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1 SMR International:KD/KS—Knowledge Development & Knowledge Sharing for Performance Excellence
Knowledge Services
Future Requirements of the Profession
(Especially for Knowledge Workers]
Guy St. ClairHumboldt University, Berlin
11 May 2004
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Introducing…
Knowledge Services
The Convergence of:
Information ManagementKnowledge Management
Strategic (Performance-Centered) Learning
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What is it?
Knowledge services is an enterprise-wide management methodology that enables companies and organizations to achieve excellence, both in the performance of internal staff and in interactions with external customers.
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Knowledge Services
The successful organization in today’s business and research environment is a knowledge-centric organization….
Knowledge services is the basic management tool in the knowledge-centric organization, providing tangible and measurable benefits for all organizational stakeholders.
Knowledge services converges information management, knowledge management, and strategic (performance-centered) learning into a single over-arching management methodology.
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Knowledge Services
Organizations use knowledge services to:
– establish a proactive environment within the organization
– ensure that KD/KS (knowledge development/knowledge sharing) is practiced throughout the enterprise
– ensure that the organization’s intellectual capital is captured organized, analyzed, interpreted, and customized for maximum return to the organization
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How the Specialized Library UsesKnowledge Services
• To improve knowledge workers’ productivity
• To improve the efficiency, repeatability, and consistency of enterprise employees whose work requires them to capture and convey the organization’s intellectual capital
• To enable the enterprise to apply same standards of asset management to explicit, tacit, and cultural knowledge as to other organizational assets
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My Grand Design forInformation Delivery in the 21st Century
• Information customer expectations are met and exceeded
• Management satisfaction is assured
• Enterprise-wide performance excellence is a given
• The specialized library/information center/knowledge center becomes the organization’s Knowledge Services Center
• Specialist librarians — as Certified Knowledge Services Professionals — lead the way
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Why a New Profession?
• The splendid information services continuum (identified just eight years ago!) has expanded—and will continue to expand
• The three disciplines have evolved separately (and not always in harmony)
• Enterprise management and information customers don’t like the disconnect between information need and information delivery
• Information customers need more than just information delivery… and they know it
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Other Reasons (Not So Nice)
• Current information delivery in most organizations, institutions, and enterprises is hampered by
– Attention to processes and not to customers
– Focus on the artifact and not on the content
– Academic/theoretical emphasis (not “real-world”)
– Insular (not holistic) thinking
– Professional arrogance
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What’s So Special AboutKnowledge Services?
Knowledge Services — as a Management Practice — is Founded on KD/KS
(Knowledge Development/Knowledge Sharing)
“… a framework for management that embodies the highest objectives of knowledge management and combines them with the basic principles of the learning organization and the teaching organization.”
Guy St. ClairBeyond Degrees:
Professional Learning for Knowledge Services
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KD/KS(Knowledge Development / Knowledge Sharing)
“… builds on the assumption that all stakeholders accept their responsibility to develop, to learn, and to share tacit, explicit, and cultural knowledge within the enterprise.
“… exists for the benefit of the organizational enterprise with which the learning stakeholders are affiliated and which provides support for their learning endeavors, and for the growth and development of these stakeholders as lifelong learners.”
Guy St. ClairBeyond Degrees:
Professional Learning for Knowledge Services
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KD/KS(Knowledge Development / Knowledge Sharing)
• is holistic, integrated, and top-level
• reflects an understanding of complex business issues
• reflects a broader, more inclusive relationship throughout the larger enterprise
• enables enterprise-wide service delivery that reflects the competitive global environment
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It’s All About Knowledge as aCompetitive Asset
In today’s business and research environment, the management of information as a “stand-alone” activity is insufficient.
For an enterprise to succeed in achieving its operational objectives, and to function as a knowledge-centric organization, enterprise management must include the management of intellectual capital as a competitive asset.
“Intellectual capital is the sum of everything everybody in a company knows that gives it a competitive edge.”
-Thomas A. Stewart
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It’s AboutInformation Management
Information Management - the management methodology concerned with the acquisition, arrangement, storage, retrieval, and use of information to produce knowledge.
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It’s AboutKnowledge Management
Knowledge Management - the management practice for making relevant information readily available, so that users can make timely valid decisions.
“The most critical requirement for workplace success is Knowledge Management - a way to gather, share, and provide easy access to technical data and information related to the work.”
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Knowledge Management
KM is not a product or a thing. KM is
...a management practice that helps an enterprise manage explicit, tacit, and cultural information in ways that enable the organization to reuse the information and to create new knowledge
...an established atmosphere or environment in which KD/KS (knowledge development and knowledge sharing) is established as the essential element for the achievement of the corporate mission
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And It’s AboutStrategic (Performance-Centered) Learning
“Organizational Learning”
… the successful achievement of skills, competencies, knowledge,behaviors, and/or other outcomes required for excellence inworkplace performance
… enables those who develop knowledge to share it, for the benefit ofeverybody in the organization (i.e., combines knowledgedevelopment with knowledge sharing)
…provides training / learning that is specific to the workplace, thatfocuses on applications
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Knowledge Work in Today’s Business/Research Environment
The work of most employees in the business/research environment is knowledge work.
The new workplace environment requires a new kind of knowledge work - the work of conversation (sharing), analysis, and synthesis.
