Scope & Concerns

Organizational Intangibles and Their Tangible Value

The International Conference on Knowledge, Culture and Change in Organizations, The International Journal of Knowledge, Culture and Change Management, The Organization Book Imprint and the Management News Blog create a forum for discussion and a place for the publication of new knowledge about the nature and future of organizations.

Their focus is those intangible drivers which determine not only the liveability of organizations for insiders, and their credibility and attraction to outsiders; but also their tangible results in the form of efficiency, effectiveness and productivity. The intangibles of knowledge, culture and change management do not appear on balance sheets, but ultimately do have an enormous impact on ‘bottom lines’.

The interests of the Conference, Journal, Book Imprint and News Blog range across organizations in all their forms and manifestations: businesses, from micro-enterprises to multinational corporations; institutions of formal learning, from schools to universities; public sector agencies; and non-government and community sector organizations. Their concern also extends beyond the boundaries of organizations to consider the dynamics of supply chains, organizational alliances, networks, communities of practice and capacity building. The story may be different from situation to situation. However, across all of these contexts, a pragmatic focus persists—to examine the ‘organization’ and ‘management’ of groups of people collaborating to productive ends, and to analyse what makes for success and sustainability.

Knowledge

Ours is the era of the knowledge economy, or so say the commentators. (And it seems a little late to be calling it a ‘new’ economy, particularly when some of the things that only yesterday were supposed to be excitingly ‘new’ have proved disappointing today or become mere commonplaces.)

What might it mean to have a ‘knowledge economy’? Today’s economy is increasingly dependent upon technologies which assist the flow of information, and this we might in one sense call a knowledge economy. The value of an organization is also increasingly located in intangibles such as business systems, intellectual property and the human skills base, and in this sense, knowledge has become a factor of production. And human needs have been transformed to the point where, in the marketplace, consumers focus on knowledge-representations as much as they do on physical entities—design, aesthetics, product concepts, brand associations, service values. If anything, these are the things that make the knowledge economy new.

What, however, is this nebulous thing, knowledge, and how do we manage it? Certainly, it is bigger than out-of-the box IT systems, or content management systems, or groupware—things that are often sold as knowledge management ‘solutions’. To be sure, the new technologies have the capacity to enable and transform. But knowledge is also the stuff of incessant talk, collaborative working relationships, personalised stories and constant learning. It is, in fact, no less than the core of human capital.

With or without technology assistance, knowledge management involves transforming personal knowledge into common knowledge, implicit and individual knowledge into explicit and shared understandings and everyday common sense into systematic designs. It is also the business of codifying these designs as information architectures, paradigms or disciplines.

Not that this leaves the world of tacit understandings and individual subjectivity behind as a poor cousin to knowledge proper. On the contrary, herein lies the raw material of inspiration, imagination and creativity. The shape of things has to be felt before it can be articulated.

It is the project of knowledge management to ensure that collaboration is institutionalised and that knowledge sharing occurs. As a result, wheels are not needlessly reinvented. Lessons are learnt from mistakes and these lessons shared. And the knowledge of the organization or community is not dangerously depleted when a key person departs. Organising knowledge creates more work, to be sure, but the longer term effect of this extra work should be to create less.

Now we’re managing knowledge, but what is this thing we are managing? Knowledge is the process of connecting the stuff of the mind and the stuff of the world. It is not a recorded thing (data, information), or at least, it is not just that. Knowledge is a form of action. Knowing might be by experiencing (deep understandings, intuitions or judgments based on extended immersion in a particular situation), or conceptualisation (knowing the underlying concepts and theories of a particular discipline, system or vocation), or analysis (linking cause with effect, interests with behaviours, purposes with outcomes), or applying (doing something again or anew). These are some of the ways in which knowing is done.

And what does knowing do? For one thing, it creates a different kind of organization. This organization is one in which certain kinds of knowledge rise to higher levels of validity. This is the knowledge that has been collaboratively constructed, is widely informed, is cross-referenced — and these processes give it a collegial or organizational imprimatur. This knowledge becomes authoritative to the extent that the processes of knowledge construction are made transparent. And the unidirectional (top-bottom, expert-novice, organization-customer) transmission of knowledge is replaced by knowledge as dialogue.

Culture

Ours is an era when organizations are driven by culture, or so today’s management gurus tell us. This is in direct contrast to the focus on system and structure in an earlier era when management was considered to be an exact science.

On the micro-scale, teams are driven by shared values—or is it perhaps the complementarity of differences of knowledge and experience? On the corporate scale, organizations try to enlist employees to their visions and ethos—or is it perhaps a matter of creating an inclusive space in which everyone’s motivations and energies are enlisted, even if they don’t fit a single obvious corporate mould? On a market or community scale, organizations try to get close to customers and forge tight supply chain relationships—or is this really a matter of negotiating the differences that are inherent to a world of ever more finely differentiated niche markets and subtly or not-so-subtly divergent organizational cultures? And on the macro, global scale, we may find ourselves operating across one world market—or is it perhaps, a world where, in crossing borders, successful organizations negotiate differences and become many things to many peoples?

Culture is a key organizational driver, but not because it has a simplistically unifying dynamic — of shared values, singular vision and cloning to the ideal of the corporate person. Its dynamic today, more often than not, is one of productive diversity. This is not the diversity of affirmative action or remedies for discrimination. Rather it is the diversity that is at the heart of organizational cultures, including workaday domains such as human resource management, product and service diversification strategy, sales and marketing into a myriad of niches, and customer relationship management which recognises that no two customers are the same.

Change

Ours is an era of massive change, sometimes liberating, other times traumatic. Organizations find themselves buffeted by external forces: technological, market, political and cultural. They are challenged to become ever more efficient, effective, productive and competitive. How can they be active masters of change rather than reactive servants? How can change in organizations be driven by their people rather than the organization in the abstract, or its leaders having to drag them along? Organizations will fail if they are not capable of learning, in a collective sense, as well as ensuring the learning growth of the individuals who spend their days there at work. They will fail if they do not regard themselves as places of continuous personal and corporate reinvention, of individual and institutional transformation. The organization and every person within it needs to envision themselves, not as a change object, but as an agent of change.

The Conference, Journal, Book Imprint and News Blog attempt to address these and other dynamics of knowledge, culture and change as they manifest themselves in organizations. The perspectives range from big picture analyses to detailed case studies which speak to the tangible value of organizational intangibles. They traverse a broad terrain, from theory and analysis to practical strategies for action.