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Executive summary




Executive summary
  In the days when knowledge management                                                  organisation and had presumably not had
  was still thought of as comprising activities                                          time to develop their networks.
  for capturing and organising content, or                                                   Consider another story from a software-
  creating knowledge bases and portals, the                                              development company with offices and
  Institute for Knowledge Management (IKM)                                               development sites in India, the US and
  conducted a survey of 40 managers in a                                                 Europe. During group meetings, there were
  company known for its knowledge-                                                       often people who were unaware of new
  management leadership. Respondents were                                                product features or design options that were
  asked to reflect on a project that was                                                 being actively considered and, more impor-
  important to their careers and indicate                                                tantly, had been in the product’s design
  where they had obtained knowledge                                                      document. As a result, meetings were
  critical to their success. Eighty-five per cent                                        ineffective as people had to explain new
  said they received this information from                                               features or design changes rather than
  other people.1                                                                         make decisions for the future. The product’s
       These ‘other people’ are the social                                               lead architect decided to investigate the
  network: the people we are connected to                                                patterns of communication across the
  and to whom we turn when we have an                                                    group. The map looked like the one shown
  idea, concern, problem or question. The                                                in Figure 1.


                   Biddy                                                                      Lionel         Yuri          Eyal   Ziv         David



         Cliff                 Igor                                          Jennifer                               Adar                       Ezra



        Nicholas     Nicolai          Joan   Salomo   Nanci   Edwin   Sean          Izacnic      Guillaume          Dov




                      Bob                                     Rick




                                                        Figure 1 Patterns of communication



  social network is not only the first place we                                               Lines between the names of people
  go to when requesting knowledge, but is                                                represent communications links. Note the
  also the place where we are most likely to                                             larger, connected group on the left and two
  find it. But what happens if the social                                                isolated groups on the right. This map
  network is inadequate? What if we do not                                               gave the team insight into why communica-
  have the right connections to find the infor-                                          tions had failed. The team immediately
  mation we need for crucial career events or                                            made a plan to ensure that people would
  running a business? The IKM survey found                                               be better connected and created opportu-
  that 15 per cent of managers who received                                              nities for more frequent and consistent
  information from impersonal sources, such                                              communications.
  as computer archives, the internet or KM                                                    This example is typical of the situation in
  databases, were relatively new to the                                                  many firms, and illustrates the value of




                                                                                                                                                        1
Executive summary




     examining the connections that exist             improve their effectiveness, competitiveness
     between people in organisations. The map         and agility. New organisational capabilities
     helped the managers understand what was          are focused on networking practices. Just as
     happening, and stimulated action to              a fisherman’s livelihood depends on keeping
     improve the knowledge and information            his nets mended, managers (especially KM
     flow in the company. This insight is a corner-   managers) must work at keeping networks
     stone of the study and practice of social        healthy. New practices described in this
     networks and knowledge management                report are helping managers detect, sustain
     within organisations.                            and leverage networks to enable more
         This report is based on a few                cross-organisational working practices,
     simple premises: 2                               communications and collaboration. This
                                                      report brings the need for these capabilities
        Networks matter: the new nexus of             into focus, and presents some of the
        knowledge management is in the                networking practices and tools that are
        network. It is where work gets done;          being adopted by leading commentators
        Networks are everywhere: as fish              and organisations.
        are unaware that their environment                 The first section of this report describes
        is water, we are often not conscious          the trends that have converged to make
        that networks form our knowledge              networks a matter of importance in
        environment. Most of the important            knowledge management. Subsequent
        networks underlying every organisation        sections discuss:
        are the relationships that are invisible
        to management;                                   Why should managers care about
        Existing networks can be identified,             networks in their organisations?
        analysed and measured: knowledge of              What do managers need to know
        what is happening in networks can lead           about networks?
        to action that improves individual and           What knowledge-management practices
        organisational performance;                      and methods support network creation
        New networks can be intentionally                and growth?
        created, grown and supported:                    What software tools, products and
        individuals, enterprises and communi-            platforms support network creation,
        ties can reach out and create networks           growth and leverage?
        to achieve specific purposes and                 How can you introduce the practice of
        common goals;                                    social-network management into an
        Networks will be important in the future:        organisation without it becoming an end
        organisational leadership will be based          in itself and a distraction from the
        on a leader’s ability to gain rapid              business’s purpose and goals?
        insights into existing and potential
        networks within the organisation, and         Each discussion includes the experiences of
        take action to leverage them.                 pioneer practitioners in this new domain of
                                                      knowledge management, most of whom
     Many businesses are struggling to under-         have just completed a pilot project and are
     stand how to leverage talent, skills and         at the ‘now what?’ stage of implementing
     experience from across the organisation to       knowledge-networking practices.




2
Executive summary




Terms in context                                     The science of networks and study of
“What in the past could be taken for                 social networks that have led to social-
granted and sometimes even minimised can             networking applications;
no longer be ignored or left to chance.”             The evolution of knowledge manage-
Laurence Prusak and Don Cohen3                       ment into its third generation that builds
     ‘Social network’ is an academic term            on collaborative infrastructures and
that has slipped into the knowledge-                 social software developed in the
management vocabulary. Outside of                    previous generations.
knowledge management and other spe-
cialised academic areas, it is not a term that   These topics introduce both the context and
people use with comfort. Officially, it means    terminology that will be used as the report
nothing more than a network of people (in        goes into more detail on the development of
contrast to networks of computer systems or      knowledge strategies that address these
railroad lines). However, to some people,        social phenomena.
the word ‘social’ connotes gossip, parties
and getting together outside work. To keep       Social capital
things simple, this report uses the terms        Most KM practitioners are familiar with the
‘network’ and ‘social network’ interchange-      model in Figure 2. This model was first used
ably. In addition, it introduces the qualified   to help companies distinguish between tradi-
terms ‘personal network’ and ‘organisation-      tional thinking about capital as accounted
al network’ to distinguish between types. I      for on the corporate balance sheet (cash
also talk about ‘knowledge networks’ and         assets, inventory and property, for example)
‘knowledge networking’, which in some            and intellectual capital. It suggests that intel-
companies are more acceptable terms than         lectual capital is really the sum of human,
knowledge management.                            structural and customer capital, and that
                                                 corporations need to look for methods to
Social capital, networks                         account for (literally) the intellectual capital
and third-generation KM                          of the enterprise. Without intellectual capital,
The knowledge-management community               there are no people, no relationships with
is made up of practitioners who are
self-aware and constantly exploring new
ideas and concepts. Because the underly-
ing principles of knowledge management
touch so many diverse disciplines, innova-
tions from different schools of thought                  Human
                                                         Human                   Structural
                                                                                 Structural

have allowed knowledge management to
                                                                     Financial
                                                                     Financial
continually grow and expand. The trends                               (value)
                                                                     (Value)
and developments influencing the
emergence of social-networking practices
                                                                    Customer
                                                                    Customer
into KM include:

