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A compendium of articles that focus on how communities can be
viewed from an organizational context, and how organizations are
using communities to leverage external stakeholders, such as
customers and suppliers. "Communities" are any cross-organizational
subset of people that share a common knowledge, and these
communities are the vehicle for social capital Within all
communities are informal clusters of individuals who work together
- sharing knowledge, solving common problems and exchanging
insights and frustrations. When appropriately supported by the
formal organization, these "communities" play a critical role: they
are the major building blocks in creating, sharing and applying
organizational knowledge Organizations ranging from British
Petroleum to the World Bank have begun to invest time, energy and
money in supporting their own communities, viewing these groups as
essential vehicles for managing their organizational knowledge as a
necessity to maintain competitive advantage. This book looks at how
they achieve success using this approach.
Social capital - the informal networks, trust and common
understanding among individuals in an organization - determines
major competitive advantages in today's networked economy.
Knowledge and Social Capital explains how social capital can drive
collaboration, reconcile an organization's internal and external
labor markets, and improve organizational effectiveness. This
edited compilation of authoritative articles helps readers
understand how they can build and capitalize on their own
organizations' social capital. Knowledge and Social Capital teaches
core principles and important strategies to a range of executives,
including organizational development specialists, corporate
strategists, and knowledge management professionals. Readers will
learn how an organization can:
Knowledge and Communities is the first book dedicated to a major
new knowledge management topic. "Communities of Practice" are
cross-organizational groups of people sharing knowledge, solving
common problems, and exchanging insights and frustrations.
Knowledge and Communities, a collection of authoritative articles,
describes the dynamics of these groups and explains how they enable
organizational knowledge to be creating, shared, and applied. The
book teaches how organizations can empower both traditional and
on-line communities and make them a cornerstone of a general
knowledge management strategy. Readers will learn how communities
can help unify an organization and its external stakeholders, such
as customers and suppliers, and how they can critically support an
e-commerce strategy. Knowledge and Communities will help readers
understand a primary vehicle for building an organization's social
capital and competitive advantage.
Social capital - the informal networks, trust and common
understanding among individuals in an organization - determines
major competitive advantages in today's networked economy.
Knowledge and Social Capital explains how social capital can drive
collaboration, reconcile an organization's internal and external
labor markets, and improve organizational effectiveness. This
edited compilation of authoritative articles helps readers
understand how they can build and capitalize on their own
organizations' social capital. Knowledge and Social Capital teaches
core principles and important strategies to a range of executives,
including organizational development specialists, corporate
strategists, and knowledge management professionals. Readers will
learn how an organization can:
The mid-1990s saw the rise of an important movement: a recognition that organizational knowledge, in its various forms and attributes, could be an important source of competitive advantage in the marketplace. Knowledge management has become one of the core competencies in today's competitive environment, where so much value in companies resides in their people, systems, and processes. Creating Value with Knowledge: Insights from the IBM Institute for Knowledge-based Organization examines a variety of important knowledge-related topics, some of which has been previously published in such journals as the Harvard Business Review, the California Management Review, and the Sloan Management Review, such as the use of informal networks, communities of practice, the impact of knowledge on successful alliances, social capital and trust, narrative and storytelling and the use of human intermediaries in the knowledge management process. It includes contributions from such leading thinkers as Lawrence Prusak, Dorothy Leonard, Eric Lesser, Rob Cross, and David Snowden. This book synthesizes some of the best thinking by the IBM Institute for Knowledge-Based Organizations, a think tank whose research agenda focuses on the management methods for deriving tangible business value from knowledge management and their real-world application.
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Paperback
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Discovery Miles 100
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