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Intellectual Capitalism: Does KM = IT?

Of all the business trends of the past decade, perhaps none — possibly excepting reengineering — is more closely associated with technology than knowledge management. KPMG LLP’s Chief Knowledge Officer Michael Turillo says that “knowledge management cannot be done without technology.”

Maybe not. But knowledge management is in danger of being perceived as so seamlessly entwined with technology that its true critical success factors will be lost in the pleasing hum of servers, software and pipes.

Yogesh Malhotra, founder, chairman and CKO of the @Brint Institute in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and @Brint LLC, a Web site devoted to knowledge management (http://www.brint.com), has identified some myths that surround the murky confluence of information technology and knowledge management.

Myth:Knowledge management technologies deliver the right information to the right person at the right time. This idea applies to an outdated business model. Information systems in the old industrial model mirror the notion that businesses will change incrementally in an inherently stable market, and executives can foresee change by examining the past. “The basic premise is that you can predict…how and what you’ll need to do and that IS can simplify this and do it efficiently,” Malhotra says. The new business model of the Information Age, however, is marked by fundamental, not incremental, change. Businesses can’t plan long-term; instead, they must shift to a more flexible “anticipation-of-surprise” model. Thus, it’s impossible to build a system that predicts who the right person at the right time even is, let alone what constitutes the right information.

Myth:Information technologies can store human intelligence and experience. Technologies such as databases and groupware applications store bits and pixels of data. “But they can’t store the rich schemas that people possess for making sense of data bits,” says Malhotra. Moreover, information is context-sensitive. The same assemblage of data can evoke different responses from different people. “Many information textbooks say that, while people come and go, their experience can be stored in databases. But unless you can scan a person’s mind and store it directly into a database, you cannot put bits into a database and assume that somebody else can get back the experience of the first person.”

Myth:Information technologies can distribute human intelligence. Again, this assumes that companies can predict the right information to distribute and the right people to distribute it to. Compiling a central repository of data for people to access doesn’t solve the problem either. “The fact of information in a database doesn’t ensure that people will see or use the information,” Malhotra says. “Most of our knowledge management technology concentrates on efficiency and creating a consensus-oriented view. The data therein is rational, static and without context.”

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