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Today’s Information Customers Must
• Find information
• Transform information into knowledge
• Share knowledge with someone else
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Knowledge Services:Strategic Purpose and Value
• Competitive marketplace
• Global information services environment
• M&A
• Mobile work force
• Changing employment contract
Five factors lead to building the business case for establishing a formal knowledge services function within the enterprise (e.g., converging information management, knowledge management, and strategic learning):
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The “Burning Platform” forEstablishing Knowledge Services
Why create a KD/KS (knowledge development / knowledge sharing) culture?
• we’re in the expertise business
• we’re specialists
• the work of the enterprise is wide-ranging and, in many cases, geographically dispersed (in any event, information flows into the enterprise is from widely dispersed sources)
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“Big Picture” Considerations (1)
• The issue is growth (if ideas are the new capital of growth, where do the ideas come from?)
• Knowledge services must be part of a company’s business strategy
• A senior officer of the enterprise is responsible for creating a culture of innovation, knowledge development and knowledge sharing, and learning across the enterprise
• The successful incorporation of knowledge services into the corporate mission creates a KD/KS culture (knowledge development/knowledge sharing)
• Communities of Practice are used to establish real collaboration, as well as to establish centers of expertise
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“Big Picture” Considerations (2)• Buy-in of senior management is critical
• Knowledge services is about establishing social communities… Creating the social infrastructure, foundation of trust, etc.
• Knowledge services is not about technology - technology enables (tools change - the quest for organizational success doesn’t change)
• Knowledge services must be institutional and “forever” (the biggest challenge is the continued evolution of the knowledge sharing environment)
• Services, products, and consultations provided by the organization’s Knowledge Services Center must be packaged with end users in mind
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Knowledge Services:Critical Factors in Establishing the Environment
• Trust
• Collaboration (and no disincentives for collaboration)
• Collegiality
• Concentration on relationship building
• Part of everyday worklife / not something “extra” to “regular” work (“It’s part of your desktop.”)
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Knowledge Services:Collaboration is Critical
• “Collaboration is a principle-based process of working together, which produces trust, integrity, and breakthrough results by building true consensus, ownership, and alignment in all aspects of the organization…
• “Put another way, collaboration is the way people naturally want to work…
• “Collaboration is the premier candidate to replace hierarchy as the organizing principle for leading and managing the 21st-century workplace…”
--Marshall, Edward M. Transforming the way we work: the power of the collaborative workplace (New York: American Management Association, 1995)
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CreatingCommunities of Practice / Centers of Expertise
• Leadership responsibility
• Individual “experts” identified for their expertise
• Use success stories (people want to be part of something that provides tangible benefits)
• The goal is to create a KD/KS (knowledge development/knowledge sharing) culture
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Knowledge Services:What’s in it for Employees?
• A healthy, enabling work environment
– from competition to collaboration
– from “information power” to “relationship power”
– from stress to resilience
• Drivers of retention and commitment
– Quality of Management
– Empowerment / Entrepreneurship
– Impact / CommunityNancy Reed Marsh
Vice-President, Organization Development
GlaxoSmithKline Beecham
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Knowledge Services:What’s in it for Management?
• Speed, agility, alacrity
• Better leverage of resources and capabilities
• Better talent management: attract, retain, and enable full potential
• Better performance
Nancy Reed Marsh
Vice-President, Organization Development
GlaxoSmithKline Beecham
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Knowledge Analysts / ManagersLead the Way
“My job is to help an extended organization, including its customers, partners, and suppliers, manage or leverage their
collective intellect in order to produce a change in its profitability and growth—and to renew themselves as a business by better organizing its knowledge assets to create new knowledge, new
products and services, and to change the entire competitive playing field.”
-Kent Greenes
Chief Knowledge Officer & Senior Vice PresidentScience Applications International Corporation
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Specialist Librarians Can Lead the Way
• Establish your knowledge objective
• Conduct a knowledge audit
• Determine goals and expectations for knowledge services
• Decide on a management approach
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Knowledge Services:Strategic Purpose and Value
Building the business case for Knowledge Services:
• Identify the bottom-line impact
• Focus on projects with short-term payoff
• Establish meaningful measures of progress and demonstrate results
• Talk about future opportunities in a knowledge services environment
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Why Specialist Librarians?
• Been doing it all along….
• Not like other librarians, or even other information professionals• (cf., Marion Paris, Information Outlook, December, 1999)
• Exploit the differences, to our and our organization’s advantage
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What’s Required of Us?A Willingness to...
• Change
• Take leadership
• “Let go”
• Recognize that librarianship (as it has evolved) is something else—it’s not what we do
• Transform specialized librarianship into knowledge services
• Move to an “opportunity-focused and results-focused” management framework
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Building the NewKnowledge Services Profession
The goal: excellence in service delivery and established expertise in professional practitioners
• Recognize that information delivery/knowledge services is part of the larger information services industry
• Recognize that different staff are required for different work, that the current single “professional” classification is unwieldy.
• Recognize the need for establishing professional standards and for examining, adjudicating, and certifying credentials for anyone who desires to practice as a Certified Knowledge Services Professional.
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Questions???
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Contact Information
Guy St. Clair
Consulting Specialist for Knowledge Management and Learning
SMR International
527 Third Avenue (# 105)
New York NY 10016 USA
Tel: +1 212 683 6285
Fax: +1 212 683 2987
E-Mail: GuyStClair@cs.com