Vol. 32, No. 4 (2000) |
by Verna
Allee Knowledge Networks and Communities of
Practice |
Knowledge and learning have become
the new strategic imperative of organizations. Recent surveys by The
Conference Board and the American Management Association show that
at least one-half of U.S. companies, and up to 72% of overseas
firms, have some kind of knowledge management initiative underway.
Other studies put the figure closer to 80% for global corporations.
Chief Knowledge Officers and Chief Learning Officers are popping up
everywhere. These strategic knowledge initiatives are ushering in a
rich array of opportunities for applying OD expertise. This article
will first describe the new logic driving interest in knowledge
management and then focus on how OD practitioners can participate in
that strategic conversation, and support knowledge creation and
sharing through building communities of practice.
WHY KNOWLEDGE?
What is this knowledge management
focus really about? At the heart of the knowledge question lies a
very different logic about how value is created in the new economy.
In the industrial economy if people thought about knowledge at all
they operated from the old equation: knowledge = power, so hoard it.
Today companies are embracing a new equation for success: knowledge
= power, so share and it multiplies. This new logic represents a
radical rethinking of basic business and economic models.
Tom Stewart, editor of Fortune
magazine, sums up the new assumptions that are driving business
thinking when he writes about knowledge having become the most
important factor of economic life: it is the chief ingredient of
what we buy and sell; it is the raw material with which we work. As
executives and business leaders absorb this simple truth they find
they must completely change the way they think about the
organization, business relationships, measures, tools, business
models, values, ethics, culture and leadership. In short–it changes
everything. In order to support this shift of thinking OD
practitioners need to master this new strategic language and
appreciate both the subtle and profound differences of the knowledge
focus. (Knowledge management is a label that no one really
likes, but we seem a bit stuck with it at the moment. I like
knowledge leadership myself.)
A knowledge strategy serves as a
unifying frame for building organizational capability across
multiple arenas. For example, Xerox’s corporate strategy director
Dan Holtshouse, takes a broad approach to knowledge claiming
"managing for knowledge means creating a thriving work and learning
environment that fosters the continuous creation, aggregation, use
and re-use of both organizational and personal knowledge… in the
pursuit of new business value." Xerox embraces no less than ten
knowledge-focused strategic domains:
Sharing knowledge and best
practices
Instilling responsibility for sharing
knowledge
-
Capturing and
reusing past experiences
-
Embedding
knowledge in product, services and processes
-
Producing
knowledge as a product
-
Driving
knowledge generation for innovation
-
Mapping
networks of experts
-
Building and
mining customer knowledge bases
-
Understanding
and measuring the value of knowledge
-
Leveraging
intellectual assets
Such focus areas are typical of
companies that embrace the sharing of knowledge across
organizational boundaries. Corporate know-how is important at
strategic levels to sense the environment and challenge management
assumptions. At the tactical level, day-to-day decision making
requires that people talk candidly, share their experience and
insights, and find meaning together. At the operational level,
replicating best practices throughout the company quickly and
effectively can lead to greater efficiencies, lower costs and higher
quality of goods and services.
IT’S THE PEOPLE…
As an early practitioner and author
addressing organizational intelligence and knowledge, I have helped
many different companies develop knowledge strategies, ranging from
global giant Motorola to small, fast moving start-ups. In the last
six years I have seen the focus of knowledge management quickly move
from an early emphasis on technologies and databases to a keen
appreciation of how deeply corporate knowledge is embedded in
people’s experience. Some companies have invested millions of
dollars in technologies only to find that people don’t use
them.
Contrast these two examples. One
global technology company spent roughly $7 million building a best
practice database for all its technology consultants around the
world that sell very expensive, complex technology systems. When it
became apparent that people weren’t contributing to or accessing the
database, they asked me to help them assess what went wrong. When I
inquired how much of that $7 million was invested in trying to
understand how the target group of people already creates and shares
knowledge, or in bringing them together as a learning community, the
answer was zero! I then coached them in reshaping the project with a
new focus on building a learning community and involving their
internal OD and learning specialists.
