The 10-Step of Knowledge Management.
The 10-Step of Knowledge Management.
The 10-Step of Knowledge Management.
This 10-step Knowledge Management road map will guide you through strategizing,
designing, developing, and implementing a KM initiative that delivers business impact.
Learn how to build an effective road map for developing an helpfull knowledge strategy
that is unique to your company.
4 phases.
1. Infrastructural evaluation
2. KM system analysis, design, and development
3. System deployment
4. ROI and performance evaluation
Phase 1: Infrastructural Evaluation
The first phase of the 10-step technique involves two steps. In the first step, you analyze your existing
infrastructure, then identify concrete steps that you can take to leverage and build on your KM platform. In the
second step, you perform a strategic analysis to link KM objectives and business strategy.
The second phase of KM implementation involves analysis, design, and development of the KM
system. The five steps that constitute this phase are:
3. KM team design
Let us briefly examine each of these steps and understand the key tasks that need to be
accomplished at each step.
As the third step toward deploying KM, you must select the infrastructural components that constitute
the KM system architecture. KM systems use a seven-layer architecture, and the technology required
to build each layer is readily available. Integrating these components to create the KM system model
requires thinking in terms of an infostructure, rather than an infrastructure. Your first big choice is the
collaborative platform. We will reason through the choice of the preferred collaborative platform to
decide whether the Web or a proprietary platform is better suited for your company. You will also
identify and understand components of the collaborative intelligence layer: artificial intelligence, data
warehouses, genetic algorithms, neural networks, expert reasoning systems, rule bases, and case-
based reasoning. You will also examine how newer developments, such as peer-to-peer platforms,
hold promise for corporate KM.
A KM project must begin with what your company already knows. In the fourth step, you audit and
analyze knowledge, but first you must understand why a knowledge audit is needed. Then you
assemble an audit team representing various organizational units, as described in Chapter 8. This
team performs a preliminary assessment of knowledge assets within your company to identify those
that are both critical and weak.
In the fifth step on the KM road map, you form the KM team that will design, build, implement, and
deploy your company's KM system. To design an effective KM team, you must identify key
stakeholders both within and outside your company; identify sources of expertise that are needed to
design, build, and deploy the system successfully while balancing the technical and managerial
requirements. We examine the issues of correctly sizing the KM team, managing diverse and often
divergent stakeholder expectations, and using techniques for both identifying critical failure points in
such teams.
The KM team identified in Step 5 builds on a KM blueprint that provides a plan for building and
incrementally improving a KM system. As you work toward designing a KM architecture, you must
understand its seven layers specifically in the context of your company and determine how each of
these can be optimized for performance and scalability, as well as high levels of interoperability. You
will also see how to position and scope the KM system to a feasible level where benefits exceed
costs. Finally, you will see ways to future-proof the KM system so that it does not "run out of gas"
when the next wave of fancy technology hits the market. This step integrates work from all preceding
steps so that it culminates in a strategically oriented KM system design.
Once you have created a blueprint for your KM system (Step 6), the next step is that of actually
putting together a working system. We will tackle the issues of integrating a system across different
layers to build a coherent and stable KM platform.
Phase 3: Deployment
The third phase in the 10-step road map involves the process of deploying the KM system that you
built in the preceding stages. This phase involves two steps:
1. Deployment of the system with a results-driven incremental technique, more commonly known
as the RDI methodology. This step also involves the selection and implementation of a pilot
project to precede the introduction of a full-fledged KM system.
2. Cultural change, revised reward structures, and the choice of using (or not using) a CKO to
make KM produce results. This is perhaps the most important complementary step that is
critical to the acceptance of a KM system in any company.
A large-scale project such as a typical KM system must take into account the actual needs of its
users. Although a cross-functional KM team can help uncover many of these needs, a pilot
deployment is the ultimate reality check. In the eighth step on the KM road map, you must decide how
you can select cumulative releases with the highest payoffs first. You will evaluate the need for a pilot
project; if it is needed, select the right, nontrivial, and representative pilot project. You will also
appreciate scope issues and ways to identify and isolate failure points. Finally, you will evaluate how
to use the RDI methodology to deploy the system, using cumulative results-driven business releases.
The most erroneous assumption that many companies make is that the intrinsic value of an
innovation such as a KM system will lead to its enthusiastic adoption and use. Knowledge sharing
cannot be mandated: Your employees are not like troops, they are like volunteers. Encouraging use
and gaining employee support requires new reward structures that motivate employees to use the
system and contribute to its enthusiastic adoption. Above all, it requires enthusiastic leadership that
sets an example to follow. Chapter 13 guides you through these leadership and incentive
development issues.
The last phase involves one step that most companies have been struggling with: measuring
business value of KM. When pushed for hard data, managers have often resorted to ill-suited and
easily misused approaches, such as cost-benefit analysis, net present value (NPV) evaluation, vague
ROI measures, or, at best, Tobin's q. Chapter 14 describes the traps that companies are most
vulnerable to and suggests ways to avoid them while devising a robust set of company-specific
metrics for KM.
The tenth step—measuring ROI—must account for both financial and competitive impacts of KM on
your business. This step guides you through the process of selecting an appropriate set of metrics
and arriving at a lean but powerful composite. We will use the Nobel Prize- winning real-options
approach for analysis. We will also evaluate many ways in which real-options data can be tracked.
We also see how successful companies have approached metrics, what errors they have made in the
past, and how you can learn from their mistakes.
Being able to measure returns serves two purposes: It arms you with hard data and dollar figures that
you can use to prove the impact of effective KM, and it lets you refine KM design through subsequent
iterations.
Lessons Learned
The 10-step road map is built on years of cumulative research involving small and large companies in
a variety of industries worldwide. It is a road map that—unlike a cookie cutter methodology—will help
you build both a KM strategy and a KM system that is tailored to your company.