Interview d'expert : Pascal Bernardon, Directeur de Programme KM, FRANCE

Pascal BERNARDON    

What is your vision on Knowledge Management future ? What do you think the main trends are today and will be in the next years ?

In my opinion, I think Knowledge Management is going to be more valued by companies. The economic context provides the real value of knowledge and skills used every day by employees, team managers have to explore different ways to achieve their goals, customers claim more agility to get the right service at the right moment for the right price. So to get or to save more customers, companies would have to manage and improve every day their Knowledge Networks. A Knowledge Network is an environment in wich people share and capitalize connections that provide access to the right item, employee, process, information, supplier, customer. In other words, I call this environment the RELATIONSHIP ECONOMY.
 

How organizations can use Knowledge Management to improve their competitiveness and optimize their businesses results? And what are the main expected benefits?

First organizations have to launch pragmatic actions to demonstrate the benefits, to become aware of the organisational change, and to involve more business communities in future Projects. Change managment has to be built by everybody, everyday, and become a new behavior in the culture of the organization. Knowledge Management is a new way to work with all stakeholders, KM gives the power to empower business communities. The big challenge is to know what is the right knowledge I could use to be more efficient. And the right knowledge is the cognitive trigger to extract, to capitalise, to share and to improve everyytime it is necessary.

What are your recommendations to start an effective Knowledge Management project and its successful roll-out?

To be pragmatic, to begin with a little project, to put in place an open-minded environment where skateholders could exchange with complete transparancy. Do not forget to put in place measurement criterias in accordance with business work unit to demonstrate benefits.


In your opinion, what are the major hurdle to overcome and the pitfalls to avoid?

To forget to put in place an individual and a collective, and a internal and external reward system.


Do you think there are cultural specificities on Knowledge Management maturity depending on your geographical location?

Oh yes, the culture of the organization is one major point to manage at the beginning of the project. On the same subject the approach and the meaning of each stakeholders  is often different. The community manager has to foster exchanges between members of the community to build a common language and meaning share by everybody. Then the mutlicultural community is able to build knowledge capitalisation and transfers.

Le Social KM : de quoi parlons-nous ?

Pendant des décennies, la gestion des connaissances est restée une promesse. Aujourd'hui, le KM est devenu une réalité car les outils de réseaux permettent la création de véritables lieux de travail fondés sur la connaissance.

Source : KMWorld Magazine (2009)

Le Social Knowledge Management est la gestion adéquate des processus d'assimilation et de supervision des connaissances accumulées par le dialogue et l'établissement de relations entre personnes. Ce type particulier de gestion des connaissances se concentre souvent sur l'organisation et l'usage correct d'informations fournies en ligne, par exemple les contributions d'utilisateurs sur différents sujets ou leurs publications dans le cadre de référentiels généraux. L'idée derrière le Social Knowledge Management est d'établir des processus et des standards qui aident à qualifier l'information reçue et à la diffuser de la façon la plus responsable possible.

Source : Conjecture Corporation (Malcolm Tatum - Bronwyn Harris) (2011)

Le Social Knowledge Management est l'une des tendances structurantes d'évolution des usages des Réseaux Sociaux d'Entreprise. L'objectif est d'augmenter le capital "savoir et savoir-faire" en changeant de paradigme : passer de la constitution de la bibliothèque des savoirs à celle d'un réseau d'experts. L'entreprise doit sortir de la seule logique "connaissance = document" et enrichir sa capacité à gérer un savoir d'un accès à ceux qui savent. Ceci conduit à travailler sur 3 axes : le partage d'expertises et de ressources, l'évaluation des expertises et des contributions,  la sollicitation du réseau via des Questions/ Réponses.

Source : LECKO – Extraits de « Les Réseaux Sociaux d'Entreprise : l'entrée dans l'ère du conversationnel » (2010)

Social KM

Knowledge Management

The easy definition of KM is the ideas, experience, events that people share and exchange in particular issue which can lead improvement as well innovation.

source : by elmi on knowledge-management-online.com

Interview d'expert : Nick Milton & Tom Young, Knoco Ltd., UK

Nick Milton    Tom Young

What is your vision on Knowledge Management future ? What do you think the main trends are today and will be in the next years ?

Nick: I think the main trend I see that is closest to my vision, is that KM is becoming a requirement from big companies, who are increasingly requesting that their suppliers and subcontractors develop or demonstrate a capability in KM. This will lead to the mainstreaming of KM.

Tom: I agree, it will take the big companies to make it a requirement of their suppliers and partners to drive it forward.  Thankfully we are already seeing signs of this happening.

Nick: I also see a confusion between content management, information management, social networking, and other elements of KM. Each of these is pulling in a different direction, and there is no integrating model to unify them. I also see a tendency to apply western Km theories to non-western cultures.

Tom: There is very significant confusion between content management, information management, social networking , web 2.0 etc etc which is leading to what I would term as an ‘un informed buyer’; they ask for ‘knowledge management’ but they don’t know what it is, what it can do and more especially what they want it to do for them.  I am not suggesting we need a global definition of ‘knowledge management’ that would be too hard but a better understanding of what each of the other terms mean.
Forcing western models of KM on non western cultures is leading to disappointing results which could backfire on all future km projects.  If a lot of organizations say ‘it didn’t work for us’ people will only hear that message, they won’t think to ask, why not?

How organizations can use Knowledge Management to improve their competitiveness and optimize their businesses results? And what are the main expected benefits?