As an example of how an OD
perspective can make a difference, here is how another company
undertook a similar effort. AT&T Global services (a $10 billion
segment of AT&T) wanted to support their worldwide,
sophisticated technology consultants with a best practice database.
However, they first established base-line measures of exactly what
they hoped to improve and invested in studying how the group was
already learning and sharing knowledge. Based on what they learned,
they trained everyone in the group for forty hours in what it means
to be a learning community. For the training they partnered with
consultants with experience in learning organization concepts and
practice. They fine tuned rewards and measurements to support
community learning. Only then did they identify what technology
support they might need. The company built a database to capture and
share best practices, populated by the community with the
information and practices they identified as important. The
group achieved outstanding business results – with far less
financial outlay and time than the first company.
Top companies have learned
that technology is the easy part of supporting knowledge creation
and sharing. The really hard part is working with people to improve
collaboration and knowledge sharing. What becomes clear very quickly
to those supporting knowledge initiatives is that as knowledge
complexity increases the degree to which technology can be counted
on to assist with the task is reduced. (See Figure 1.) On the
up side, though, as we learn how to build smarter technologies that
can assist with more complex tasks, we move the complex to the
routine. This in turn frees up people’s intelligence to address more
complex questions.
THE SOCIAL NATURE OF KNOWLEDGE AND
LEARNING
Knowledge and learning are social in
nature. Knowledge travels through language and every conversation is
an experiment in knowledge creation–testing ideas, trying out words
and concepts. Continuing conversation through daily work activities
continually builds both tacit and explicit knowledge. Tacit
knowledge is the wealth of know-how that resides in people’s heads,
deeply rooted in their life experience and learning. Explicit
knowledge is that which gets deliberately shared, documented and
communicated. Many people in the knowledge field insist that there
is no knowledge outside of people. Externalized knowledge, they
claim, is only information.
No database or technology system can
fully capture and distribute all the knowledge that floats around a
company–nor should it. If we respect the way knowledge naturally
happens, then we support the communities in which it grows. As Chief
Knowledge Officers appreciate that networks and practice communities
are the most natural and powerful resources for learning and
knowledge we are rapidly seeing a convergence of knowledge
management efforts with a focus on learning communities. Time and
again, as I speak at conferences or work with companies, I will meet
a new Chief Knowledge Officer or Director of Knowledge Management
bursting with plans for new technologies. A few months later the
same person will present a new business card displaying a title such
as Director of Knowledge Networks or Facilitator of Knowledge
Communities and describe their efforts to change group behaviors
around collaboration and learning.
COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE
Knowledge cannot be separated from
the communities that create it, use it, and transform it. In all
types of knowledge work, even where technology is very helpful,
people require conversation, experimentation, and shared experiences
with other people who do what they do. Especially as people move
beyond routine processes into more complex challenges they rely
heavily on their community of practice as their primary
knowledge resource.
What is a community of practice? John
Seely Brown, VP and Chief Scientist at Parc Xerox describes such
communities as "peers in the execution of real work. What holds them
together is a common sense of purpose and a real need to know what
each other knows." What sets these apart from teams, however, is
that communities are defined by knowledge rather than task.
Further, a community life cycle is determined by the value it
creates for its members, not by project deadlines.
There are important distinctions
between work groups, teams, communities of practice, and knowledge
networks. Etienne Wenger, a global leader in community of practice
development describes three important dimensions of communities of
practice:
Domain. People organize around
domain of knowledge that gives members a sense of joint enterprise
and brings them together. Members identify with the domain of
knowledge and a joint undertaking that emerges from shared
understanding of their situation.
Community. People function as
a community through relationships of mutual engagement that
bind members together into a social entity. They interact regularly
and engage in joint activities that build relationship and
trust.
Practice. It builds capability
in its practice by developing a shared repertoire and resources such
as tools, documents, routines, vocabulary, symbols, artifacts, etc,
that embody the accumulated knowledge of the community. This shared
repertoire serves as a foundation for future learning.
