memory." With a variety of software tools, the "knowledge base pushes relevant information -- such as product announcements, special offers, industry news and regional updates to these customers and partners, based on rules" (Anderson, 2001, p. 64).
The 2001 survey by Knowledge Management and IDC found that of those companies that adopt KM, the top reasons are to:
--Retain expertise of personnel (51.9%)
--Increase customer satisfaction (43.1%)
--Improve profits, grow revenues (37.5%)
--Support e-business initiatives (24.7%)
--Shorten product development cycles (23.0%)
--Provide project workspace (11.7%)
As public, private, and for profit higher education institutions alike respond to the phenomenal growth of online courses, cyber colleges, and virtual universities, these same reasons to adopt KM apply. It is with KM that colleges will be better able to increase student retention and graduation rates; retain a technology workforce in the face of severe employee shortages; expand new web based offerings; work to analyze the cost effective use of technology to meet more enrollment; transform existing transaction-based systems to provide information, not just data, for management; and compete in an environment where institutions cross state and national borders to meet student needs anytime/anywhere.
One of the attractions of the information revolution is that it moves us away from a top-heavy structure... Information acts like a force of gravity that pulls the decision-making power lower into the organization, so it has more freedom, flexibility and vibrancy. The gravitational pull is toward greater freedom and flexibility for junior personnel, and I think that's very healthy (Delio, 2000, p. 50).
--Employees have no time for KM (41.0%)
--Current culture does not encourage sharing (36.6%)
--Lack of understanding of KM and benefits (29.5%)
--Inability to measure financial benefits of KM (24.5%)
--Lack of skill in KM techniques (22.7%)
--Organization's processes are not designed for KM (22.2%)
--Lack of funding for KM (21.8%)
--Lack of incentives, rewards to share (19.9%)
--Have not yet begun implementing KM (18.7%)
--Lack of appropriate technology (17.4%)
--Lack of commitment from senior management (13.9%)
--No challenges encountered (4.3%)
The greatest benefit of using storytelling in KM may come from its ability to capture tacit knowledge, which many observers call the most valuable knowledge asset of an organization. Unlike explicit knowledge, which is written down in documents, manuals and other accessible sources, tacit knowledge is implicit in the minds of people, many of whom literally don't know how much their experience has taught them (Gill, 2001, p. 27).
Angus, Jeff. (1999a). "Beyond Digital Dashboard." Knowledge Management, (2):12. p. 16. December, 1999. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=156
Angus, Jeff. (1999b). "Challenging Quaquaversality." Knowledge Management, (2):11. pp. 18-19. November, 1999. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=146
Bernbom, Gerald, editor. (2001). Information Alchemy: The Art and Science of Knowledge Management. EDUCAUSE Leadership Series #3. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Delio, Michelle. (2000). "Grass Roots Are Greener: Knowledge initiatives advance from bottom-up successes, not by executive fiat." Knowledge Management, (3):2. pp. 47-50. February, 2000. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=170
Delio, Michelle. (2000b). "Proving We're Productive." Knowledge Management, (3): 7. pp. 33-38. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=347
Dyer, Greg and Brian McDonough. (2001). "The State of KM." Knowledge Management, (4):5. pp. 31-36). May, 2001. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=822
Gill, Philip J. (2001). "Once Upon An Enterprise: The ancient art of storytelling emerges as a tool for knowledge management." Knowledge Management, (4):5. pp. 24-28. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=823
Graham, Ricci. (2001). "Benchmarking Jackson State." Knowledge Management, (4): 5. p. 11. May, 2001. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=829
Karlenzig, Warren. (1999). "Behind Microsoft's Digital Dashboard." Knowledge Management, (2):12. p. 84. December, 1999. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=156
Kidwell, Jillinda J., Vander Linde, Karen M., and Sandra L. Johnson (2001). "Applying Corporate Knowledge Management Practices in Higher Education." In Bernbom, Gerald, editor, Information Alchemy: The Art and Science of Knowledge Management. EDUCAUSE Leadership Series #3. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. pp. 1-24.
Knowledge Integrity, Inc. (2000). "Collecting Quality Customer Data." Knowledge Management, (3):2. pp. 78-80. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=226
Microsoft. "Digital Dashboard: Business Process Assessment Guide." White Paper. May, 2000. Available online at: http://www.microsoft.com/business/digitaldashboard/ddbpag.asp.
Microsoft. "Introducing the Dashboard Site for Microsoft SharePoint Portal Server 2001." White Paper. April, 2001. Available online at: http://www.microsoft.com/sharepoint/techinfo/digitaldash.asp.
Nylund, Andrea L. (2000). "Finding Patterns in a Deluge of Data." Knowledge Management, (3):2. pp. 69-71. February, 2000. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=189.
Roberts-Witt, Sarah. (1999). "Making Sense of Portal Pandemonium." Knowledge Management, (2):7. pp. 36-48. July, 1999. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=24
Ruber, Peter. (2000). "Portals on a Mission." Knowledge Management, (3):4. pp. 34-44. April, 2000. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=252
Sherman, Lee. (2000). "Workgroups Meet on the Web." Knowledge Management, (3):7. p. 78. July, 2000. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=352
"Survey Tracks Trends in E-Learning." (2001). Knowledge Management (4):1. p. 11. January, 2001. Available online at: http://www.destinationcrm.com/km/dcrm_km_article.asp?id=641
Thorn, Christopher A. (2001). "Knowledge Management for Educational Information Systems" What Is the State of the Field?" Educational Policy Analysis Archives (9):47. November 19, 2001. Available online at: http://epaa.asu.edu/epaa/v9n47/
Ward, Lewis. (2001). "Collaborative KM Tools: Putting Customer Care Online." Knowledge Management (4):4. pp. CS1-CS6. Special Advertising Section.
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