    The ongoing KM theme that social
    capital can be a measure of an
                                                       Figure 2 Forms of intellectual capital
    organisation’s value;




                                                                                                     3
Executive summary




     customers, no innovation and no                  traditional capital, such as material assets,
     competitive processes.4                          inventory and cash. In most respects,
                                                      however, they represent what companies are
     Human capital: The necessary capabilities        actually valued for today.7 You can often
     of individuals to provide solutions to           sense social capital in the atmosphere of a
     customers; for example, the company’s core       company or on its intranet bulletin boards,
     competency;                                      for example. As you walk through a company
     Structural capital: The capabilities of the      you see people smiling and cartoons on the
     organisation to meet market requirements;        walls. You observe informal knowledge being
     for example, its processes;                      exchanged through gossip, stories and
     Customer capital: The value of an organisa-      anecdotes, and hear engaged, purposeful
     tion’s relationships with the people with whom   dialogue in meetings. People respect and
     it does business; for example, its brand.        seek each other’s opinions, share what they
                                                      know and trust that their contributions will
     As I began working with social-network           be acknowledged.
     concepts, I returned to the models I used for         From a knowledge-management
     developing KM practices, and realised that       viewpoint, social capital reflects how
     there is another way to look at this classic     knowledge does or does not move in an
     model. Consider that these three elements        organisation. For example, leaders may
     intersect or connect through the relationships   instinctively know that organisational
     of the people in the firm. Replace financial     stovepipes or silos are unhealthy, but they
     value in this model with social capital and      may accept them as a fact of life or a
     you begin to see another picture.                simple communication problem that can be
          In their book, In Good Company, Prusak      fixed with more information technology.
     and Cohen define social capital as, “The         Knowledge-management practitioners know
     stock of active connections among people,        that anything that impedes the flow of
     the trust, mutual understanding, and shared      knowledge can be detrimental to the
     values and behaviours that bind the members      business. Recall the example of the software
     of human networks and communities and            company at the beginning of this report:
     make co-operative action possible.”5             absent social ties meant that critical
          Wayne Baker, an expert in organisational    knowledge was not shared.
     networks who teaches the University of                Prusak and Cohen emphasise four
     Michigan, is more explicit and personal          specific areas where social capital
     about its value in his definition of social      benefits organisations:
     capital. “Social capital refers to the
     resources available in and through our              Better knowledge sharing due to
     personal networks. These resources…                 established, trust-based relationships,
     include information, ideas, leads, business         common frames of reference and
     opportunities, financial capital, power and         shared goals;
     influence, emotional support, even goodwill,        Lower transaction costs because of high
     trust, and co-operation.”6                          levels of trust and co-operative spirit
          Note that none of these forms of capital       (both within the organisation, and
     (human, structural, customer or social) are as      between the organisation, its customers
     easy to quantify as the methods for counting        and partners);




4
Executive summary




    Low turnover rates reduce severance,           experiences and culture – will occupy a
    hiring and training costs, avoid               more positive position in the market.
    discontinuities associated with frequent           To investigate this proposition in the
    personnel changes, and maintain                organisational realm, the IKM, under Rob
    valuable organisational knowledge;             Cross’s direction, carried out research on
    Greater coherence of action due to             social-network analysis in knowledge
    organisational stability and shared            management in 1999. It examined what it
    understanding.8                                would mean to be able to measure social
                                                   capital and whether instruments could be
Valdis Krebs, who has worked extensively           placed in an organisation to detect how
with organisational networks, began                knowledge is flowing and how people ‘feel’
drawing diagrams of these networks in              about the environment. Ultimately, it looked
1987. He applied them for the first time           at whether it is possible to take the readings
during a project measuring organisational          from a variety of organisations and plot
diversity at TRW, a defence and electronics        these measures against the balance sheet of
company. During that time he began                 the company to look for improvements on a
working on methods and software for what           year-to-year basis.
he called organisational-network analysis
(ONA). He is one of the leaders (and a             Networks
great teacher and mentor to many) of the           The past three to four years have brought an
application of network analysis to organisa-       explosion of interest in the science of
tional effectiveness and knowledge manage-         networks of all types: computer networks
ment. One of Krebs’s earliest findings was         (including the internet), terrorist networks,
that the engineers with the highest commit-        traffic networks, network spread of diseases,
ment to the organisation were those who            and so on. Much of this interest has been
were connected with the key information            fuelled by the availability of computing
flow and decision-making paths. More and           resources that enable researchers to plug in
better connections led to more social              vast amounts of data to analyse networks.
capital, higher commitment and stronger            Many of the scholars have written books that
individual performance and improved                have crossed over into the mass market
business results.                                  following the success of Malcolm Gladwell’s
    The concepts of social capital and             The Tipping Point.9
research on its measurement and impact,                 Gladwell, a writer for The New Yorker
are not limited to the business, organisation-     magazine, explained a number of concepts
al and knowledge-management domains. It            about social networks as he sought to show
also applies to nations, the quality of rela-      how major changes in society and culture
tionships between the people of a nation           can happen through a series of almost
and the quality of relationships among             unnoticed and seemingly inconsequential
nations. It applies to corporations, industry      events. To explain how ideas spread through
networks and the management of relation-           populations of people, he recounted some of
ships through the interactions of individuals.     the history behind sociological research into
In this context, it should be intuitive that the   social networks. He began by highlighting a
firms with more social capital – more              study by Dr Stanley Milgram in 1967 that
relationships characterised by trust, shared       was the basis for the phrase ‘six degrees of




