JKM2005 AbstractA Strategy-Based Ontology of Knowledge Management Technologies
Andre Saito, Katsuhiro Umemoto and Mitsuru Ikeda
Abstract
Purpose – To distinguish and describe knowledge management (KM)
technologies according to their support for strategy.
Design/methodology/approach – This study employed an
ontology development method to describe the relations between technology, KM
and strategy, and to categorize available KM technologies according to those
relations. Ontologies are formal specifications of concepts in a domain and
their inter-relationships, and can be used to facilitate common understanding
and knowledge sharing. The study focused particularly on two sub-domains of the
KM field: KM strategies and KM technologies.
Findings – 'KM strategy' has three
meanings in the literature: approach to KM, knowledge strategy, and KM
implementation strategy. Also, KM technologies support strategy via KM
initiatives based on particular knowledge strategies and approaches to KM. The
study distinguishes three types of KM technologies: component technologies, KM
applications, and business applications. They all can be described in terms of
'creation' and 'transfer' knowledge strategies, and 'personalization' and
'codification' approaches to KM.
Research limitations/implications – The resulting framework
suggests that KM technologies can be analyzed better in the context of KM
initiatives, instead of the usual approach associating them with knowledge
processes. KM initiatives provide the background and contextual elements
necessary to explain technology adoption and use.
Practical implications – The framework indicates three
alternative modes for organizational adoption of KM technologies: 1) custom
development of KM systems from available component technologies, 2) purchase of
KM-specific applications, or 3) purchase of business-driven applications that
embed KM functionality. It also lists adequate technologies and provides
criteria for selection in any of the cases.
Originality/value – Among the many studies analyzing the role of
technology in KM, an association to strategy has been missing. This paper
contributes to fill this gap, integrating diverse contributions via a clearer
definition of concepts and a visual representation of their relationships. This
use of ontologies as a method, instead of an artifact, is also uncommon in the
literature.
Keywords – knowledge management, technology, strategy, ontology,
implementation
Paper type – Research paper
|