Contenu connexe Similaire à Organization theory and design 13 2013 (20) Plus de Wai Chamornmarn (20) Organization theory and design 13 20132. หัวข้อบรรยาย/กรณีศึกษา
11 Organizing for Innovation
C 8: Harvard Business Case / 3M Optical Systems : Managing Corporate Entrepreneurship
12 การสร้างและออกแบบ Cybernetics, Viable System
C 9 : Harvard Business Case / Sun Hydraulics Corporation (A&B)
13 การสร้างและออกแบบ learning Organization/กระบวนการเรียนรู้
C 10 : Harvard Business Case / McKinsey & Company : Managing Knowledge and Learning
14 Control system
C11: Harvard Business Case / Verizon
15 สรุปปิดการบรรยาย or guest speaker
organization @TC 2013
3. Why Knowledge?
•
• “Knowledge is the only meaningful resource today.”
Peter Drucker (1993)
• Knowledge is one of the most important assets
• of an organization for creating value and, hence,
• maintaining sustainable competitive advantage.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
4. Characteristics of Knowledge
– 1. Increasing Return
– 2. Unlimited Usage
– 3. Unseparated Production and Consumption
– 4. Difficulties in Market Transaction
– 5. New Value by Re-categorization
– 6. Quickly Outdated
– 7. Created by Human Beings
•
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
5. Simon’s Metaphor: A Man is an Ant
- Bounded Rationality or Cognitive Limits Direction to Home
A man, viewed as a behaving system, is quite simple. The
apparent complexity of his behavior over time is largely a
reflection of the complexity of the environment in which he
finds himself.
Simon, H.A.(1982) The Sciences of the Artificial.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
6. Two Types of Knowledge
Tacit Knowledge
Subjective and experiential
knowledge that can not
be expressed in words,
sentences, numbers, or
Formulas (Context-specific)
Cognitive Skills
beliefs
images
perspectives
mental models
Technical Skills
craft
know-how
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
Objective and rational
knowledge that can be
expressed in words, sentences,
numbers, or formulas (contextfree)
Explicit Knowledge
Theoretical approach
Problem solving
Manuals
Database
Dynamic Interaction
Analog-Digital Synthesis
organization @TC 2013
7. Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
“The strength of Japanese manufacturing industries are at the
technologies (based on) tacit knowledge. With the progress in
Information Technology (IT), tacit knowledge is converted into
explicit knowledge. Still, we need tacit knowledge. To build a car,
we have to build people.”
-Hiroshi Okuda, the chairman of Toyota
Without a firm-specific high quality tacit knowledge, a firm cannot survive just by combining explicit knowledge
through outsourcing. A company needs to recognize a dispersed tacit knowledge embedded in people, synthesize
tacit and explicit knowledge, and incorporate knowledge into key organizational activities for continuous
innovation.
organization @TC 2013
8. Reality has Duality - Subjectivity and Objectivity-
Tacit
Insider sensitivity
Life world
Commitment
Here and now
Phenomenologist
Existentialist
Explicit
Outsider objectivity
Factual world
Detachment
There and then
Positivist
Spectator
organization @TC 2013
9. SECI Process
Tacit
Sharing and creating
tacit knowledge through
direct experience
Socialization
Taci
t
Tacit
Explic
it
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
I
Explic
it
9. embodying explicit
knowledge through
action and reflection
10. Using simulation and
experiments
Externalization
Articulating tacit
knowledge through
dialogue and reflection
4. articulating tacit
Environment
E
O
knowledge using
I
I
symbolic language
Group
Individual
I
5. translating tacit
I
I
knowledge into a
I
concept or prototype
Systemizing and
applying explicit
Internalization
Combination
knowledge and
information
E
G
O
6. gathering and
G
integrating explicit
G Org. G
I
knowledge
G
E
7. Breaking down the
concept and finding
relationship among
Explicit
Explicit
concepts
8. editing and
organization @TC 2013
explicit
I = Individual, G = Group, O = Organization, E = Environment
systemizing
1.Perceiving the reality
as it is
2. Sensing and Empathizing
with
others and the
environment
3. Transferring of
tacit knowledge
Learning and acquiring
new tacit knowledge in
practice
Tacit
10. Basic Components of
Knowledge-creating Organization
Environment
Vision
(Ecosystem)
(What?)
Ta
it
jectiv
b
e (Su
g
owled
cit Kn
y)
Driving
Objectives
Dialogue
(Why?)
Ba
Practice
(How?)