                                                                                                    5
Executive summary




                                                             The numbers of ties between two people
             Owen         Sarah                         represent degrees: one tie is one degree.
                                                        Ben and Sarah are connected by one
                                                        degree, but Sarah and Emily are two degrees
    Emily                              Alex
                                                        apart. Hence, Ben and Sarah have a direct
                                                        tie, and Sarah and Emily an indirect tie.
                                                             This is a small network, and you could
                    Ben                                 probably draw this by hand if you knew all
                                                        the people (in fact, this is a practical way to
                                                        do some simple network analysis). Chapter
                                                        four, ‘Network-analysis and tools’, describes
       Sabrina                       Michael            the methods and tools for collecting data,
                                                        drawing maps and reviewing statistics when
            Figure 3 Social-network maps:
               Ties, nodes and degrees                  a network consists of a large number of
                                                        people. The software involved is generically
                                                        called social-network-analysis software, or
     separation’. The concept holds that you, I or      SNA software. Chapter two, ‘Network struc-
     anyone on the planet is connected to               tures, patterns and views’, goes into more
     everyone else by no more than six connec-          detail about how to read and understand
     tions: me, somebody I know, somebody they          maps. For now, it is helpful to understand
     know, somebody this third person knows,            the two basic sources of data: surveys and
     and so on. The methodology of the Milgram          data mining. Surveys ask people within a
     study, and therefore its conclusion, now           clearly defined network about their relation-
     appear to have some inconsistencies, but the       ships to other people. In Figure 3, for
     magic of the notion remains.10                     example, Sarah has indicated in the survey
          Alongside the magic are a number of           that she goes to Alex and Ben for advice.
     useful basic properties of networks, structural         Surveys provide qualitative information
     patterns and heuristics for analysing              about relationships, but can be difficult to
     networks that have been developed and              administer in large groups. Data mining
     passed into some mainstream disciplines,           involves the use of software with applica-
     like knowledge management. These                   tions that include social context. In e-mail,
     concepts come with a small number of tools         for example, this social context consists of
     that enable practitioners to collect data          the sender and recipients (direct or copied).
     about networks, plug the data into software        As you will see in the next section, social
     that can perform all kinds of analysis and         software and social-networking applications
     draw maps such as that shown in Figure 3.          can provide data for analysis using social-
          In Figure 3, the circles represent nodes in   networking tools
     the network: each node represents a person.
     Arrows between people are the ties – they          Social software and
     show where people are connected and in             social-networking applications
     what direction. For example, if the relation-      Terminology is a source of great confusion,
     ships in this network represent who goes to        especially between the terms ‘social
     whom for advice, then ties to Ben indicate         software’ and ‘social-networking applica-
     that four people go to Ben for advice.             tions’. I differentiate these terms as follows:




6
Executive summary




social software refers to software applica-       Both software categories – which will be
tions that foster the development of social       described in more detail later – are useful
networks, such as collaboration tools,            and available in both organisational settings
e-mail, instant messaging, weblogs (also          and in everyday life. In an organisational
called blogs), wikis and other tools that you     setting, social software represents an
are already familiar with.11 These tools help     essential element of a knowledge-manage-
form connections on a person-to-person            ment framework that is sustained by an
basis, strengthening individual relationships     understanding of how people and groups
and in most cases, improving the social           collaborate. Social software improves
capital of a group as well. Consider the          connections among people and groups.
extent to which you use e-mail, not just for      Network-referral software, which is being
business correspondence with colleagues,          field tested on many public websites, can be
but also to set up lunches, celebrations and      introduced into an enterprise to solve
other social activities. The more e-mails you     specific types of knowledge-management
exchange with a person, the more you              problems, such as those related to expertise
develop a common language, shorthand for          location, contact management, relationship
frequently used terms, and generally              management and relationship mining.
improve the ties between you and that             Social-networking applications use the con-
person. Multiply that by all the people in an     nections themselves as a knowledge asset.
organisational network and you can see                 Both applications accumulate proxy
how social software nurtures and sustains         information about connections between and
social capital.                                   among people, either overtly (as in the
     Social-networking applications, on the       referral software) or implicitly. E-mail logs
other hand, enable users to network digitally     and saved or shared folders, for example,
and step across the degrees of separation.        are a rich source of data about who com-
You may, for example, be looking for infor-       municates with whom, with what frequency,
mation on paperweights and want to find           and (when the contents of e-mails are
someone who knows something about them.           searched) about what topics. As more
You can search the web or your intranet to        organisations and researchers become
find a paperweight expert, but you know that      interested in the nature and value of
your conversation will be a lot easier if you     networks, the silent collection, or mining, of
have had an initial introduction. Social-         this data grows in importance.
network referral software is designed to help
you find people who can introduce you to          Third-generation knowledge management
the people you want to meet. This software is     It is become a truism among those of us
based on the degrees-of-separation concept.       who work in knowledge management that
LinkedIn is an example of such a referral         the term itself has become problematic. We
tool.12 If you want to contact a person in a      would rather use something else, but it has
particular company on LinkedIn it will tell you   become a shorthand way of identifying a
how many degrees away you are from them.          school of thought that is more practice than
It can tell you that, for example:                theory and more about applied technology
                                                  than about technology itself. We work in the
You know      Sally, who knows     Per (who       real world and are constantly learning –
is an expert on paperweights)                     from our own and each other’s experiences