Author |
Verna Allee is an internationally
recognized thought leader in knowledge management and new
business models. Her book, The Knowledge Evolution: Expanding
Organizational Intelligence (Butterworth-Heinemann 1997) is an
international best-seller. As President of Integral
Performance Group, she consults in knowledge management and
strategic issues with global companies of all sizes. She
serves as advisor for special projects in intellectual capital
and the knowledge economy with Stanford University and the
Brookings Institution and guest lectures frequently in
academia. Verna holds degrees from U.C. Berkeley and JFK
University. |
Skills that OD professionals have
developed in respect to teams cannot simply be transferred to
communities of practice. There are important differences that
require different approaches. In work teams and project teams, major
goals and the basic nature of the joint enterprise are generally
predetermined by management. In a real community of practice these
are negotiated among members. Also, where membership in work groups
and project teams is usually assigned or selected by the leader, a
community of practice is completely self-selecting. People
participate because they personally identify with the topic and
enterprise of the community. Internal consultant Melissie Rumizen
has led community of practice development at both the National
Securities Administration and Buckman Laboratories. "I had to
learn," she says, "that these learning communities are more like
volunteer organizations. They simply cannot be managed like a
project or team." A community continually redefines itself and its
enterprise in a more emergent, organic way.
At the other end of the spectrum from
work groups are informal knowledge networks and business networks
where relationships are always shifting and changing as people have
need to connect. The primary purpose of these informal networks is
to collect and pass along information. They are loose and informal
because there is no joint enterprise that holds them together, such
as development of shared tools. They are just a set of
relationships. Networking does not make for a community of practice.
Communities require a sense of mission–there is something people
want to accomplish or do together that arises from their shared
understanding.
With today’s increasingly mobile
workforce people are often more aligned to their professional
identity than to their organizational affiliation. For this reason
companies that actively connect new hires to practice communities,
such as American Management Services, find that retention levels
increase dramatically. In addition, many people also participate in
external communities of practice, both locally and globally serving
as intelligent "synapses" interacting with both the larger social
system and with the company. In today’s work environment many people
working for a company’s success aren’t even "in" the company. They
are customers, suppliers, business partners, contract workers or
consultants who frequently participate in learning communities that
extend both inside and outside organizational boundaries. The social
fabric of business extends to informal knowledge networks, business
networks, economic clusters and technology networks that may be
either local or "global.
All of these arenas offer new
possibilities and opportunities for OD practitioners to expand their
field of practice. In Figure 2 I have indicated where new OD
practices are beginning to emerge in response to the growing need
for facilitation and support of communities of practice and
knowledge networks.
Communities of practice emerge in the
social space between project teams and knowledge networks. When
multiple project teams are engaged in similar tasks the need to
share what they know often will lead to community formation. From
the other direction, a loosely organized knowledge network of people
who share common interests can gel into a focused community when
people recognize new shared opportunities or begin to seek a
significant breakthrough. Those who would support communities need
to learn what conditions foster their emergence and create an
environment in which they can flourish.
Xerox is an old hand at communities,
having supported research at the Institute for Research in Learning
in the 1980’s. Today communities of practice are deeply embedded
into Xerox culture. British Petroleum requires "dual citizenship"
where everyone is both a member of their functional work group and
an active participant in at least one community of practice. This
helps spread learning from projects more widely across the company.
Other companies leveraging communities of practice include Johnson
& Johnson, General Motors, Pillsbury, The World Bank, The
Veterans Administration, Hewlett-Packard, Chevron, Shell Oil, the
large consulting groups, Philip Morris, Daimler-Chrysler, IBM,
Intel, Lucent Technologies, and Motorola.
BENEFITS OF COMMUNITIES OF
PRACTICE
Communities of practice are
beneficial for the business, for the community itself and for
employees. They are powerful vehicles both for sharing knowledge and
achieving business results.