(Shared Context)
ledge
w
it Kno
c
Expli
it
jectiv
(Ob
y)
Knowledge Assets
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
11. Knowledge Vision
Knowledge Vision
– - Essential Questioning: “What do we exist for?”
– “Where should we live?” (Existence and Domain)
– “Why do we create knowledge?”
– A vision that transcends the existing boundary. A vision that can be
accepted by and can inspire the people with various contexts.
– -Gives the firm an absolute, not a relative, value system.
– “You do it because you want to do it, not because
– everyone else is doing it.”
– -A long-time view that goes beyond the arena of
– competition. It is not a short-time view on efficiency in
– knowledge utilization.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
12. Why do we create knowledge?:
A story of Honda
• Honda was trying to develop the CVCC engine, which had lower
emission and higher fuel efficiency. Souichiro Honda, the founder and
then CEO of Honda one day told his engineers that the engine would
finally give Honda the opportunity to beat Big 3.
• The engineers looked at Mr. Honda, and said, “Please, don’t say such
a thing. We are not doing this to beat other guys. We are doing this for
our children.”
• Mr. Honda was ashamed of himself, and said that he realized that he
had become too old, and decided to retire.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
13. Driving Objective
• It is a concept, goal, or codes of conduct to synchronize
vision, dialogue, and practice. By pursuing it relentlessly,
contradictions are created and synthesized to create
high quality of knowledge.
• Seven-Eleven Japan: Cut opportunity losses
• Eisai: Knowledge Creation
• Canon: Cash Flow
• Suzuki: 1cc=1000 Yen
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
14. Dialogue
- Dialectic in Thought -
• 1. Dialectic
– Truth is dynamic and is developed through the dynamic process of thesis,
antithesis and synthesis.
• 2. Existential Context
– A theme is created by sharing deep thoughts and beliefs.
• 3. Nature of Time, Continuity and Contents
– It is not about whether it exists or not, it is a question of the process of how
it comes into being. The process productively examines the contents rather
than form through denial.
– “Human is mortal. Socrates is a human. Socrates is mortal”
– So what? No new meaning can be created. For example, if one asks,
– ”What does it mean to be mortal?” we might reach a new conclusion,
– “Socrates as a thought is immortal”
• 4. Open Thought
– Beyond the recognition of one’s self-fallibility, conflict with others serves
as a catalyst to reach a higher level of understanding.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
15. Practice - Dialectic in Action
Practice as Kata (Creative Routine)
- Creative Routine: Continuous spiral of tacit and explicit
knowledge until it becomes the second nature.
Kata (form) means “way of doing things.”
- Kata is the core of ideal action.
- Good Kata functions as archetype that fosters creative
routine but provides higher freedom.
- Kata has a high quality feedback function that sharpen
senses and help to notify and modify the differences
between predicted outcomes and reality.
- Shu 守 (learn), Ha 破 (break), and Ri 離 (create) steps are
critical in continuous self-renewal processes.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
16. Ba: Shared Context-in-Motion
• Knowledge cannot be created without specifying
context (time, space, and relationships); sharing context
including experience, memory, past/history is essential.
• Ba is the inter-subjective space-time where meaning is
created through dialogues and practice.
It can exist in various spaces such as:
Ø Physical
- Office, dispersed operating spaces
Ø Virtual - E-mail, video conference
Ø Psychological - Shared experience (history), beliefs, ideals
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
17. Office for Knowledge Creation
meeting
WINDOW
CREATIVE ZONE
FOREST
OF
KNOWLEDGE
OFFICE ZONE
Office Zone
WINDO
W
Meeting
Room
Creative zone
(meeting zone)
Smoking
Communication
Coroner
Smoking
Communication
Zone
Entrance
Forest of
Knowledge
Refresh Corner
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
19. Small World Network
SIX DEGREES
We are a happy family
and we all are six degrees
away from an Albanian farmer.
The network of human
social interactions connect
us all by six degrees of
separation.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
TIPPING POINT
Connected people are
able to get information
and control networks.
I want to be in the middle
of the network because it
provides me information
and power. I can make big
changes by small @TC 2013
organization things.
20. Small World Network: Rewiring the Multilayered Ba
• Through rewiring, far apart ba can be connected to each other to find new
combinations and create new knowledge.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
21. Various Ba at Toyota Prius Project
Calty Design Research
(Exterior Design)
2nd & 4th
Electronics Tech Div.