                                                                                                   7
Executive summary




     – and acquiring new tools. What we like          is the AOK network.13 As its facilitator, Jerry
     about working with knowledge management          Ash, says, “Managing knowledge is not the
     is the learning culture, and that the princi-    latest fad. It is a shift in the value of
     ples we apply to knowledge management in         knowledge due to fundamental changes in
     an organisation we apply to ourselves. We        political, social, economic, business and work
     collect ideas, try them out, share them with     environments brought about by the passing of
     others and notice how they are transformed       the industrial age and the arrival of the
     through sharing. And we are reflective.          knowledge economy.” David Snowden, who
     There are many opinions on the nature of         introduced the concept of complexity to
     the various knowledge-management gener-          knowledge management, argues that KM is
     ations. My synthesis of these opinions leads     the management of the ecology of
     to the first premise of this report: networks    knowledge.14 Snowden also introduced the
     are where work gets done.                        term, ‘emergent knowledge management’.
          The first generation of knowledge man-           Social-networking and knowledge-
     agement was heavily focused on technology.       networking practices are a central focus of this
     Knowledge assets were primarily information      current generation’s ecology of emergent
     resources and re-usable artefacts, such as       knowledge management. That is the connec-
     intranets, document, databases and files.        tions among people in organisations and
     The initial market surge in knowledge            across organisational boundaries. If we say
     management focused on providing software         that in the first generation knowledge was in
     to assist in managing these assets. This         artefacts, and in the second it was in people,
     generation coincided with the introduction       we need to say that in the third generation we
     of web-based technologies into corporate         understand that knowledge is in the network.
     environments: intranets, content-management      These generations are summarised in Table 1.
     systems, web-based portals, search engines            When knowledge is in the network, it
     and so on.                                       emerges from the interactions of units within
          The second generation came as the           the network – individual to individual,
     distinction was drawn between explicit and       individual to group, group to group. The
     tacit knowledge. As more thinkers and            network is not just the social relationships,
     practitioners understood these differences,      but organisational relationships and
     process improvement and organisational           relationships among people, groups and
     disciplines started to take hold through the     artefacts as well. Snowden refers to three
     sharing of good practice, continuous             general heuristics about the knowledge
     improvement, reward and recognition              worker in this generation:
     policies, change management, and commu-
     nities of practice. The second generation            Knowledge can only be volunteered; it
     proved that the real knowledge of an                 can never be conscripted;
     organisation lay in its human resources.             We know more than we can tell, and we
          The exact nature of the third generation,       can tell more than we can write down;
     which is upon us, is still emerging from the         We only know what we know when we
     conversations among practitioners and                need to know it.
     theorists. Some say that it is about business
     transformation. One of the largest communi-      In the third generation, a central idea
     ties of knowledge-management practitioners       of knowledge management is about




8
Executive summary




Generation of KM      Where knowledge ‘lives’       Type of knowledge       Implications
First generation      Artefacts                     Explicit                Create the infrastructure for capturing,
                                                                            collecting, refining and re-using artefacts

Second generation     Individuals                   Tacit                   Focus on collaborative behaviours and
                                                                            person-to-person knowledge exchange

Third generation      The network                   Emergent                Provide the conditions for enabling knowledge
                                                                            and action to emerge

                                      Table 1 Generations of knowledge management



             understanding what can and cannot be                    may be. This is also a complexity-based
             managed. As you can infer from these                    model, as it reflects information’s constantly
             heuristics, it is nearly impossible to manage           changing nature and the relationships
             what people know when they are not always               between individual people at the edge and
             aware of it themselves. We therefore use the            what is happening at the network’s core.
             term ‘emergence’, which comes from the                       If you remove the warfare connotations
             science of complex systems, also referred to            from this concept, you find that ‘power to
             as complex-adaptive systems (I will use the             the edge’ also resonates in the context of
             shorter term, ‘complex’, throughout the                 global, agile corporations. David
             report to mean a complex-adaptive system).              Krackhardt, another pioneering researcher
             Emergence is what happens at the point                  in social-network analysis, summarises
             where two systems meet. Knowledge                       power as the ability to mobilise resources
             emerges when people connect with each                   and get things done.
             other within and across networks, and when                   The more networked the information
             networks reach touch points.                            and knowledge, the easier it is to move
                 A closely related concept that is                   decision making – the power – to the
             appearing more frequently is that of                    people closest to the customer. The ability to
             network-centric warfare (NCW), and its                  identify potential innovations can also be
             companion mantra, ‘power to the edge’.                  shifted to the organisation’s periphery, and
             NCW effectively links all possible informa-             people across a global enterprise can
             tion sources – satellite images, intelligence           readily and quickly share context. As David
             data, global positioning information about              Albers and Richard Hayes say in their
             supplies and equipment, mobile audio,                   report, Power to the Edge: Command
             video and computer-networked connections                and Control in the Information Age: “Until
             to people, and so on – to provide precise               quite recently, networking was too expensive
             global and situation awareness. By linking              for us to realise the value proposition.
             sources of information and knowledge, the               Communications technologies provided an
             network is the centre of the command-and-               opportunity to be more robustly networked.
             control operation, and it is possible to move           As bandwidth becomes less costly and more
             decision making to the edge. That is, to the            widely available, we will be able to not only
             people closest to the situation, wherever that          allow people to process information as they




                                                                                                                            9
Executive summary




     see fit, but also allow multiple individuals                management must focus on enabling the
     and organisations to have direct and                        conditions for knowledge to emerge.
     simultaneous access to information and                          This report examines what is possible
     each other. We will also be able to                         once you have made the connection
     support richer interactions between and                     between social-networks ideas and
     among individuals.”15                                       knowledge-management practices. Figure 4
          Knowledge management in this network-                  shows a map of the concepts and ideas that
     centric environment means trusting people                   have emerged, are coming together again
     to make the right decisions when they are                   and changing in practice.
     provided with the right context. And,                           If, like me, you have always considered
     because the context is complex, it can never                knowledge management a lens through
     be wholly known or understood. Managing                     which to view current business problems, then
     networks is about managing complexity, that                 you can consider organisational networks a
     is, being able to chart a course, provide                   new frame – although unfortunately it does
     direction and enable action at the edges of                 not have a fixed shape. The lens is still
     the network, even as the network itself is                  knowledge, and you continue to draw on the
     constantly changing.                                        methods, tools and practices in your KM
                                                                 toolkit as needed. But you also have an
     Summary: the intersection of                                additional set of tools that let you examine
     knowledge and networks                                      and leverage the power and knowledge that
     As Table 1 shows, the role of knowledge                     are in the networks around you.




