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April 27, 2003
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Knowledge managers define knowledge
as something that gives you the capacity to do something better than
would be possible without it. In business, knowledge is further delineated
by its position on the knowledge
value chain
- 'raw' data, information that has been distilled and had
context added, insights that analyze the information to assess what
it means, and actions that prescribe what to do about it. At the upper
(insights and actions) end of this value chain, there are six main types
of business knowledge:
- Leading Practices & Business Models: Reports on what
some divisions of the company, or some competitors, do uniquely or
exceptionally well, e.g. Wal-Mart's practice of selling 'shelf space' to
suppliers instead of products to customers
- Benchmarks: Exemplary performance levels (usually quantifiable)
that market leaders have achieved, that other companies in the industry can
aspire to, e.g. reducing inventory to a small fraction of annual sales by
the use of just-in-time inventory management techniques
- Stories & Lessons Learned: Histories of what a company
or a division did spectacularly right or wrong, with a clear 'moral'
- Industry Trend Analyses: Surveys of what is happening
in an industry and what is differentiating winners from losers
- F.I.S.T. & Five Forces Analyses: Comprehensive studies
of a company's or division's competitive position, with recommendations for
action
- Thought Leadership: Highly insightful perspectives or
'points of view' about a company's products, processes and technologies,
and recommendations for action
Unlike the other five types, Thought Leadership is generally the result of
an inductive (creative), rather than a deductive (logical,
analytical) process. If you have access to deep knowledge about a company's
inner workings, culture, business processes and key people, you can produce
any of the other five types of knowledge, but Thought Leadership requires
more: an ability to think ahead and laterally, to ask creative and even serendipitous
'what if' questions, and an ability to take knowledge and learning gleaned
in some completely different domain and context and apply it to solve a burning
business problem.
Here's an example: It was recently discovered that butterfly wings have absolutely
no pigment in them, since the aerodynamic requirements of wings cannot tolerate
the weight of pigment. What gives the wings their illusion of colour is the
way the cells of the wings are layered, so that light reflects from them
prismatically. A Thought Leader could take this esoteric discovery and apply
it, practically and economically, to ideas for producing more lightweight,
and hence efficient, airplane wings, say, or ideas for creating un-counterfeitable
currency.
What makes a Thought Leader? Clearly it requires some deep, specialized but
un-myopic subject-matter expertise, some right-brain core competencies, an
extremely broad range of interests and readings, and networks and tools that
filter and feed the firehose-volume of daily news and information into a
manageable stream. I think there are three main Thought Leadership styles,
that are pictured in the chart at right, and which depend on individual temporal
orientation and knowledge processing behaviour:
- Guru: Exceptionally innovative yet practical. Typical
follower 'aha' response: How'd she ever think of that?
- Visionary: Future-oriented, able to 'think people ahead'.
Typical follower 'aha' response: Now I see where we have to go.
- Facilitator: Canvasses and synthesizes others' perspectives
and points of view. Typical follower 'aha' response: This guy knows everything
that's happening and what it all means.
Life isn't easy for thought leaders. They are often seen by management as
intimidating or impractical. They may be culturally out of sync with the
company for whom they work. To do their job right takes a lot of time and
resources that must compete with the day-to-day resource needs and priorities
of the company. They need permission to be wrong, since a lot of new ideas
and predictions that look right on paper don't pass the market test.
Some companies have been much more successful at innovation, at remaining
agile in the face of market changes. Such companies tend to attract thought
leaders, to give them the roles and resources they need to capitalize on
their skills and knowledge and bring them to fruition. They also tend to
have business processes that encourage and enable gurus to come up with breakthrough
ideas and products, visionaries to steer the company into the future profitably
ahead of its competitors, and facilitators to capture, build on and act on
others' leading-edge ideas.
Until very recently, knowledge management has been about capturing employee
knowledge and know-how, and because of the practical difficulties of codifying
and leveraging such knowledge, has fallen on hard times of late. KM may have
a second chance if it can design the enabling architecture for business innovation
and thought leadership. That will require knowledge leaders to refocus their
attention from the bottom line, where KM was expected to have the greatest
impact, to the top line and to the connection with customers, where its greatest
promise always lay.
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3:36:59 PM
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© Copyright 2004
Dave Pollard.
Last update:
19/02/2004; 2:42:57 PM. |
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