Organizational Behavior Knowledge Management Tomáš Ondráček ondracek.t@mail.muni.cz Faculty of Economics and Administration, Masaryk University 2024 overview I KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES TOOLS GOOD PRACTICIES ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING QUESTIONS ·ORBE ·2024 2 / 70 introduction introduction (Anonymous, 2019) ·ORBE ·2024 3 / 70 introduction questions questions ·ORBE ·2024 4 / 70 introduction questions What can be known? ·ORBE ·2024 5 / 70 introduction questions When do we know, that we have known something? ·ORBE ·2024 6 / 70 introduction cognitive success cognitive success ·ORBE ·2024 7 / 70 introduction cognitive success problems What kinds of things are knowable? Can knowledge be known (by cognition)? Are there different kinds of cognitive achievement? (e.g., by other justifications or in the distinction between cognitive – individual, collective – etc.) ... ·ORBE ·2024 8 / 70 introduction cognitive success defining success What is cognitive success? contractualism consequentialism constitutivism ·ORBE ·2024 9 / 70 introduction cognitive success contractualism (Craig, 1990) A certain cognitive state is a cognitive achievement, because it serves some practical interest. testimonials activity ... ·ORBE ·2024 10 / 70 introduction cognitive success consequentialism (BonJour, 1985; Brogaard, 2009) A certain cognitive state is a cognitive achievement, because it supports certain core beliefs. understanding the world the good life ... ·ORBE ·2024 11 / 70 introduction cognitive success constitutivism (Korsgaard, 2009) A certain cognitive state is a cognitive achievement, if it is the constitutive goal of an endeavour. understanding (reasoning) practical wisdom (everyday life) ... ·ORBE ·2024 12 / 70 introduction knowledge knowledge ·ORBE ·2024 13 / 70 introduction knowledge different knowledge? (Boër & Lycan, 1975; Ryle, 2009) knowing who knowing which knowing why knowing where knowing when knowing how ·ORBE ·2024 14 / 70 introduction knowledge traditional notion of knowledge of facts Knowledge is (sufficiently) justified true belief. ·ORBE ·2024 15 / 70 introduction knowledge Gettier’s problems (Gettier, 1963) problems of modes of justification the relationship between reasons and inference problems of truthfulness Can only the truth be known? epistemic luck testing students ·ORBE ·2024 16 / 70 introduction justification justification ·ORBE ·2024 17 / 70 introduction justification question How can one justify our beliefs? ·ORBE ·2024 18 / 70 introduction justification possibilities positive negative ·ORBE ·2024 19 / 70 introduction justification positive (Alston, 1988) A given belief is justified, if there are good reasons, to hold it. ·ORBE ·2024 20 / 70 introduction justification negative deontological justification (Feldman, 1988; Plantinga et al., 1993; ?) A given belief is justified, unless there are reasons, not to be. ·ORBE ·2024 21 / 70 introduction the structure of justification the structure of justification ·ORBE ·2024 22 / 70 introduction the structure of justification fundacionalism ·ORBE ·2024 23 / 70 introduction the structure of justification fundacionalism: possible assumptions (BonJour & Sosa, 2003) basis/bases A justified belief p is a basic or base belief if and only if the belief p is not justified by another belief. justified belief Every justified belief p is a basic or base belief or is justified by another belief q. ·ORBE ·2024 24 / 70 introduction the structure of justification coherentism ·ORBE ·2024 25 / 70 introduction the structure of justification coherentism: possible assumptions (Davidson & LePore, 1986) coherence Every justified belief p is justified by others beliefs in its epistemic environment. ·ORBE ·2024 26 / 70 introduction the structure of justification infinitism ·ORBE ·2024 27 / 70 introduction the structure of justification infinitism: possible assumptions (Aikin, 2008) infinite chain Every justified belief p is justified by others preceding beliefs. actuality vs. possibility ·ORBE ·2024 28 / 70 introduction the structure of justification specification of justification structures (Aikin, 2008) COST strong/weak PURITY pure/mixed AVAILABILITY diachronous/synchronous ORIGIN transmissive/emergent ·ORBE ·2024 29 / 70 introduction ways of knowing ways of knowing ·ORBE ·2024 30 / 70 introduction ways of knowing apriori ·ORBE ·2024 31 / 70 introduction ways of knowing aposteriori ·ORBE ·2024 32 / 70 introduction ways of knowing analytic ·ORBE ·2024 33 / 70 introduction ways of knowing synthetic ·ORBE ·2024 34 / 70 introduction ways of knowing direct realism ·ORBE ·2024 35 / 70 introduction ways of knowing indirect realism ·ORBE ·2024 36 / 70 introduction ways of knowing basic approaches empiricism rationalism constructivism ·ORBE ·2024 37 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT ·ORBE ·2024 38 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT organizational knowledge “To sum up, knowledge is the individual capability to draw distinctions, within a domain of action, based on an appreciation of context