Nick: Introduce a Knowledge Management Framework. The KM framework approach developed at Knoco is our compilation of nearly 20 years of experience in this field, and represents what we believe is the best approach. The framework is described on the wiki and the website
Introducing a framework is the key at corporate level, introducing knowledge management plans is key at project level

Benefits vary from organization to organization, but may include:

  • Lower cost
  • Higher profit
  • Higher market share
  • Better use of resources
  • Faster delivery
  • Faster time to market
  • Safer operation
  • More environmentally compliant operation
  • Happier stakeholders
  • Greater success rate in development, And so on...

What are your recommendations to start an effective Knowledge Management project and its successful roll-out?

Nick: These recommendations are fully documented in our wiki, and again represent our experience over the years. A very brief summary would be :

  • Assess the current state
  • Develop a business led strategy
  • Test the elements of a KM framework
  • Pilot the entire framework
  • Roll out the framework


In your opinion, what are the major hurdle to overcome and the pitfalls to avoid?

Nick: The 7 most common pitfalls are in this blog post. In summary these are :

  1. KM is not introduced as a change program
  2. The KM team does not have the right people to deliver change. Tom : they create a km team with IT people
  3. The KM team preach only to the choir. Tom : they only talk to km team and people who are interested in km, not to people in the business who want to solve business problems
  4. Only parts of the KM solution are implemented. Tom : framework approach is needed...
  5. KM is never embedded into the business
  6. There is no effective high-level sponsorship
  7. KM is not introduced with a business focus.

Nick: the major cultural hurdles are in this blog post. In summary these are :

  • Knowledge is power
  • Building empires
  • Individual work bias/Local focus
  • Not invented here
  • Fear of "not knowing"
  • Penalising errors
  • No time to share

The main missing enabling and elements are mentioned here.

Nick: Most common enablers :

  • Most companies had a good selection of technology for communicating knowledge - i.e. for enabling dialogue and discussion to exchange tacit knowledge. (This element scored an average of 3.3 on a 1-5 scale, in our same dataset of 28 companies)
     
  • Most companies also had pretty good processes for knowledge identification and capture, whether these were after action reviews, project debriefs, or debriefs of individuals. (An average score of 3.1)


Most common missing elements :

  • Many or most companies had no way of checking whether knowledge management was being applied - in other words, no performance management of KM(An average score of 1.9 on a 1-5 scale). If it's not managed, it remains options, and if it's optional, many people will opt out. We find that 80% of people in an organisation don't care about KM, and unless it is seen as part of the job, they won't bother.
     
  • Also many or most companies had no clear accountabilities assigned to ensuring that knowledge is reused (An average score of 2.1). They might be very good at "knowledge capture" or "knowledge sharing", but if it's nobody's role to ensure re-use, then the capture and sharing is wasted effort.



Do you think there are cultural specificities on Knowledge Management maturity depending on your geographical location?

A short overview is below :

  Maturity of KM Culture Approach to KM
USA V high High individuality, low power distance Heavily technology-focused
UK V high High individuality, low power distance Communities of practice, learning from experience
Scandinavia V high Moderate individuality, very low power distance Communities of practice, learning from experience
India Medium High power distance Totally dominated by portals
Middle east Medium to low Very high power distance, low individuality Early days, but looks like rigid systems focused on learning and on knowledge ownership, dominated by experts and heirarchy
Indonesia/Malaysia /Thailand Medium to low Low individuality, high power distance A portal–led approach
China Very low Low individuality, high power distance Impossible to say yet
Russia Very low    
Japan, Singapore High Low individuality, high power distance Relationship focused
Brazil/Argentina/Chile moderate med power distance, low individuality Expert-dominated
Australia High High individuality, low power distance Based on relationships and storytelling


Also see here :
- KM and national culture 1 - UK and Thailand/Malaysia
- KM and national culture 2 - Australia and South Africa
- KM and national culture 3 - Scandinavia and South America

FOCUS : les atouts du Social Knowledge Management

Aujourd’hui, dans le monde des logiciels d’entreprise, il n’existe peut-être pas de terme autant utilisé que Réseau Social d’Entreprise. Et aussi souvent galvaudé !... Car le monde de l’entreprise n’est pas un cercle d’amis (1) et il est bien compréhensible que Directions générales ou métier, managers, experts et autres collaborateurs n’en aient pas la même perception et n’en attendent pas les mêmes bénéfices : tout dépend de leurs objectifs, missions, responsabilités, compétences et comportements. En résumé, du contexte d’usage.

Nombre de sociétés et de directions informatiques pionnières, d’analystes et d’experts constatent qu’il faut aller au-delà des apparentes similitudes (2) entre projets et que les logiciels polyvalents tels IBM Connections, Microsoft SharePoint ou Jive ne sont pas en mesure d’exceller dans toutes les facettes des réseaux sociaux (3). Le présent focus analyse la situation dans le contexte spécifique aux projets de Social Knowledge Management et positionne le logiciel AKH™ de VEDALIS par rapport aux outils plus généralistes.


(1) Philippe Cottret – Le Monde.fr 14/10/2011
(2) Anthony J. Bradley, group vice president, Gartner Research, and Mark P. McDonald, group vice president and Gartner Fellow, Gartner Executive Programs – Harvard Business Review 26/10/2011
(3) Collaboratif-Info – 29/03/2011

Sommaire :

  1. Valoriser les connaissances métier et les organiser en réseaux : les atouts du Social KM
  2. Les limites des outils polyvalents pour les projets SKM
  3. Les atouts d’AKH™ de VEDALIS pour les projets SKM
  4. Complémentarités entre outils RSE et AKH™

Lire le Focus