                                                                       Social
                                                                      software
                             Social capital
      KM first and
        second
      generations




                                                                                                 Organisational
                                                  Knowledge-                                    and management
                  Emergent                                                                          sciences
                                                  networking
                 knowledge
                                                   practice
                management


                                                                                      Social
                                                                                     networks



                                                                      Social-                Social-
                                                                     network               networking
                                     “Power to                       analysis               software
                                     the edge”




                                      Figure 4 Emergence of networking practices




10
Executive summary




Brief history of SNA and KM                         it internally to support IBM’s re-organisation
Social-network analysis has always been a rich      efforts as it moved to a services-oriented
and multidisciplinary field. It began in the        business model. He continued his work with the
1930s-40s with research and discoveries in          consulting group and worked with Krebs to
psychology, sociology and anthropology. These       enhance InFlow, the mapping and measuring
insights were first explored using mathematical     software that Krebs created as a class project in
analysis in the 1960s among a group led by          1987 while working at Toyota and taking
Harrison White at Harvard University. (See          courses in artificial intelligence.
www.analytictech.com/networks/history.htm. For           Meanwhile, academic research on social
a great photo of the first symposium on the topic   networks flourished. In 1998, Duncan Watts
held at Dartmouth College in 1975, visit            and Steven Strogatz published an article on
http://eclectic.ss.uci.edu/~drwhite/Networks/MS     small-world networks that brought a new group
SB1975.html.) The International Network for         of academics – physicists and complexity
Social Network Analysis (INSNA) was founded in      scientists – into the study of network dynamics.
1978 and has been holding annual conferences             In 1999, Rob Cross approached Larry
since 1979.                                         Prusak with an idea for bringing the insights of
    David Krackhardt, Daniel Brass, Ron Burt,       social networks to knowledge management.
Ron Rice and Karen Stephenson were among            Cross, Stephen Borgatti, who created the
the first to apply network analysis to people,      UCINET software, and Andrew Parker collabo-
organisation and culture and to develop the         rated on bringing these methods and tools to
vocabulary of network types and metrics, which      companies participating in the IKM. Over the
is key to this report. In 1993, Stephenson,         following years, Cross and Parker worked with
Gerry Falkowski and Valdis Krebs worked             dozens of companies who were members of the
together at UCLA and then at IBM developing         IKM to expand on the knowledge base of
the methodology for organisational-network          social-network analysis, which introduced
assessment (ONA). They introduced ONA into          network analysis to the broad and diverse
the IBM consulting group where Falkowski used       knowledge-management field.




                                                                                                        11

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Executive summary outlines importance of social networks

