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A Brilliant Intersection of Theory and Practice

Posted by TWik | Posted in Northwestern Learning and Organizational Change, Tracey Wik | Posted on 19-05-2002

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This is the first time I have have blogged in awhile as I was out of town attending the Conference Board’s Knowledge Management and Organizational Learning Conference.  In addition, I was in New York on business interestingly enough looking at a e-learning solutions for the capital markets.  I will comment more on this later.

Like most people who are likely to read this blog, I am on too many mailing lists, both paper and electronic.  I try not to read most of what comes my way as if I did, I would have no time for anything else.  However, I do find the quality of the Conference Board’s material to be exceptional and relevant.  I write this because I DO read everything they send me, and it is for this reason I decided to attend this conference.  Many of the noteworthy names in KM were there.  For a complete listing please see the Conference Board’s web site.

A couple of themes emerged speaker after speaker which echo what we are learning in class.  This seemed like a brilliant intersection of the theory and the practice.  Meet people where they are, and embed the KM process in their routine, don’t impose it on top of the routine.

Perhaps more importantly than the meeting the gurus, was the opportunity to discuss with others who are in similar positions to me, the ways in which they have overcome their own organizational hurdles.  After sharing my own experiences with them, I concluded I am actually farther along than I thought.

Warren Sterling, Ph.D., Director, Development Partnerships for Teradata gave an interesting presentation about Technology and KM/OL.  He spoke more from a CRM framework, but he gave some interesting points to consider regardless of application.  For example, he distinguished between structured and unstructured data.  This has a spillover effect on tacit and explicit.  Most of what is interesting to a business is the unstructured data.  That is all of the things a business “knows” about its processes, cutomers, products, etc.  This information is usually not captured.  The way I interpreted this is that unstructured data is actually a subset of tacit information.

Using the words structured and unstructured has helped me with my project for class.  My project is an attempt to capture all of the unstructured data about my company’s e-commerce’s activities.  I would not have used this framing, but in doing so, it has allowed for a systematic approach to capturing the data.  I think this was Warren’s main point.

He went on to discuss several technologies that aid in the capture of this tacit of unstructured data.  For example, he talked about the E-Motions Database Research (University of Southern California).  This attempts to answer the research question,  “What if you could capture the face animation vectors and determine how people reacted to stimuli?”  He referred to it as Facial CRM.  In his presentation he asserted that 50-90% of interaction information is non-verbal.

How do you capture this non-verbal information and then codify it?  The example he gave was at an ATM machine.  What emotion is present as people are conducting a transaction at an ATM machine.  Clearly this is the first step at capturing tacit data in this case emotions.  While part of me finds this fascinating, there is a part of me that is terrorized by the implications.  George Orwell was right.

I would like to apply this technology to the sales process.  If I use this example in my business, it would be useful information to have the emotions of a portfolio manager captured in a database as he or she made transaction decisions.  It would provide the covering sales person a competitive advantage.  The question of course is, who would give consent to be observed in this fashion?  I plan to e mail Warren and ask if any studies of this sort have been done.  I will report back my answer.

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Information Can No Longer Be Horded

Posted by TWik | Posted in Northwestern Learning and Organizational Change | Posted on 29-04-2002

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It occurred to me as I was reading this week’s articles that it would be interesting to frame the conversion of “data” to “knowledge” through the notion of employee engagement or employee loyalty.  One theme that seems to be emerging in class Krishna and Paul in particular, is that of not wanting valuable resources to walk out of the door.  Valuable resources being people and the information that is contained in their heads.  It is interesting to consider that both law firms and financial services firms illustrate Drucker’s notions of the Knowledge Worker.  If practitioners leave Goldman Sachs or Paul’s firm, there isn’t a machine in place to replicate the income created by these professionals.  It seems to me that everyone knows there is a “mercenary” attitude of professionals towards their own clients or revenue stream, but I have yet to see senior management factor this into decision making.

In another class I am conducting an analysis of the behaviors that make Relationship Managers (i.e. Sales People, Business Developers, Managing Consultants) successful at a professional services firm.  It seems to me that most professionals who are responsible for a revenue stream are navigating the changing waters of “Context”.  Those that are able to do this nimbly, tend to be the most successful.

If you take Davenport, Harris, De Long, and Jacobson’s perspective that “Context” is decisive–in their model it is the corners ton–and that there are several variables that comprise “Context” (Strategy, Skills & Experience, Organization & Culture, Technology & Data), then it follows that not all variables are weighted the same in each setting.  Part of what I gathered from this piece is that there is a skill that the manager must employ to assess which is weighted the most heavily and make decisions accordingly.  If the culture of the firm or company is changing, or the market is capricious, then it becomes challenging to determine the “Context”.

Why I raise the issue of loyalty or engagement is that it is easy to see why someone would choose to be loyal to themselves, or loyal to their client if the “Context” was dynamic regardless of the reasons “why”.  Either way it results in people not wanting to share data or information.  This hoarding of data or information does not lead to knowledge creation.

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The Coming User Generated Content Revolution

Posted by TWik | Posted in Northwestern Learning and Organizational Change | Posted on 10-04-2002

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In May’s issue of Wired magazine, Dave Winer CEO of Radioland.com proud provider of Radio, wagered $1,000 that Weblogs will outrank the New York Times Web site by 2007 (based on a Google search of five keywords or phrases reflecting the top five news stories.)  He made this bet with Martin Nisenholtz CEO, New York Times Digital.

This presents an opportunity for us to BLOG!  I will try to create a hyperlink to Wired, but in case I don’t, here is a synopsis.

Each year Wired runs an annual “Betting on the Future” competiton with key industry folks.  What does it mean that Winer was included?

Winer briefly describes the changing economics of the publishing industry, and that the mainstream press determines a narrow scope of what is presented–usually only covering three main stories.  Weblogging came into existence as a response to the abundance of information available on the Web, but not published by the popular press.  Guerilla warfare tactics on Winer’s part?

Nisenholtz’s believes “Readers need a source of information that is unbiased, accurate, and coherent.  News organizations like the Times can provide that far more consistently than private parties can.  Besides, the weblog phenomenon does not represent anything fundamentally new in the news media.”

BLOG me with your thoughts, or if you are interested in wagering your own bet, I take Winer’s view.  We can make a bet that spans the time horizon of this class.  I don’t want to wait until 2007 to collect!

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