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Applied Knowledge & Innovation

Services : Knowledge Structure Mapping

One of our chief services is Knowledge Structure Mapping and Analysis.This simple but effective applied methodology can enable your business to support decision making by giving managers direct access to the business knowledge resource. The following gives some background insight into its foundations.

Knowledge Management

What is it?

Document Management

What's it for?

Knowledge is now recognised by most businesses as a very important and valuable resource.

Previously knowledge was not managed explicitly and as a consequence of this, some serious mistakes have been made, sometimes putting a company's future at risk.

Knowledge management is intended to allow organisations to protect and develop their knowledge resource.

Structural Knowledge Mapping?

Knowledge Study Tool

Methodology

The Deliverables

KSM leads to several physical outputs that can be used directly by managers to help them protect and develop the organisational knowledge resource. The results can also be used by managers in a wide range of knowledge related business areas.

Specifically, KSM delivers:

A Map of Knowledge Structure

A large map of the structure of knowledge in a particular area of the business provides a common frame of reference for discussion. It also provides structural information about the knowledge that relates directly to the way the knowledge can be developed and utilised. The map can also be colour coded to aid management decision making.

Knowledge Map

Analytical Information about the Knowledge Resource

Knowledge contained on the map also supports several descriptive analytical parameters that can be used to support value judgements when decision making is required.

A Detailed Report

The report presents a set of results derived directly from the map and from statistical evaluation of the parameters attached to each knowledge node. It presents an analysis of these results that combines elements from the separate result statistics and from the records of interviews carried out. The report also presents a set of recommendations that have been derived from the analysis and can form the basis of a management action plan concerning the knowledge resource.

A Computer Based Knowledge Tool

The computer based tool allows the map to be viewed on a computer screen and edited or updated as the knowledge management project develops.

How is the work done?

The work is carried out in accordance with a methodology that has been developed with the help of many organisations over a diverse range of projects. The methodology can be very briefly outlined:

  1. Initial scoping meeting with a knowledge leader.
  2. Presentation to the whole knowledge team.
  3. A group interview.
  4. A set of individual interviews.
  5. Validation.
  6. Creation of map and results.
  7. Analysis of results and map.
  8. Written recommendations.
  9. Deliver the results.
  10. Management action plan.

What Resources are Required?

KSM Resources Required

A typical project will be completed in about three weeks. The major time requirement is from a person who is designated the knowledge leader and has a general working knowledge of the whole area to be studied. All staff who will be involved will be required for one day and then subsequently for one two hour interview. Results are generally presented to all staff and this presentation lasts about 1.5 hours (+ any discussion)

A Typical Knowledge Map

Arithmetic Knowledge

The map of Arithmetic Knowledge derived using the KSM methodology.

Application

Scope

Global SkeletonKSM can be applied on a range of different levels. Organisations may wish to study their knowledge resource at global yet very general level or they may want to study a specific and well defined area of the knowledge resource in greater detail. An organisation may also wish to design a programme of individual projects to investigate the knowledge resource in a fairly complex way.

Two of the benefits of multiple projects are:

  1. Subsequent project activity can be carefully directed in the light of results from earlier work.
  2. Analysis of linkages and overlap between knowledge areas and specific projects may prove valuable.

Levels

In practice, knowledge can be studied at a variety of different levels of granularity. Typically however, organisations use the work to look at knowledge at one of three levels:

Strategic

The method has been applied at several different levels of granularity. A company may require a more strategic look at an area of the business or even the whole business. Clearly, the depth of study in these cases will be relatively shallow and will involve high level knowledge items. Analysis of the strategic study may lead to other studies of a strategic nature or more focused studies of particular knowledge areas identified in a previous study. Examples include: The whole company: A business within the company: A discipline:

Specific

Alternatively, an organisation may wish to look directly at a specific knowledge area in a more detailed way. This will reveal knowledge structure at a more fundamental level. Even this is likely to leave many fundamental areas unexplored. Typically these areas will be related to general and occupational knowledge prerequisites. Examples include: A particular business activity: A specific job: An interesting area such as 'Negotiation':

Fundamental:

It is of course, also possible to study the most fundamental areas of knowledge. Examples of this could include: 'Arithmetic', 'Writing', Logic etc.

Analysis

The aim of KSM is to provide managers with information and guidance so that decision making involving the organisational knowledge resource can be more objective.

KSM Provides:

  1. A clear and intuitive map of a knowledge resource organised around the natural process of learning dependency (acquiring knowledge).
  2. Derived information about each of the knowledge nodes on the map. This information is:
    1. (a) Importance : How important is the knowledge to the process
    2. (b) Difficulty :How difficult would it be to replace the knowledge
    3. (c) Study-Exp : How is the knowledge normally acquired (experience)
    4. (d) Known By : How many people in the study area possess this knowledge fully?
  3. Information concerning the connectivity of the map. Which knowledge areas rely on most of the knowledge resource?
  4. Analysis of the answers to questions about the knowledge resource. For example, how much of the knowledge resource is learned through experience?
  5. Comment from interviews

Outputs

Analysis Provides:

  1. An examination of the linkages between knowledge node parameters.
  2. An examination of linkages between parameters and comment
  3. An examination across the areas of map connectivity, node parameters and staff comment.
  4. Linkages between business needs and the knowledge resource

Recommendations

Recommendations are derived from the results, the analysis and the stated business needs.

Recommendations are derived from the KSM process but further recommendations would usually be derived by the in house management team following a presentation of the results.

The KSM methodology leads to the derivation of an action plan involving the knowledge resource. This plan may draw from the results and recommendations of the process but will be produced by the in house management team. This is intended to combine information from the study of the knowledge resource by dedicated professionals with the best of management practice and in depth business knowledge provided by the in house management team.

Action Plan

A typical action plan could include:

Example

The Knowledge Area of Negotiation

The following knowledge dependency map has been created by considering the knowledge associated with negotiation. Negotiation is an important element in many job functions.

The map shows that one of the things that needs to be known before it is possible to fully know 'negotiation' is the area of 'conducting a negotiation'.

Knowledge Map of Negotiation

From the parameters assigned, this shows up as being the highest risk piece of knowledge on the map, see the table below. Being able to start a negotiation and constructing a response rely on the prior acquisition of the ability to describe things. In order to know how to describe things it is necessary to already know how to compose a concise statement. The table below identifies this piece of knowledge as the second highest risk in the area of negotiation.

Node Name Importance Difficulty Study - Experience Known - By
Conduct a negotiation 9 9 9 2
Compose concise statements 8 9 8 2
Identify agents fundamental position 6 9 7 2
Compare bargaining elements 8 8 5 2
Describe things 8 7 7 3
Value component parts 8 8 6 3

Knowledge nodes with parameters in order of highest risk (top 6)

John L. Gordon 2002

Commercial Enquiries

All commercial enquiries relating to Structural Knowledge Mapping and Auditing are now dealt with by Mimica.Logo : Mimica

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