  • 1. Executive summary Executive summary In the days when knowledge management organisation and had presumably not had was still thought of as comprising activities time to develop their networks. for capturing and organising content, or Consider another story from a software- creating knowledge bases and portals, the development company with offices and Institute for Knowledge Management (IKM) development sites in India, the US and conducted a survey of 40 managers in a Europe. During group meetings, there were company known for its knowledge- often people who were unaware of new management leadership. Respondents were product features or design options that were asked to reflect on a project that was being actively considered and, more impor- important to their careers and indicate tantly, had been in the product’s design where they had obtained knowledge document. As a result, meetings were critical to their success. Eighty-five per cent ineffective as people had to explain new said they received this information from features or design changes rather than other people.1 make decisions for the future. The product’s These ‘other people’ are the social lead architect decided to investigate the network: the people we are connected to patterns of communication across the and to whom we turn when we have an group. The map looked like the one shown idea, concern, problem or question. The in Figure 1. Biddy Lionel Yuri Eyal Ziv David Cliff Igor Jennifer Adar Ezra Nicholas Nicolai Joan Salomo Nanci Edwin Sean Izacnic Guillaume Dov Bob Rick Figure 1 Patterns of communication social network is not only the first place we Lines between the names of people go to when requesting knowledge, but is represent communications links. Note the also the place where we are most likely to larger, connected group on the left and two find it. But what happens if the social isolated groups on the right. This map network is inadequate? What if we do not gave the team insight into why communica- have the right connections to find the infor- tions had failed. The team immediately mation we need for crucial career events or made a plan to ensure that people would running a business? The IKM survey found be better connected and created opportu- that 15 per cent of managers who received nities for more frequent and consistent information from impersonal sources, such communications. as computer archives, the internet or KM This example is typical of the situation in databases, were relatively new to the many firms, and illustrates the value of 1
  • 2. Executive summary examining the connections that exist improve their effectiveness, competitiveness between people in organisations. The map and agility. New organisational capabilities helped the managers understand what was are focused on networking practices. Just as happening, and stimulated action to a fisherman’s livelihood depends on keeping improve the knowledge and information his nets mended, managers (especially KM flow in the company. This insight is a corner- managers) must work at keeping networks stone of the study and practice of social healthy. New practices described in this networks and knowledge management report are helping managers detect, sustain within organisations. and leverage networks to enable more This report is based on a few cross-organisational working practices, simple premises: 2 communications and collaboration. This report brings the need for these capabilities Networks matter: the new nexus of into focus, and presents some of the knowledge management is in the networking practices and tools that are network. It is where work gets done; being adopted by leading commentators Networks are everywhere: as fish and organisations. are unaware that their environment The first section of this report describes is water, we are often not conscious the trends that have converged to make that networks form our knowledge networks a matter of importance in environment. Most of the important knowledge management. Subsequent networks underlying every organisation sections discuss: are the relationships that are invisible to management; Why should managers care about Existing networks can be identified, networks in their organisations? analysed and measured: knowledge of What do managers need to know what is happening in networks can lead about networks? to action that improves individual and What knowledge-management practices organisational performance; and methods support network creation New networks can be intentionally and growth? created, grown and supported: What software tools, products and individuals, enterprises and communi- platforms support network creation, ties can reach out and create networks growth and leverage? to achieve specific purposes and How can you introduce the practice of common goals; social-network management into an Networks will be important in the future: organisation without it becoming an end organisational leadership will be based in itself and a distraction from the on a leader’s ability to gain rapid business’s purpose and goals? insights into existing and potential networks within the organisation, and Each discussion includes the experiences of take action to leverage them. pioneer practitioners in this new domain of knowledge management, most of whom Many businesses are struggling to under- have just completed a pilot project and are stand how to leverage talent, skills and at the ‘now what?’ stage of implementing experience from across the organisation to knowledge-networking practices. 2
  • 3. Executive summary Terms in context The science of networks and study of “What in the past could be taken for social networks that have led to social- granted and sometimes even minimised can networking applications; no longer be ignored or left to chance.” The evolution of knowledge manage- Laurence Prusak and Don Cohen3 ment into its third generation that builds ‘Social network’ is an academic term on collaborative infrastructures and that has slipped into the knowledge- social software developed in the management vocabulary. Outside of previous generations. knowledge management and other spe- cialised academic areas, it is not a term that These topics introduce both the context and people use with comfort. Officially, it means terminology that will be used as the report nothing more than a network of people (in goes into more detail on the development of contrast to networks of computer systems or knowledge strategies that address these railroad lines). However, to some people, social phenomena. the word ‘social’ connotes gossip, parties and getting together outside work. To keep Social capital things simple, this report uses the terms Most KM practitioners are familiar with the ‘network’ and ‘social network’ interchange- model in Figure 2. This model was first used ably. In addition, it introduces the qualified to help companies distinguish between tradi- terms ‘personal network’ and ‘organisation- tional thinking about capital as accounted al network’ to distinguish between types. I for on the corporate balance sheet (cash also talk about ‘knowledge networks’ and assets, inventory and property, for example) ‘knowledge networking’, which in some and intellectual capital. It suggests that intel- companies are more acceptable terms than lectual capital is really the sum of human, knowledge management. structural and customer capital, and that corporations need to look for methods to Social capital, networks account for (literally) the intellectual capital and third-generation KM of the enterprise. Without intellectual capital, The knowledge-management community there are no people, no relationships with is made up of practitioners who are self-aware and constantly exploring new ideas and concepts. Because the underly- ing principles of knowledge management touch so many diverse disciplines, innova- tions from different schools of thought Human Human Structural Structural have allowed knowledge management to Financial Financial continually grow and expand. The trends (value) (Value) and developments influencing the emergence of social-networking practices Customer Customer into KM include: The ongoing KM theme that social capital can be a measure of an Figure 2 Forms of intellectual capital organisation’s value; 3
  • 4. Executive summary customers, no innovation and no traditional capital, such as material assets, competitive processes.4 inventory and cash. In most respects, however, they represent what companies are Human capital: The necessary capabilities actually valued for today.7 You can often of individuals to provide solutions to sense social capital in the atmosphere of a customers; for example, the company’s core company or on its intranet bulletin boards, competency; for example. As you walk through a company Structural capital: The capabilities of the you see people smiling and cartoons on the organisation to meet market requirements; walls. You observe informal knowledge being for example, its processes; exchanged through gossip, stories and Customer capital: The value of an organisa- anecdotes, and hear engaged, purposeful tion’s relationships with the people with whom dialogue in meetings. People respect and it does business; for example, its brand. seek each other’s opinions, share what they know and trust that their contributions will As I began working with social-network be acknowledged. concepts, I returned to the models I used for From a knowledge-management developing KM practices, and realised that viewpoint, social capital reflects how there is another way to look at this classic knowledge does or does not move in an model. Consider that these three elements organisation. For example, leaders may intersect or connect through the relationships instinctively know that organisational of the people in the firm. Replace financial stovepipes or silos are unhealthy, but they value in this model with social capital and may accept them as a fact of life or a you begin to see another picture. simple communication problem that can be In their book, In Good Company, Prusak fixed with more information technology. and Cohen define social capital as, “The Knowledge-management practitioners know stock of active connections among people, that anything that impedes the flow of the trust, mutual understanding, and shared knowledge can be detrimental to the values and behaviours that bind the members business. Recall the example of the software of human networks and communities and company at the beginning of this report: make co-operative action possible.”5 absent social ties meant that critical Wayne Baker, an expert in organisational knowledge was not shared. networks who teaches the University of Prusak and Cohen emphasise four Michigan, is more explicit and personal specific areas where social capital about its value in his definition of social benefits organisations: capital. “Social capital refers to the resources available in and through our Better knowledge sharing due to personal networks. These resources… established, trust-based relationships, include information, ideas, leads, business common frames of reference and opportunities, financial capital, power and shared goals; influence, emotional support, even goodwill, Lower transaction costs because of high trust, and co-operation.”6 levels of trust and co-operative spirit Note that none of these forms of capital (both within the organisation, and (human, structural, customer or social) are as between the organisation, its customers easy to quantify as the methods for counting and partners); 4
