Business Frameworks

Logical Business Systems Inc.  

       
          
   
 

Knowledge and Knowledge Management1

 

  

Detailed Topics

 

Concepts

 

Frameworks

 

Bodies of Knowledge

 

Industry  based Perspectives

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Knowledge is really just information that is appropriate to a needed decision, process or context. It's not the provider that gives knowledge; it's the needy recipient that makes it out of the information that is available. "Knowledge" may simply be an awareness of facts - not the provider's awareness, but the recipient's.

 

 

Knowledge exists in an environment, not in a container.  In other words, knowledge is not a material - it's an effect. Knowledge users’ roam all over the business process environment doing spontaneous and therefore frequently unpredictable things. All too often IT tends to forget this key element in a business process – the user who is trying to find an effective way of understanding, managing and supporting human-driven processes. The fact is that the majority of business processes (some 85% according to the analyst company Forrester) have a requirement for knowledge and this involves this critical resource – people.  This is not human interaction that simply performs handling and form filling – this is decision making requiring appropriate knowledge.   Knowledge and Knowledge Management therefore requires careful attention and appropriate methods for its handling.

 

If knowledge is systematically managed, there will be clarity about what kind of value is being generated at the different points in the process of making, saving and delivering it, and users should be guided through it appropriately in real-time as they work.  The availability of the right knowledge in the right circumstance is a different problem from the delivery of at-large knowledge supplies.  Determining the "rightness" of the knowledge and of the circumstance is not about inherently "correct" content. Instead, it involves the use of frameworks that connect expertise to outcomes, not just requestors to information. The biggest practical challenge is to shape analysis and judgment during a task, by exposing enough knowledge to present, guide and validate choices.

 

If the users are to get what they need, the main perspective for managing knowledge has to do with context-sensitivity. To obtain repeatable, optimal, reliable context-sensitivity, the mechanics of managing knowledge have to take care of combining a knowledge "supply chain" capability with knowledge "value chain" capability.

 

There are various repositories that we think of as system sources in the “supply chain” - data, information and knowledge. It is important to handle the transformation of data first into information and then into knowledge. However, most users don't distinguish them from each other; they count on analysis to force transformations (i.e. "interpretations") from whatever repository they start with.

 

If we are really to manage knowledge then we need to understand the different roles of the repositories.  For example, what does a database contribute to knowledge transfer? Mainly a focus on (i.e. selection of facts according to) a defined subject. An information base emphasizes the ability to associate the data with the circumstantial need. A knowledge base on the other hand emphasizes the perspective of the user who is actually in that circumstance.

 

Knowledge Management's significance is that it establishes an environment in which individual workers can more readily achieve their performance objectives.  Knowledge Management entails what might be thought of as the embedding of a consultative capability (an environment) within the workflow of operations.

This pre-supposes that we have a defined area – a framework that defines an area of workflow operations.

In our terminology a framework is derived from the concept of a domain.  Again in our terminology a domain is defined as a grouping that encompasses a logical set of business processes.   This grouping or model may have natural boundaries.  As an example, in the case of project management there are standards and definitions from the Project Management Institute which consists of knowledge frameworks, project process groups and processes that are perpetuated throughout their project standards.  Their definitions provide natural boundaries for inclusion or exclusion to their domain.  In other cases a grouping might be defined with the aid of normative models based on the deliverables of a business or a more restricted model based simply on value propositions and their attendant inputs and outputs.  Whatever the grouping it contains business processes each of which typically require some human intervention and hence a requirement for associated knowledge with which to achieve their objectives.  A Framework is where the value system for knowledge management construction is defined.

People take action based on a variety of uniquely human responses to situations – those basic human characteristics of human thinking when dealing with Business Process – context, dynamics, subjectivity and natural language.  The representation of these four core components of human knowledge in the process of knowledge modelling is fundamental to that which must be addressed by tools and methods associated with Knowledge Management:

·       Context - an event, process, paradigm, change or other reality includes the circumstances and conditions which surround it.

·        Dynamics - the social, intellectual, moral or space/time forces that produce activity and change within a given sphere

·        Subjectivity - the property of perceptions, arguments, and language as being based in a subject point of view, and hence influenced in accordance with a particular bias.

·        Natural languages - are deemed to have a vast vocabulary.  Any natural language is by its very nature able to express any and all meaning (though it may take a lot of words in some situations).

These are the items that supply the “value” environment that is knowledge.

[1] Based on the work of Malcolm Ryder at Archestra

 

 

 

 

                             

 

L4 Copyright 2001-2009 moresophy GmbH Copyright © 2009 Logical Business Systems Inc. All rights reserved.