How To Turn Employees Into Active Users of Corporate Knowledge
Launching their knowledge management
initiatives, organizations often resemble oil extraction companies. They start
to drill their knowledge wells and rub their hands in anticipation of the
upcoming boost to their business. However, knowledge management often turns to
be even harder than real oil extraction from the entrails of the earth. That
is, even with such a sustainable resource as knowledge, only few companies
succeed in making a good use of it.
After finding the optimal ways to externalize
and store their corporate knowledge, organizations often stop halfway
forgetting how important it is to actively use it. This leads to negative
consequences: provided with the access to all the necessary knowledge, both
tacit and explicit, employees just don’t retrieve it and thus underperform. But
what can be the reasons of such inertness?
Why knowledge lays idle
The problem of poor knowledge use can have
two reasons: technological and organizational ones.
The technological reason points to defects in
knowledge management tools themselves. Instead of stimulating knowledge use,
they impede navigation across knowledge sources or don’t let employees reach
out to knowledge owners. As a result, organizations get exposed to the
following issues:
Explicit knowledge is hard to access.
Badly structured, non-indexed, non-rated knowledge assets can be really
annoying for employees. However, the case is pretty common. According to the TSIA survey The state of knowledge management 2015,
66% of respondents state that they don’t index their knowledge base, while 58%
confirm they don’t index community content.
Tacit knowledge is underused. When
a knowledge management system has no hands-on collaboration tools, employees
lose the opportunity to exchange tacit knowledge. As a result, knowledge gets
stuck in employees’ heads only and hardly crosses departmental borders. In this
case, knowledge flows are very short, as knowledge is shared among limited
groups of people.
Apart from technical issues, there can be
organizational barriers. A corporate culture with poor knowledge use can bring
up the following scenarios:
Knowledge use is optional. In the
absence of official guidelines on knowledge use, employees perceive it as an
unnecessary, futile procedure that only eats their working time. As a result,
employees rely on their own knowledge exclusively, which makes working
processes inconsistent and deficient.
There is no formal procedure for knowledge
maintenance and update. Obviously, employees are interested in
using up-to-date and relevant information, so as soon as they find their
internal knowledge sources outdated and misleading, they won’t return to them
anymore. There are 2 critical situations that can put knowledge use to a stop:
- Chaotic knowledge generation and storage. When managed chaotically, knowledge sources quickly become overloaded with information noise. Therefore, users have to spend a lot of time trying to sift out relevant information and, eventually, stop searching for it at all.
- Knowledge isn’t maintained and upgraded. If nobody controls how adequate knowledge is, it quickly becomes obsolete and useless. Surprisingly, the percentage of companies neglecting knowledge updates is pretty high. TSIA’s statistics shows that less than 50% of the surveyed companies regularly review their knowledge base content for accuracy, and 27% admit that knowledge hasn’t been updated for a very long time.
Stimulating knowledge use with technology
To increase knowledge use, companies can take
a few feasible steps to adjust their knowledge management solutions or tools.
Taking corrective actions, organizations can tailor software features to be
knowledge use accelerators.
Convenient and pervasive search that
will enable users to quickly find required information across all knowledge
sources. For example, companies using SharePoint-based solutions can fine-tune
the platform’s search capabilities to provide users with a direct way to
knowledge located on different sites and site collections. Even a bigger
advantage have the owners of SharePoint 2016 that allows an instant, hybrid
search across different SharePoint environments, both on-premises and cloud.
Knowledge rating tools will
allow classifying knowledge assets by their value and relevance. This will help
users to get the most valuable knowledge ranked first in knowledge search
results.
Automated workflows for knowledge updates will
help knowledge owners to carry out knowledge reviews as soon as the relevancy
of a knowledge asset expires. Such workflows will allow organizations to keep
updated such important knowledge assets as market researches, internal
policies, methodologies and more.
Collaboration tools for tacit knowledge
exchange will facilitate dissemination of tacit knowledge among
employees by allowing them to connect to knowledge owners regardless of their
location. Companies that use SharePoint intranets can enhance knowledge use
with the help of diverse built-in collaboration features, for example,
knowledge discussion hubs, knowledge exchange and Q&As.
Fostering knowledge use on the organizational
level
To improve knowledge use on the
organizational level, companies should aim at intensifying cross-departmental
knowledge exchange and make knowledge use an essential part of daily working
processes. To reach this goal, companies can:
Provide employees with ready-to-go knowledge.
Developing SharePoint-based knowledge management solutions, we at ScienceSoft advocate the
push approach to knowledge dissemination that encourages companies to
distribute available knowledge among employees with the help of:
- In-house trainings and courses aimed at showing available knowledge, introducing knowledge owners and bridging knowledge gaps. Trainings can be allocated in a corporate learning management system (LMS) that will be integrated with a knowledge management system so that employees’ new knowledge and competencies can be then fixed in a knowledge base and added to the knowledge map.
- Collaborative knowledge transfer that should stimulate more active knowledge flows throughout the company. To facilitate collaborative knowledge transfer, companies can focus on creating both formal and informal Communities of Practice (CoP) and provide them with the possibility to carry out knowledge exchange workshops supported with discussion forums and blogs.
Make knowledge use obligatory. Corporate
knowledge use should be considered as a critical factor in a company’s success.
A high importance of knowledge use should be communicated to employees during
their working process and supported with relevant internal policies. For example,
a knowledge management policy can stipulate an obligatory use of available
corporate knowledge in employees’ daily tasks. Moreover, a regular knowledge
use can become an essential element of employees’ performance reviews.
Therefore, employees not following the policy will be subject to penalties.
Bringing the accelerators together
Even clearly understanding the value of
knowledge and having invested into knowledge management, many companies still
don’t stimulate knowledge use. As a result, employees continue to ignore
corporate knowledge and apply ineffective methods that impede their working
process. Since the reasons for poor knowledge use can be technological and
organizational, companies should take relevant measures to eliminate barriers
at all levels.
Organizations that already put their efforts
into developing knowledge management tools, can start with reviewing their
current functionality and focus on features that would stimulate knowledge use
(pervasive search, rating tools, automated workflows for knowledge updates,
etc.). If corporate knowledge has barriers to its use on the organizational
level, then companies should concentrate on creating a favorable knowledge
environment where employees can freely reach out to both knowledge assets and knowledge
owners.
Source | http://www.talentculture.com/how-to-turn-employees-into-active-users-of-corporate-knowledge/
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Manager @ Library
Khaitan & Co
Good post on corporate knowledge.Thanks for share.
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