  • 5. Executive summary Low turnover rates reduce severance, experiences and culture – will occupy a hiring and training costs, avoid more positive position in the market. discontinuities associated with frequent To investigate this proposition in the personnel changes, and maintain organisational realm, the IKM, under Rob valuable organisational knowledge; Cross’s direction, carried out research on Greater coherence of action due to social-network analysis in knowledge organisational stability and shared management in 1999. It examined what it understanding.8 would mean to be able to measure social capital and whether instruments could be Valdis Krebs, who has worked extensively placed in an organisation to detect how with organisational networks, began knowledge is flowing and how people ‘feel’ drawing diagrams of these networks in about the environment. Ultimately, it looked 1987. He applied them for the first time at whether it is possible to take the readings during a project measuring organisational from a variety of organisations and plot diversity at TRW, a defence and electronics these measures against the balance sheet of company. During that time he began the company to look for improvements on a working on methods and software for what year-to-year basis. he called organisational-network analysis (ONA). He is one of the leaders (and a Networks great teacher and mentor to many) of the The past three to four years have brought an application of network analysis to organisa- explosion of interest in the science of tional effectiveness and knowledge manage- networks of all types: computer networks ment. One of Krebs’s earliest findings was (including the internet), terrorist networks, that the engineers with the highest commit- traffic networks, network spread of diseases, ment to the organisation were those who and so on. Much of this interest has been were connected with the key information fuelled by the availability of computing flow and decision-making paths. More and resources that enable researchers to plug in better connections led to more social vast amounts of data to analyse networks. capital, higher commitment and stronger Many of the scholars have written books that individual performance and improved have crossed over into the mass market business results. following the success of Malcolm Gladwell’s The concepts of social capital and The Tipping Point.9 research on its measurement and impact, Gladwell, a writer for The New Yorker are not limited to the business, organisation- magazine, explained a number of concepts al and knowledge-management domains. It about social networks as he sought to show also applies to nations, the quality of rela- how major changes in society and culture tionships between the people of a nation can happen through a series of almost and the quality of relationships among unnoticed and seemingly inconsequential nations. It applies to corporations, industry events. To explain how ideas spread through networks and the management of relation- populations of people, he recounted some of ships through the interactions of individuals. the history behind sociological research into In this context, it should be intuitive that the social networks. He began by highlighting a firms with more social capital – more study by Dr Stanley Milgram in 1967 that relationships characterised by trust, shared was the basis for the phrase ‘six degrees of 5
  • 6. Executive summary The numbers of ties between two people Owen Sarah represent degrees: one tie is one degree. Ben and Sarah are connected by one degree, but Sarah and Emily are two degrees Emily Alex apart. Hence, Ben and Sarah have a direct tie, and Sarah and Emily an indirect tie. This is a small network, and you could Ben probably draw this by hand if you knew all the people (in fact, this is a practical way to do some simple network analysis). Chapter four, ‘Network-analysis and tools’, describes Sabrina Michael the methods and tools for collecting data, drawing maps and reviewing statistics when Figure 3 Social-network maps: Ties, nodes and degrees a network consists of a large number of people. The software involved is generically called social-network-analysis software, or separation’. The concept holds that you, I or SNA software. Chapter two, ‘Network struc- anyone on the planet is connected to tures, patterns and views’, goes into more everyone else by no more than six connec- detail about how to read and understand tions: me, somebody I know, somebody they maps. For now, it is helpful to understand know, somebody this third person knows, the two basic sources of data: surveys and and so on. The methodology of the Milgram data mining. Surveys ask people within a study, and therefore its conclusion, now clearly defined network about their relation- appear to have some inconsistencies, but the ships to other people. In Figure 3, for magic of the notion remains.10 example, Sarah has indicated in the survey Alongside the magic are a number of that she goes to Alex and Ben for advice. useful basic properties of networks, structural Surveys provide qualitative information patterns and heuristics for analysing about relationships, but can be difficult to networks that have been developed and administer in large groups. Data mining passed into some mainstream disciplines, involves the use of software with applica- like knowledge management. These tions that include social context. In e-mail, concepts come with a small number of tools for example, this social context consists of that enable practitioners to collect data the sender and recipients (direct or copied). about networks, plug the data into software As you will see in the next section, social that can perform all kinds of analysis and software and social-networking applications draw maps such as that shown in Figure 3. can provide data for analysis using social- In Figure 3, the circles represent nodes in networking tools the network: each node represents a person. Arrows between people are the ties – they Social software and show where people are connected and in social-networking applications what direction. For example, if the relation- Terminology is a source of great confusion, ships in this network represent who goes to especially between the terms ‘social whom for advice, then ties to Ben indicate software’ and ‘social-networking applica- that four people go to Ben for advice. tions’. I differentiate these terms as follows: 6
  • 7. Executive summary social software refers to software applica- Both software categories – which will be tions that foster the development of social described in more detail later – are useful networks, such as collaboration tools, and available in both organisational settings e-mail, instant messaging, weblogs (also and in everyday life. In an organisational called blogs), wikis and other tools that you setting, social software represents an are already familiar with.11 These tools help essential element of a knowledge-manage- form connections on a person-to-person ment framework that is sustained by an basis, strengthening individual relationships understanding of how people and groups and in most cases, improving the social collaborate. Social software improves capital of a group as well. Consider the connections among people and groups. extent to which you use e-mail, not just for Network-referral software, which is being business correspondence with colleagues, field tested on many public websites, can be but also to set up lunches, celebrations and introduced into an enterprise to solve other social activities. The more e-mails you specific types of knowledge-management exchange with a person, the more you problems, such as those related to expertise develop a common language, shorthand for location, contact management, relationship frequently used terms, and generally management and relationship mining. improve the ties between you and that Social-networking applications use the con- person. Multiply that by all the people in an nections themselves as a knowledge asset. organisational network and you can see Both applications accumulate proxy how social software nurtures and sustains information about connections between and social capital. among people, either overtly (as in the Social-networking applications, on the referral software) or implicitly. E-mail logs other hand, enable users to network digitally and saved or shared folders, for example, and step across the degrees of separation. are a rich source of data about who com- You may, for example, be looking for infor- municates with whom, with what frequency, mation on paperweights and want to find and (when the contents of e-mails are someone who knows something about them. searched) about what topics. As more You can search the web or your intranet to organisations and researchers become find a paperweight expert, but you know that interested in the nature and value of your conversation will be a lot easier if you networks, the silent collection, or mining, of have had an initial introduction. Social- this data grows in importance. network referral software is designed to help you find people who can introduce you to Third-generation knowledge management the people you want to meet. This software is It is become a truism among those of us based on the degrees-of-separation concept. who work in knowledge management that LinkedIn is an example of such a referral the term itself has become problematic. We tool.12 If you want to contact a person in a would rather use something else, but it has particular company on LinkedIn it will tell you become a shorthand way of identifying a how many degrees away you are from them. school of thought that is more practice than It can tell you that, for example: theory and more about applied technology than about technology itself. We work in the You know Sally, who knows Per (who real world and are constantly learning – is an expert on paperweights) from our own and each other’s experiences 7
