Knowledge management cycle is
a process of transforming information into knowledge within an organization. It
explains how knowledge is captured, processed, and distributed in an
organization. In this chapter, we will discuss the prominent models of knowledge
management cycle.
Till date, four models have
been selected based on their ability to meet the growing demands. The four
models are the Zack, from Meyer and Zack (1996), the Bukowitz and
Williams (2000), the McElroy (2003), and the Wiig (1993) KM cycles.
Zack |
Bukowitz & Williams |
WIIG |
McElroy |
Acquisition |
Get |
Creation |
Learning |
Refinement |
Use |
Sourcing |
Validation |
Store |
Learn |
Compilation |
Acquisition |
Distribution |
Contribute |
Transformation |
Integration |
Presentation |
Assess |
Application |
Completion |
The Zack model is extracted
from work on the design and development of information products. In Meyer and
Zack’s approach, the network between each stage is designed to be logical and
standardized.
In this cycle, the major
developmental stages of a knowledge repository are analyzed and
mapped to the stages of a KM cycle.
The stages are acquisition, refinement, storage/retrieval, distribution, and presentation/use. This cycle is also known as the “refinery.”
Acquisition deals with issues
regarding origin of raw materials such as scope, breadth, depth, credibility,
accuracy, timeliness, relevance, cost, control, and exclusivity.
The guiding principle is the
well- known proverb of “garbage in, garbage out.” That is, highest quality
source data is required, else the intellectual products produced downstream
will be lower.
Refinement may be physical
(like migrating from one medium to another) or logical (like
restructuring, relabeling, indexing, and integrating.)
Refining also defines cleaning
up (like sanitizing content so as to ensure complete anonymity of sources and
key players involved) or standardizing (like conforming to templates of a best
practice or lessons learned as used within that particular organization).
This stage also adds up to the value by creating more readily usable knowledge objects and by storing the content more flexibly for future use.
Storage or Retrieval forms a
bridge between the upstream addition and refinement stages that feed the
repository and downstream stages of product generation. Storage can be physical
(file folders, printed information) as well as digital (database, knowledge
management software).
Distribution defines how the
product is to be delivered to the end-user (like fax, print, email) and
encloses not only the medium of delivery but also its timing, frequency, form,
language, and so on.
Context plays an important
role in Presentation or Application stage. The performance of each of the
preceding value-added steps is evaluated here – for example, does the user have
enough context to be able to make use of this content? If not, the KM cycle has
failed to deliver value to the individual and ultimately to the company.
The repository and the
“refinery” combined enable the management of valuable knowledge of a firm. In
this cycle, there is also an impression of having to continually renew the
repository and the refinery in order to avoid elimination.
The Meyer and Zack model is
one of the most complete picture of the key elements engaged in the knowledge
management model. To be specific the notion of refinement is a crucial stage in
the KM cycle and one that is often neglected.
Bukowitz and Williams portray a knowledge
management process framework that outlines “how organizations generate,
maintain and expand a strategically correct stock of knowledge to create value”.
In this framework, knowledge
includes knowledge repositories, relationships, information technologies,
communications infrastructure, functional skill sets, process know-how,
environmental responsiveness, organizational intelligence, and external sources.
These stages aim on more
long-range processes of matching intellectual capital to strategic needs.
● Get Stage is the first stage, it consists of
seeking out information required in order to make decisions, solve problems, or
innovate.
● Use Stage is the next stage, and it deals with how
to combine information in new and interesting ways in order to foster
organizational innovation. The spotlight is primarily on individuals and then
on groups.
● The Learn Stage points to the formal process of learning
from experiences as a means of creating competitive gain. Learning in
enterprises is important because it serves the transition step between the
application of ideas and the generation of new ones.
● The Contribute Stage of the Knowledge Management cycle deals
with encouraging employees to post what they have learnt to the communal
knowledge base (like a repository). Only in this way, can individual knowledge
be made visible and available to the entire organization, where and when
appropriate.
McElroy outlines a knowledge
life cycle that consists of the processes of knowledge production and knowledge
integration, with a series of feedback loops to organizational memory, beliefs,
and claims and the business-processing environment.
● Problem claim formulation is an attempt
to learn and state the specific nature of the detected knowledge gap.
● Knowledge claim formulation acts as a
response to approved problem claims via information acquisition and individual
and group learning.
● New knowledge claims are tested and
examined through knowledge claim evaluation processes.
● Evaluation of knowledge claims results in
surviving knowledge claims that will be integrated as new organizational
knowledge or falsified/undecided knowledge claims.
Experience gained from the
application of knowledge in the organizational knowledge base leads to new
claims and resulting beliefs, triggering the cycle to begin all over again.
In knowledge production, the
primary processes are individual and group learning. Knowledge claim
formulation, information acquisition; codified knowledge claim and knowledge
claim evaluation.
These knowledge production processes can be briefed as −
● Individual and group learning marks the
first step in organizational learning.
● Knowledge claim validation includes
codification at an organizational level.
● A formalized procedure is essential for
the receipt and codification of individual and group innovations.
● Information addition is the process by
which an organization deliberately or serendipitously acquires knowledge claims
or information produced by others, usually external to the company. This stage
plays a basic role in formulating new knowledge claims at the organizational
level.
Knowledge integration is the
process by which an organization announces new knowledge claims to its
operating environment and retires old ones. It includes all knowledge
transmission such as teaching, knowledge sharing, and other social activities
that either connects an understanding of previously produced organizational
knowledge to knowledge workers or accommodate newly minted knowledge.
One of the advantages of the
McElroy cycle is the clear description of how knowledge is examined and a
conscious decision is made as to whether or not it will be included into the
organizational memory. The authorization of knowledge is a step that clearly
differentiates knowledge management from document management. The KM cycle aims
at processes to identify knowledge content that is of value to the organization
and its employees
WIIG highlights the three
conditions that need to be present for an organization to conduct its business
successfully.
● It must have a business
(commodities/services) and customers.
● It must have resources (people, budget,
and facilities).
● It must have the strength to act.
WIIG marks the major purpose
of KM as an effort “to make the organization intelligent-acting by facilitating
the creation, accumulation, deployment and use of quality knowledge.” WIIG’s KM
cycle shows how knowledge is built and used as individuals or as organizations.
The following figure shows the
four major steps of the WIIG model.
● Building knowledge − From external and internal knowledge
sources
● Holding knowledge − Storing the information in a particular
form
● Pooling knowledge − Through intranets and knowledge
management portals
● Applying knowledge − In the context of work embedded in process
The following are the three major stages of integrated cycles of knowledge management strategy when introduced in any organization −
● Knowledge capture and/or creation
● Knowledge sharing and dissemination
● Knowledge acquisition and application
Knowledge
Capture states the identification and frequent
codification of existing (usually previously unnoticed) internal knowledge and
know-how within the organization and/or external knowledge from the environment.
Knowledge
Creation is the advancement of new knowledge and
know-how innovations that did not have a previous existence within the
organization.
Once, it is clear that the
newly identified content is of sufficient value, the next step is to
contextualize this content. This involves maintaining a connection between the
knowledge and those knowledgeable about that content.
Contextualization also indicates identifying the key
elements of the content in order to better match to a variety of users.
Finally, contextualization succeeds to when the new content is firmly, precisely
yet seamlessly, embedded in the business processes of the enterprise.
The knowledge management cycle
is then rechecked as users understand and decide to make use of content.
The users will update
usefulness, and they will signal when it becomes out of date or when this
knowledge is not applicable.