For the Business
-
Help drive
strategy
-
Support faster
problem solving both locally and organization wide
-
Aid in
developing, recruiting and retaining talent
-
Build core
capabilities and knowledge competencies
-
More rapidly
diffuse practices for operational excellence
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Cross fertilize
ideas and increase opportunities for innovation
For the Community
-
Help build
common language, methods and models around specific
competencies
-
Embed knowledge
and expertise in a larger population
-
Aid retention
of knowledge when employees leave the company
-
Increase access
to expertise across the company
-
Provide a means
to share power and influence with the formal parts of the
organization
For the Individual
-
Help people do
their jobs
-
Provide a
stable sense of community with other internal colleagues and with
the company
-
Foster a
learning-focused sense of identity
-
Help develop
individual skills and competencies
-
Help a
knowledge worker stay current
-
Provide
challenges and opportunities to contribute
IMPLICATIONS FOR OD
OD practitioners can support
knowledge initiatives in very important ways. The knowledge focus
has expanded beyond learning organization approaches to embrace new
thinking about the business, new scorecards and indexes,
comprehensive supporting technologies, new frameworks and tools.
Here is a sampling of ways that OD practitioners can help support
knowledge and learning.
• Actively participate in
knowledge strategy development. The knowledge management
conversation is far too critical for OD practitioners to dismiss or
be left out. While not difficult, a knowledge focused strategy
is different, and there are new concepts and terms that OD
practitioners need to master to fully participate. This means
learning the new language of intangibles, surfacing through
attention to Balanced Scorecards, Intellectual Capital Indexes, and
Triple Bottom Line accounting (financial success, social success and
environmental success). Linking knowledge to building intangible
assets poses a genuinely new way of thinking about business that
potentially can reconnect business and economics to the web of life.
We will need new perspectives, methodologies, frameworks and
scorecards to manage in the Knowledge Era. At the strategic level, I
expand ROI analysis to include a complementary framework for
understanding intangibles. I also have developed a Value Network
Analysis methodology that illuminates how knowledge creates both
tangible and intangible value and deepens business relationships. It
is critical to link specific domains of knowledge and their
communities to business success and strategic goals.
• Making networks and communities
visible. Knowledge networks and communities of practice already
exist in most organizations. The first challenge is not to create
them–but to simply find them and make them visible to themselves and
to the rest of the organization. We need to first understand how
knowledge sharing is already taking place before we begin
strategizing ways to improve it. Some companies create directories
or yellow pages, but these alone are insufficient. Other companies
leverage special interest groups or expert networks into more
formal, business-focused communities.
Networks and communities are
always changing (Figure 3) and our analysis tools need to
reflect the movement of people through different projects,
communities and networks. OD practitioners need to continue to
expand from a focus on teams to patterns of teaming and
community formation as people come together, work on projects,
participate in communities, connect with networks, then disband and
move into webs of relationships. In my own practice I apply social
network analysis methodologies to surface patterns of interaction
and help guide development of communities.
• Community
formation. Working with communities and
knowledge networks is different from working with project teams or
intact working groups. Communities have looser bonds and are focused
less on a particular task than they are on overall development of
their field of expertise. Facilitating community development,
however, is a natural role for people with a solid background in OD.
Etienne Wenger’s groundbreaking book Communities of Practice
lays out a solid theoretical foundation for understanding the
dynamics of practice communities. We can anticipate that there will
be a growing body of thought and practice in this area and it offers
great opportunity for practitioners to shape offerings and services.
(See "Role of OD Practitioners..." below)
Five Stages of
Development |
Role of OD Practitioners in Formation of Communities
of Practice
Etienne Wenger has worked with colleagues Richard
McDermott and Bill Snyder to define five stages of development
in communities of practice. Although the following is not by
any means a complete list of activities, adapting it to the OD
perspective reveals many opportunities for those with
expertise in group development.
Stage 1: POTENTIAL. At this stage there is a
loose network of people with similar issues and needs. People
need to find each other, discover common ground and prepare
for a community.