or theory, or both. Organizations are three things at once: concrete settings within which individual action takes place; sets of abstract rules in the form of propositional statements; and historical communities. Organizational knowledge is the capability members of an organization have developed to draw distinctions in the process of carrying out their work, in particular concrete contexts, by enacting sets of generalizations (propositional statements) whose application depends on historically evolved collective understandings and experiences. The more propositional statements and collective understandings become instrumentalized (in Polanyi’s sense of the term), and the more new experiences are reflectively processed (both individually and collectively) and then gradually driven into subsidiary awareness, the more organizational members dwell in all of them, and the more able they become to concentrate on new experiences, on the operational plane.” (Tsoukas & Vladimirou, 2001) ·ORBE ·2024 39 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT types of organizational knowledge tacit implicit explicit ·ORBE ·2024 40 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT tacit knowledge Tacit knowledge is personal, experience-based knowledge that is difficult to formalize or communicate. It is deeply embedded in individuals’ experiences, insights, and skills, and is often communicated through shared experiences or actions. Example: A senior sales manager’s ability to build strong relationships with clients based on years of experience. (Nonaka & Takeuchi, 1995; Polanyi, 1966) ·ORBE ·2024 41 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT implicit knowledge Implicit knowledge is knowledge that has not yet been formalized but can be codified or articulated. This type of knowledge exists in an undocumented state and can be transferred through training or practice. Example: A product manager’s instinctive knowledge about which features to prioritize based on market trends and experience. (Leonard & Sensiper, 1998; Nonaka & Takeuchi, 1995) ·ORBE ·2024 42 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT explicit knowledge Explicit knowledge is formalized, documented knowledge that can be easily communicated and shared through manuals, documents, or databases. This type of knowledge is systematic and can be readily transferred between individuals in an organization. Example: An operations manual or employee handbook that details organizational policies. (Nonaka, 1994; Nonaka & Takeuchi, 1995) ·ORBE ·2024 43 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT introduction/question How would you describe a knowledge management structure in a company? ·ORBE ·2024 44 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT model (Botha, Kourie, & Snyman, 2014) ·ORBE ·2024 45 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT model (Oliva & Kotabe, 2019) ·ORBE ·2024 46 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT model (Yang, Zheng, & Viere, 2009) ·ORBE ·2024 47 / 70 KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT basic model ·ORBE ·2024 48 / 70 STRATEGIES STRATEGIES ·ORBE ·2024 49 / 70 STRATEGIES What strategies do we have for KM? ·ORBE ·2024 50 / 70 STRATEGIES KM: strategies people tech ·ORBE ·2024 51 / 70 STRATEGIES KM: roles collector custodian consumer ·ORBE ·2024 52 / 70 STRATEGIES KM: knowledge objectification knowledge objectification Knowledge objectification is the embedding of acquired knowledge into documents, artifacts, procedures, etc., so that they are independent of their holder. ·ORBE ·2024 53 / 70 STRATEGIES data quality (Strong, Lee, & Wang, 1997) ·ORBE ·2024 54 / 70 STRATEGIES data availability (Strong et al., 1997) ·ORBE ·2024 55 / 70 STRATEGIES model (Earl, 2001) ·ORBE ·2024 56 / 70 TOOLS TOOLS ·ORBE ·2024 57 / 70 TOOLS KM: tools 1/2 KMS (knowledge management system) CMS (content management system) DMS (document management system) data storage ·ORBE ·2024 58 / 70 TOOLS KM: tools 2/2 tools for creating tools for collaboration social networks meeting chatting expressing knowledge visualization ... tools for conserving and maintaining knowledge base content repository codification knowledge visualization tools for recalling decision support knowledge visualization ·ORBE ·2024 59 / 70 GOOD PRACTICIES GOOD PRACTICIES ·ORBE ·2024 60 / 70 GOOD PRACTICIES KM: good practices knowledge feedback explicit non-explicit measuring acces use ... reviewing internal external ·ORBE ·2024 61 / 70 ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING ·ORBE ·2024 62 / 70 ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING organizational larning (Roux & Murray, 2008) ·ORBE ·2024 63 / 70 QUESTIONS QUESTIONS ·ORBE ·2024 64 / 70 QUESTIONS Where can you apply KM? ·ORBE ·2024 65 / 70 QUESTIONS Where can you apply KM particularly? ·ORBE ·2024 66 / 70 QUESTIONS Do you know any examples of good practices of KM? ·ORBE ·2024 67 / 70 QUESTIONS Do you know any examples of bad practices of KM? ·ORBE ·2024 68 / 70 Sources I Aikin, S. 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