(Inverter)
BR-VF
(Hybrid System)
Zi (G21)
(Planning)
1st Vehicle
Tech Div.
(Suspension)
2nd Engine
Tech Div.
(Engine)
Drive-train
Tech Div.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
(Hybrid transaxel)
2nd Vehicle
Tech Div.
(Brakes)
EV Development
(Motor, Battery)
Panasonic EV
Energy
organization @TC 2013
22. Organization as Organic Configuration of Ba
• Ba is a concept that synthesizes the hierarchy and the network. The
organization is viewed based on the meaning it creates, not the form it
takes.
University
Customer
Government
Local
Communities
Supplier
Firm
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
Competitor
organization @TC 2013
23. Ecosystem
- Characteristics of Knowledge Assets • Knowledge has no boundary. The market is an eco-system of
knowledge, which is composed of various ba inside and
outside of the organization.
• When an organization creates knowledge more efficiently
and effectively than the market, it internalizes knowledgecreating activities.
• The boundary is determined by the ideal image of the
knowledge system, appropriateness of knowledge assets,
justification cost of knowledge, interaction cost, and cocreating or cooperative relationships among stakeholders.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
24. Knowledge Asset in Embedded in Discipline/Kata/Way
Practice of relative values
Mutual interaction between
relative and absolute values
• GE
• What does your global
competitive environment
look like?
• In the last three years, what
have your competitors
done?
• In the same period, what
have you done to them?
• How might they attack you
in the future?
• What are your plans to
leapfrog over them?
Toyota
• Honda
even higher goals and
implement continuous
improve- ments without
settling with temporary
success.
n Observe the place of
manufacturing with a clean
slate and without bias, repeat
‘why?’ five times to the
subject.
n Understand one’s own
capability through comparison
internally and externally.
• 3-Gism: Be at the actual place
of work (genba), know the actual
product (genbutsu) and
situation (genjyou), be realistic
(genjitsuteki).
• Respect sound theory, develop
fresh ideas and make the most
effective use of them.
• A00 -What do you do this for?
(Ontological)
• A0 - What is your concept?
(Conceptual)
• A - What is your specification?
(Operational)
n Set
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
Practice of absolute values
organization @TC 2013
26. The Knowledge Leadership is…
• The process to exercise the synthesizing capability of the organization by
integrating the vision, dialogues, practice, ba, and environment.
• At the base of such leadership is phronesis.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
27. Aristotle’s Three Types of Knowledge
• Episteme (Scientific Knowledge)
– Universal, context-free and objective knowledge (explicit
knowledge)
• Techne (Skills and Crafts Knowledge)
– Practical and context-specific technical know-how
– (tacit knowledge)
• Phronesis (Practical Wisdom)
– Experiential knowledge to make context-specific decisions based
on one’s own value/ethics (high quality tacit knowledge)
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
28. Phronesis (Prudence, Practical Wisdom)
• A virtuous habit of making decisions and taking actions that
serve the common good.
• A capability to find a “right answer” in particular context.
• Deliberate reasoning and improvisation that comes from the
SECI process, which synthesizes particulars and generals.
• Can acquire only through high quality direct experiences.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
29. Six Abilities to Constitute Phronesis
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Ability to make judgment on goodness.
Ability to share contexts with others to create ba/shared
sense.
Ability to grasp the essence of particular situations/things.
Ability to reconstruct the particulars into universals using
language/concepts/narratives.
Ability to skillfully use any necessary means well to realize
concepts for common goodness.
Ability to foster phronesis in others to build resilient
organization.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
31. Judging What is Good
• Every sort of expert knowledge and every
• inquiry, and similarly every action and
• undertaking, seems to seek some good.
• Because of that, people are right to affirm
• that the good is ‘that which all things
• seek’.
– Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics
– Example: Self-sufficient values such as happiness.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
32. Judging by Philosophy
• Philosophy is more important than technologies. Such things as money and
technologies are just means to serve people…There is no meaning to a
technology if it does not consider people at the basis of it. What drives a
firm’s growth is philosophy…A true technology is a crystal of philosophy.
•
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
-Souichiro Honda
organization @TC 2013
33. Judging by Fundamental Question
• Our competitors are neither other
companies nor other stores, but our
customers' needs and wants. Our absolute
value is to answer the fundamental
questions of “what does the customer
want?”