Opportunities
for OD support
-
Staging an awareness campaign and identifying
benefits of practice communities
-
Diagnosing organizational issues around
communities
-
Leading creation of a corporate community development
strategy
-
Identifying what communities to build
-
Helping people find common ground through interviews
and group dialogue
-
Identifying what knowledge a community wants / needs
to share
-
Coaching community champions
Stage 2: COALESCING. At this stage people
come together and launch a community. People find value in
engaging in learning activities and design a
community.
Opportunities
for OD support
-
Facilitating dialogue around identity and joint
enterprise
-
Designing, facilitating and documenting informal
meetings
-
Mapping knowledge flows and knowledge
relationships
-
Designing and creating a community support
structure
-
Coaching community coordinators, communicators and
support staff
-
Working with designers of work spaces to improve
knowledge sharing
-
Building organizational support
Stage 3: MATURING. The community takes
charge of its practice and grows. Members set standards,
define a learning agenda, and deal with growth. By now they
are engaging in joint activities, creating artifacts, and
developing commitment and relationships.
Opportunities
for OD support
-
Guiding a community through growth
-
Co-developing support strategies for the group
learning agenda
-
Creating frameworks, guidelines, measures and
temperature checks for development
-
Designing knowledge capture and documentation
systems
-
Designing, convening and facilitating
conferences
-
Working with the community on issues around
relationships
-
Building a Coordinator community and sharing best
practices on community building
Stage 4: ACTIVE. The community is
established and goes through cycles of activities. They need
ways to sustain energy, renew interest, educate novices, find
a voice and gain influence.
Opportunities
for OD support
-
Working with the community on issues around
commitment and sustaining energy
-
Addressing organizational issues that may be helping
or hindering activity
-
Linking community learning to individual career
development goals
-
Helping negotiate the role of the community in
organizational decision-making
-
Forge linkages with other groups and communities for
mutual learning
Stage 5: DISPERSING. The community has
outlived its usefulness and people move on. The challenges are
about letting go, defining a legacy and keeping in
touch.
Opportunities
for OD support
-
Helping people let go
-
Facilitating story telling
-
Preserving artifacts, memorabilia and maintaining
history
-
Convening reunions
-
Maintaining maps and directories
|
• Supporting new
roles. Organizational design issues also emerge around the new
roles that people play within a community. Even without going as far
as BP’s "dual citizenship" approach, people need to redefine their
personal and collective roles and responsibilities so communities
are not just "one more thing to do," but are how people do their
work. This means reward systems, recognition, job definitions and
relationships will change across the entire organization. Even
though practice communities are more informal than work groups or
business units, they still are purposeful groups of people. There
are new roles to be defined for community champions, members,
experts, mentors, organizers, coordinators, communicators,
facilitators, documents and support staff. (Figure
4)
Holtshouse suggests that one
important area of opportunity for OD professionals is helping
communities find ways to share power and influence with the formal
parts of the organization. "Having forums, platforms, etc, for the
voice of the community to be heard as a part of the business
processes is something we in business need to do much better." So
not only do individual roles need to be revamped, but the role of
the community itself also needs to be negotiated. The roles they can
and do play range from informal, even hidden to those that are more
formally supported. There is an art to this though, going too far
can institutionalize them to the degree people actually stop
learning.
• Building capacity for meaningful
conversation. With renewed interest in community there is a
great opportunity to build capacity and skill in holding meaningful
conversations. Juanita Brown and David Isaacs have focused on
community building with several global companies, including
Hewlett-Packard. They insist that conversation is a core
business process, because it is through conversation that decisions
get made and real work gets done.
• Building supporting
infrastructure. The knowledge evolution is clearly enabled by
new communication and information management technologies. Xerox for
example, employs intranet resources, collaborative on-line
technologies, and shared databases to support its communities and
project teams.
Yet it is still rare for companies to
train and coach people in how to have more meaningful dialogue or
seriously address the challenges of collaborative decision making.
