1 / 10

Class 4 Systems Support to Knowledge Work

Asper School of Business - MBA Program MIS 6150 - Management of Information Systems & Technology April-June 2009 Instructor: Bob Travica. Asper School of Business 9.614 Information Age Organizations Part-Time MBA, April 2002 Instructor: Bob Travica. Class 4

kennan
Download Presentation

Class 4 Systems Support to Knowledge Work

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Asper School of Business - MBA Program MIS 6150 - Management of Information Systems & Technology April-June 2009 Instructor: Bob Travica Asper School of Business 9.614 Information Age Organizations Part-Time MBA, April 2002 Instructor: Bob Travica Class 4 Systems Support to Knowledge Work Updated April 2009

  2. Outline • Knowledge, Information, and Data Work • What is Knowledge • Knowledge Types • Knowledge Management Cycle • Technology for Knowledge Management • Messages for Change Leader 6150 Management of Information Systems & Technology

  3. Knowledge, Information & Data Work • Knowledge work involves knowledge generation • and utilization (application); Chapter 14 • In contrast, information work involves understanding • data (usually processed and formatted, as in reports). • Data work involves data collection, entry, processing, • and formatting. Ch. 7 • Database Systems (demo), Enterprise Resource Planning • Systems/Data Warehouses; Owens & Minor 6150 Management of Information Systems & Technology

  4. What is Knowledge • Knowledge refers to interconnected information on what something is, why something happens, and how to do something . • - What: definitions of concepts and relationships, taxonomies • - Why: understanding cause-effect relationships • - How-to, know-how: analysis/synthesis; methods, procedures • for generating new knowledge Knowledge acquisition is incremental (what in layers, why with imperfect accuracy, starting from know-how and learning what/why in the process) Knowledge is never complete, or 100% correct, can be incoherent and controversial… is messy. 6150 Management of Information Systems & Technology

  5. Knowledge Types • Source view: Theoretical (science, theories) vs. • Experiential knowledge (personal, learned by doing) • Communication view: • Explicit • can be communicated to others • definitions, taxonomies, theories, • procedures, cases • Tacit • difficult to communicate • experiential, analytical & • synthesizing skills Sharing and capturing tacit knowledge – one of main goals before knowledge management and knowledge support systems. 6150 Management of Information Systems & Technology

  6. Edvinsson & Malone, Realizing Your Company’s True Value by Finding Its Hidden Brainpower, 1997 Knowledge Types – Capital View . • Human Capital: Knowledge in employees’ mind (BP mini-case) • Structural Capital : • Knowledge embedded in organizational artifacts • Knowledge representations in documents (patents, problem solving • descriptions – different documents than reports; Accenture case) • - Invented work procedures/processes (Pharmaceutical co.) • - Knowledge embedded in technology (any), production floor • design, products • - Innovation Potential (e.g., educational facilities) 6150 Management of Information Systems & Technology

  7. Knowledge Management Cycle. • Knowledge management refers to activities from knowledge generation to • discarding. • Similar to data/information management (Ch. 7) but strong human • aspect and using some specific technologies • Generating: • Creating (by R+D & other professionals) • Capturing (from company’s own experts) • Collecting (learning from others) Codifying (putting in a form that communicates to others) & Organizing (establishing relationships, classifying) Updating (changing and discarding) Utilizing (putting at work, drawing value) Sharing (disseminating documented knowledge; Communicating via apprenticeship and teamwork)

  8. Technology for Knowledge Management. • Generating: • Creating (Computer Aided Design, Artificial Neural Networks) • Capturing (from own experts; Expert Systems, Case-Based Sys.) • Collecting (Patent & other databases, Internet) • Codifying & Organizing • (structuring, classifying & indexing in Document Management Systems, Locators/Maps, Wikis, Expert Systems, Case-Based Systems) Updating (making the content of knowledge support systems current) See next Utilizing (using Expert Systems, Case-Based Sys.; studying knowledge documents) Sharing Document Management Systems, Comm. Sys., GSS, educational tech.) 6150 Management of Information Systems & Technology

  9. More on systems discussed Technology for Knowledge Management. • Artificial neural networks (detect patterns in data; p. 442-3, see diagram) • Document management technologies with templates • and search capabilities (capturing, codifying, organizing, • communicating; Accenture case; TVA mini-case) Go back • Expert Systems (capturing; codifying/organizing; p. 440-1, Ch.12; • Partners Health Care case, using) • Case Based Systems (capturing, codifying/organizing, • using, updating; p. 442, Ch.12) 6150 Management of Information Systems & Technology

  10. Messages for Change Leader Turn to managing knowledge in your organization Knowledge management team/champions should be promoted Demonstrate value (financial & intangible) of capturing explicit and tacit knowledge Consider both the people and technological aspects of knowledge management stimulate generation and sharing, train and motivate staff; capture knowledge in knowledge work systems (KWS) and organizational procedures 5. Create and manage governance of knowledge and KWS (Policies and Procedures) 6. Don’t become victim of own knowledge – discard obsolete knowledge 6150 Management of Information Systems & Technology

More Related