• -Toshifumi Suzuki, CEO, Seven-Eleven Japan
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
34. Phronetic Leadership (2)
• Ability to share context with others
to create ba/shared sense.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
35. Joking as Context Sharing
•
Joking is very difficult. You have to grasp the
atmosphere of the occasion and the chance. It exists
only for that particular moment, not anywhere else. The
joke doesn’t work in any other timing…To joke is to
understand human emotions.
•
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
-Souichiro Honda
organization @TC 2013
36. Ba: Canon’s Asakai (Daily Morning Meeting)
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
37. Phronetic Leadership (3)
• Ability to grasp the essence of
• particular situations/things.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
39. Phronetic Experience
• When I see a motorcycle, I can see many
things. I should do such and such to
maneuver through the curve. Then I think
about the next machine. I can make the
machine faster if I do such and such…It’s
a natural progress into the next process.
• Souichiro Honda
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
40. In Touch with the Reality: Canon’s Mitarai Visiting the Factory
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
41. See Reality in Dynamic Context
• It is impossible to apply universal rules derived from
past experiences, since customers’ need keeps
changing and each store is operating in different
context. We are successful only by denying the past and
constantly reflecting on the future to find fundamental
solutions in each particular context.
• -Toshifumi Suzuki, CEO, Seven-Eleven Japan
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
42. Phronetic Leadership (4)
• Ability to reconstruct
• the particulars into universals using
language/concepts/ narratives.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
44. Strategy is a Creation of Stories
•
Strategy is a creation of events. Quantify your
objectives as much as you can. And develop a story to
crystallize the numbers by specifying the beginningmiddle-end story structure.
• -- Fujio Mitarai, CEO, Canon
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
45. Hypothesis Building
•
The concept of opportunity loss from unrealized sales is
invisible and difficult to grasp since it is buried In tacit insights
gained in particular context for each store. Rather than written
manuals, each employee is requested to think and act on his/her
subjective insights into the local market accumulated through
daily face-to-face interactions with customers.
•
Such subjective insights in particular contexts are objectified
through the process of hypothesis building and testing. It is not
good if you just see a tree, not a forest. Of course you have to
see the particular tree. But you have see to the entire forest as
well as the trees.
• -Toshifumi Suzuki, CEO, Seven-Eleven Japan
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
47. Strategy as Dialectic Process
•
The reality of strategic process is dynamic and full of
confusion and contradictions. In such a process, dialectic
thinking to synthesize contradictions is required. It is a way
to accept contradictions and make the decisions best
suited to the situation without losing the sight of the
goodness to be achieved.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
48. Man is a Collection of Contradictory Ideas
Leaders who accept and internalize the contradictory existence of humans and who
can accept purity and impurity are sought after.
• Man is a collection of contradictory ideas, all of which exist within man
without any feelings of uneasiness: beauty & ugliness, justice and
injustice, good and bad, optimism & pessimism, wildness &
intellectualism, diligence & laziness, and idealism & realism. This is
undeniable.
• The human attractiveness of the leader is difficult to articulate but it
seems to lie in the leader’s capability to synthesize these contradictions
through understanding that such a collection of contradictory ideas is
the character of human nature.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
Source: Iizuka, A. “Jinbutsu o dou miwakeruka,” WEDGE, March 2003
organization @TC 2013
49. Embracing Paradoxes
• Paradox is a way of life at Canon….Facing a
paradox, we embrace it and go ahead coping with it.
We are constantly on the move.
• -- Fujio Mitarai, CEO, Canon
•
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
50. Phronetic Leadership (6)
• Ability to foster phronesis in
• others to build a resilient
• organization.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013
51. Building Distributed Leadership
• I only have two eyes. There are several ten thousands part-time
works at Seven-Eleven Japan stores. If everyone can make a
judgment on his/her own, we have quite a few eyes. To do so,
everyone of us have to respect the fundamental rules of business.
• No one knows for sure how the society will change in future.
Because we don’t know, we keep tackling the difficult task to adapt
to changes. Everyday, I say that the most important thing is to adapt
to any changes.
•
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
-Toshifumi Suzuki, CEO, Seven-Eleven Japan
organization @TC 2013
53. A Knowledge-Based Organization is…
• An organization who practices the idealistic pragmatism which
synthesizes;
• Ontology: How to be
– -”For what do we live?”: the vision to the future and the commitment to it.
• Epistemology: How to know
– -”What is the truth?”: the SECI spiral which synthesizes objective and
subjective views.
• Creation: How one can change itself and the
environment
• Management is viewed as “a way of life” rather than a tool to
make money.
© Nonaka・Toyama・Konno
organization @TC 2013