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Knowledge-Driven Work - Unexpected Lessons from Japan and United States Work Practices (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,275
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Knowledge-Driven Work - Unexpected Lessons from Japan and United States Work Practices (Hardcover)
Series: Japan Business and Economics Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Knowledge-Driven Work is a pioneering study of the cross-cultural
iffusion of ideas about the organization of work. These ideas,
linked with the knowledge of the workforce, are rapidly becoming
the primary source of competitive advantage in the world economy.
The book provides an in-depth look at eight Japanese-affiliated
manufacturing facilities operating in the United States, combined
with examinations of their sister facilities in Japan. The authors
offer their insights into the complex process by which elements of
work systems in one country interact with those in another. They
trace the flow of ideas from Japan to the US and other nations, and
the beginnings of a reverse diffusion of innovation back to Japan.
The authors organize their findings into six categories: the
cross-cultural diffusion of work practices, team-based work
systems, kaizen and employee involvement, employment security,
human resource management, and labor-management relations. Their
study of team-based work systems yields a taxonomy of teams and
reveals some conflicts between the desire for self-management and
the existence of interdependencies.
Investigations into kaizen (ongoing incremental improvement)
indicate that its emphasis on employee-driven, systematic problem
solving makes it a strong counterpoint to the idea of top-down
"re-engineering." Looking at employment security, the authors note
that while most US managers believe that it restrains managerial
flexibility, managers at the firms they observed see it as
essential to the flexibility associated with teamwork and kaizen.
The study of human resource management practices suggests
competitive advantages in diverse, older, unionized, and urban work
forces, and emphasizes the importance of wide-ranging training
programs in a work system premised on a long-term perspective. The
"wildcard" in the work places observed is labor-management
relations, the area in which Japanese managers have been least
likely to import their ideas. The authors report on several
situations in which existing labor-management structures remained
untouched, with mixed results: greater labor-management
consultation, for example, but also increased ambiguity of roles.
The thread running through all of these areas of work is "virtual
knowledge," an ephemeral form of knowledge derived from a
particular combination of people focused on a given issue. The
authors point out that this powerful form of knowledge is only
effectively harnessed in environments that are free of fear, that
have established procedures for collective problem-solving, and
that have some stability in group composition. They claim that too
often companies allow virtual knowledge to dissipate, squandering
opportunities to create more competitive workplaces. For those
organizations that have succeeded in anticipating and channeling
it, however, virtual knowledge leads to a knowledge-driven
workplace and continuous improvement.
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