  • 8. Executive summary – and acquiring new tools. What we like is the AOK network.13 As its facilitator, Jerry about working with knowledge management Ash, says, “Managing knowledge is not the is the learning culture, and that the princi- latest fad. It is a shift in the value of ples we apply to knowledge management in knowledge due to fundamental changes in an organisation we apply to ourselves. We political, social, economic, business and work collect ideas, try them out, share them with environments brought about by the passing of others and notice how they are transformed the industrial age and the arrival of the through sharing. And we are reflective. knowledge economy.” David Snowden, who There are many opinions on the nature of introduced the concept of complexity to the various knowledge-management gener- knowledge management, argues that KM is ations. My synthesis of these opinions leads the management of the ecology of to the first premise of this report: networks knowledge.14 Snowden also introduced the are where work gets done. term, ‘emergent knowledge management’. The first generation of knowledge man- Social-networking and knowledge- agement was heavily focused on technology. networking practices are a central focus of this Knowledge assets were primarily information current generation’s ecology of emergent resources and re-usable artefacts, such as knowledge management. That is the connec- intranets, document, databases and files. tions among people in organisations and The initial market surge in knowledge across organisational boundaries. If we say management focused on providing software that in the first generation knowledge was in to assist in managing these assets. This artefacts, and in the second it was in people, generation coincided with the introduction we need to say that in the third generation we of web-based technologies into corporate understand that knowledge is in the network. environments: intranets, content-management These generations are summarised in Table 1. systems, web-based portals, search engines When knowledge is in the network, it and so on. emerges from the interactions of units within The second generation came as the the network – individual to individual, distinction was drawn between explicit and individual to group, group to group. The tacit knowledge. As more thinkers and network is not just the social relationships, practitioners understood these differences, but organisational relationships and process improvement and organisational relationships among people, groups and disciplines started to take hold through the artefacts as well. Snowden refers to three sharing of good practice, continuous general heuristics about the knowledge improvement, reward and recognition worker in this generation: policies, change management, and commu- nities of practice. The second generation Knowledge can only be volunteered; it proved that the real knowledge of an can never be conscripted; organisation lay in its human resources. We know more than we can tell, and we The exact nature of the third generation, can tell more than we can write down; which is upon us, is still emerging from the We only know what we know when we conversations among practitioners and need to know it. theorists. Some say that it is about business transformation. One of the largest communi- In the third generation, a central idea ties of knowledge-management practitioners of knowledge management is about 8
  • 9. Executive summary Generation of KM Where knowledge ‘lives’ Type of knowledge Implications First generation Artefacts Explicit Create the infrastructure for capturing, collecting, refining and re-using artefacts Second generation Individuals Tacit Focus on collaborative behaviours and person-to-person knowledge exchange Third generation The network Emergent Provide the conditions for enabling knowledge and action to emerge Table 1 Generations of knowledge management understanding what can and cannot be may be. This is also a complexity-based managed. As you can infer from these model, as it reflects information’s constantly heuristics, it is nearly impossible to manage changing nature and the relationships what people know when they are not always between individual people at the edge and aware of it themselves. We therefore use the what is happening at the network’s core. term ‘emergence’, which comes from the If you remove the warfare connotations science of complex systems, also referred to from this concept, you find that ‘power to as complex-adaptive systems (I will use the the edge’ also resonates in the context of shorter term, ‘complex’, throughout the global, agile corporations. David report to mean a complex-adaptive system). Krackhardt, another pioneering researcher Emergence is what happens at the point in social-network analysis, summarises where two systems meet. Knowledge power as the ability to mobilise resources emerges when people connect with each and get things done. other within and across networks, and when The more networked the information networks reach touch points. and knowledge, the easier it is to move A closely related concept that is decision making – the power – to the appearing more frequently is that of people closest to the customer. The ability to network-centric warfare (NCW), and its identify potential innovations can also be companion mantra, ‘power to the edge’. shifted to the organisation’s periphery, and NCW effectively links all possible informa- people across a global enterprise can tion sources – satellite images, intelligence readily and quickly share context. As David data, global positioning information about Albers and Richard Hayes say in their supplies and equipment, mobile audio, report, Power to the Edge: Command video and computer-networked connections and Control in the Information Age: “Until to people, and so on – to provide precise quite recently, networking was too expensive global and situation awareness. By linking for us to realise the value proposition. sources of information and knowledge, the Communications technologies provided an network is the centre of the command-and- opportunity to be more robustly networked. control operation, and it is possible to move As bandwidth becomes less costly and more decision making to the edge. That is, to the widely available, we will be able to not only people closest to the situation, wherever that allow people to process information as they 9
  • 10. Executive summary see fit, but also allow multiple individuals management must focus on enabling the and organisations to have direct and conditions for knowledge to emerge. simultaneous access to information and This report examines what is possible each other. We will also be able to once you have made the connection support richer interactions between and between social-networks ideas and among individuals.”15 knowledge-management practices. Figure 4 Knowledge management in this network- shows a map of the concepts and ideas that centric environment means trusting people have emerged, are coming together again to make the right decisions when they are and changing in practice. provided with the right context. And, If, like me, you have always considered because the context is complex, it can never knowledge management a lens through be wholly known or understood. Managing which to view current business problems, then networks is about managing complexity, that you can consider organisational networks a is, being able to chart a course, provide new frame – although unfortunately it does direction and enable action at the edges of not have a fixed shape. The lens is still the network, even as the network itself is knowledge, and you continue to draw on the constantly changing. methods, tools and practices in your KM toolkit as needed. But you also have an Summary: the intersection of additional set of tools that let you examine knowledge and networks and leverage the power and knowledge that As Table 1 shows, the role of knowledge are in the networks around you. Social software Social capital KM first and second generations Organisational Knowledge- and management Emergent sciences networking knowledge practice management Social networks Social- Social- network networking “Power to analysis software the edge” Figure 4 Emergence of networking practices 10
  • 11. Executive summary Brief history of SNA and KM it internally to support IBM’s re-organisation Social-network analysis has always been a rich efforts as it moved to a services-oriented and multidisciplinary field. It began in the business model. He continued his work with the 1930s-40s with research and discoveries in consulting group and worked with Krebs to psychology, sociology and anthropology. These enhance InFlow, the mapping and measuring insights were first explored using mathematical software that Krebs created as a class project in analysis in the 1960s among a group led by 1987 while working at Toyota and taking Harrison White at Harvard University. (See courses in artificial intelligence. www.analytictech.com/networks/history.htm. For Meanwhile, academic research on social a great photo of the first symposium on the topic networks flourished. In 1998, Duncan Watts held at Dartmouth College in 1975, visit and Steven Strogatz published an article on http://eclectic.ss.uci.edu/~drwhite/Networks/MS small-world networks that brought a new group SB1975.html.) The International Network for of academics – physicists and complexity Social Network Analysis (INSNA) was founded in scientists – into the study of network dynamics. 1978 and has been holding annual conferences In 1999, Rob Cross approached Larry since 1979. Prusak with an idea for bringing the insights of David Krackhardt, Daniel Brass, Ron Burt, social networks to knowledge management. Ron Rice and Karen Stephenson were among Cross, Stephen Borgatti, who created the the first to apply network analysis to people, UCINET software, and Andrew Parker collabo- organisation and culture and to develop the rated on bringing these methods and tools to vocabulary of network types and metrics, which companies participating in the IKM. Over the is key to this report. In 1993, Stephenson, following years, Cross and Parker worked with Gerry Falkowski and Valdis Krebs worked dozens of companies who were members of the together at UCLA and then at IBM developing IKM to expand on the knowledge base of the methodology for organisational-network social-network analysis, which introduced assessment (ONA). They introduced ONA into network analysis to the broad and diverse the IBM consulting group where Falkowski used knowledge-management field. 11