Most team and work group efforts focus on cooperation, not
collaboration. We teach people how to cooperate so we can
each get our work done, which is still basically an individual
performance focus. It is far more challenging to learn real
collaboration where we create new knowledge–together. OD
practitioners can bring their experience with dialogue and group
dynamics into supporting more complex knowledge work
• Cultures of Learning and
Sharing. The knowledge era is ushering in new appreciation for
the importance of culture in attracting and retaining valuable
knowledge workers. Culture change is no longer a "nice to do"
investment. Levering and Moskowitz’s list of 100 best companies to
work for show those companies consistently enjoy higher valuation
and profitability. The case has been made that attending to a
supportive culture makes good business sense. Companies that ignore
cultural issues find many of their knowledge initiatives quickly
stall out. Successful knowledge leaders work with internal or
external OD professionals as strategic partners to create the right
conditions for knowledge creation and sharing. Culture change is, of
course, a much broader issue than can be addressed in a paragraph or
two. However, classic culture and change management approaches serve
very well for supporting behavorial change around knowledge
sharing.
• Champion new ethics and
values. Perhaps most important is an opportunity for OD
practitioners to champion the new ethics and values that are at the
heart of a knowledge-based enterprise. Knowledge cannot grow where
there is no trust. At the core of this new understanding about
knowledge and innovation as the key to success lies a very simple
ethic that I call the principle of fair exchange. Do people
feel they are being treated fairly for the intelligence, creativity,
innovation, experience and passion they bring to their work? A fair
exchange for knowledge may look somewhat different from culture to
culture. Just as communities negotiate their roles and purpose,
companies need to negotiate exchanges of knowledge that take place
with everyone, both within the company and with the extended
enterprise. Further, in this world of instant information, companies
are being forced to act from the highest possible levels of
integrity with openness, honesty and deep respect. Business tactics
that were acceptable in the past destroy trust and erode the social
fabric that companies need for success in a knowledge-based economy.
OD professionals have an exciting opportunity to champion
understanding of the new business fundamentals and the ethical
underpinnings for success.
CONCLUSION
Knowledge and learning are now at the
heart of strategic thinking about success in the new economy. Sir
John Browne, Chief Executive of BP says that "in order to generate
extraordinary value for shareholders, a company has to learn better
than its competitors and apply that knowledge throughout its
businesses faster and more widely than they do." BP, like many other
companies, is supporting learning and knowledge by focusing on
communities of practice.
OD practitioners are much needed to
support these learning communities and to work with executives to
create the culture and conditions for knowledge sharing. However, OD
practice must evolve to embrace this new strategic thinking and
language of knowledge and intangibles. Practitioners can partner
with knowledge management champions and IT groups to develop the
needed infrastructure, methodologies and practices assuring success
in the knowledge era. We might even need new communities of practice
of our own to meet the challenge!
INTERNET LEARNING SITE:
A comprehensive books and resources
guide is at http://www.vernaallee.com
or e-mail the author for a copy at verna@vernaallee.com.
REFERENCES
Survey for the
Foundation for the Malcolm Baldrige Quality Award, July
1998.
Stewart, T.
Intellectual Capital: The New Wealth of Organizations,
Doubleday, 1997
Holtshouse, D.
"Building a Corporate Capability for Knowledge," KM World
Summit, January 1999.
Barth, S.,
"Knowledge as a Function of X," Knowledge Management
Magazine, February 2000.
Allee, V.
The Knowledge Evolution: Expanding Organizational
Intelligence, Butterworth-Heinemann, 1997.
Sveiby’s,
Karl-Erik, The New Organizational Wealth, Berrett-Koehler,
1997.
Wenger,
Etienne, Communities of Practice, Cambridge University Press,
1998.
Brown, J. and
Isaacs, D., "Asking Big Questions," The Dance of Change,
ed., Senge, P., Kleiner, A., Roberts, C., Ross, R., Roth, G., and
Smith, B., Doubleday, 1999.
Levering, R
and Moskowitz, M., "The 100 Best Companies to Work For,"
Fortune, January 10, 2000.
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