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Seminar Notes On
'Clustering and Swarming as self-organising techniques in
virtual communities'.
Abstract: The survival of a business organisation depends on its
'intelligence'
- its ability to call on the intellectual capital of its members or to capture
new
knowledge from outside itself. 'Knowledge space' refers to the store of possible
information that may be generated within some cognitive system, constrained
only by the language or culture of that system. Organisations have captive
knowledge which may be 'explicit' in that it is written down or stored in some
data base or 'tacit' (implied) in that it resides in people's heads or in their
practical
skills or is unexpressed in some other way.
Business organisations are complex to the extent that their success depends on the dynamic interaction of teams or individual members which in turn
depends crucially on communication or information transfer within the
organisation. Information flows very fast and very freely on computer networks
and the self organising clusters of individuals are a result of this information
transfer. Yasmin Merali assessed the possible use of biological examples in
explaining the dynamic nature of communication networks in virtual
communities - i.e. those in contact via the computer network. David Snowden
exposed some of the myths of so called 'knowledge management' techniques,
introduced us to 'action based research' and offered a new model from the
IBM store.
Director of Complexity Research : Eve Mitleton- Kelly
London School of Economics
Houghton Street
London WC2A 2A
Presenters : David Snowden, IBM
Yasmin Merali, Warwick University
Compiled For The L.S.E.
by Geoffrey J.C. Higgs 19/3/00
Metaphors, analogies and models
The use of examples from biology is a well trodden path to understanding the
behaviour of complex systems. The natural world is after all the global
ecosystem in which we and all other organisms live out our lives and contains
species which are either in competition or collaboration or symbiotic in their
relationships. So it is natural for us to look for similarities between the way
animal communities live and our own social organisations. We can use biological
system as metaphors or analogies. If the metaphor seems to be working in
pointing up similar features we test it as a metaphor for explaining the
possible relationships that exist. Taken farther we may even build computer
models which simulate to some degree actual behaviour. But there is a limit.
True complex systems are evolving systems and as such are neither predictable
nor can be expected to repeat their
history in any exact way.
Birds, bees, ants and robots
Many animal social organisations display the characteristics of complex systems
in which the dynamic interaction of individuals both with each other and with
the environment give rise to emergent and often stable patterns on a macro
level. Human organisations consist of highly autonomous individuals, but we can
gain some insight into why they have the characteristics they do by looking at
the behaviour of animals. Why, for example, do birds fly in particular
formation, or bees swarm or ant colonies show a particular division of labour?
In an ant colony there may be 'stingers' and 'foragers'. When there is numerous
prey there are more stingers than foragers. When the prey is thin on the ground
there are more foragers. Stingers and foragers have different 'rules' of
behaviour
but the number of stingers and foragers in the community varies according to its
needs. Interactions between individuals lead to observed patterns of activity.
'Rule' one for a foraging ant might be 'find food and take it to the nest but
leave a chemical trail'. 'Rule' two might be 'if you're wandering about and you
come across a trail then follow it'. 'Rule three might be 'if you're not
carrying food and you haven't come across a trail then wander randomly until you
find one'. Put these rules together for an ant colony and you get a particular
kind of emergent behaviour. Models based on it offer a way to solve what is
known as the 'travelling salesman problem' which involves finding the shortest
route to service a number of randomly scattered clients. If robot ants are
programmed to behave as described above the shortest chemical trail routes to
food will be used by more and more ants. This is because those ants which use
the shortest routes will get back to the nest and get out again sooner than the
others. The observed feature is that there is a greater density of ants on the
shortest routes to food sources.
The immune system is a useful example in understanding how organisations adapt
to the environment. Antigens can be taken as the environmental condition that
leukocytes react to by producing antibodies. Suppose we have autonomous robots
that are programmed to deal with objects in the environment in certain ways.
Each individual robot 'experiences' its own particular portion of the
environment but in doing so at the same time feeds back information to other
robots. This activity builds up a collective history and a collective 'strategy'
which is constantly being modified depending on how appropriate it is to the
strategy of each individual robot. In working from such examples we conclude
that local responsiveness to environmental stimuli is important in gaining a
collective strategy for dealing with change. Low level coordinated individual
responses give emergent patterns to the whole and simple rules lead to complex
behaviour. Such a system gains a 'robustness' which is not dependent on any
single individual. If a particular individual robot becomes defunct another can
always take its place. Valuable insights can be gained by building such models,
though there is at present no mathematical theory that is sophisticated enough
to describe them, let alone the kind of patterns that might emerge in social
organisations in which there is a high degree of autonomy such as those of the
human kind.
Information transfer in human organisations
Human organisations consist of individuals or groups of individuals that
communicate with each other. There is no single identifiable network but a
network of networks. Individuals have a sense of identity within the
organisation depending on how it is organised. There is also a corporate
identity which is perpetuated but it is difficult to say where the boundary lies
- what or whom is in or out. The information that is passed between individuals
or groups of individuals may be codified in many different ways and at many
different levels of abstraction. Some networks are far more structured than
others. Information that is relevant to the organisation's operation may also be
stored in many different ways.
People, highly autonomous as they are, are nevertheless constrained by the rules
and culture of the organisation enabling it to be described and classified.
Economists, for example, make assumptions in defining what they see as an
economic community. They have to explain why communities grow up because of
trade. They have to explain how and why businesses cluster or swarm together in
certain locations, why they copy and collaborate with each other and how new
businesses start up.
For example, new operating systems in computer technology lead to new software
development which is very rapid. Suppose we have two technologies A and B, of
apparently similar but as yet untried merit. What would be the reason that
people would flock to A rather than B? They are not always obvious. If one
organisation chooses technology A then another may hesitate to choose B because
if it turns out to be inferior A will have a head start. Since success depends
'being in the swim' there is also a fear of being isolated so the overall result
is that there is a 'gold rush effect'. Positive feedback leads to innovation
swarming. New discoveries and information come together to have dramatic
effects.
Looked at from a complexity theory viewpoint we can say that there are certain
'attractors' operating, which means that if we were to plot the trends on graphs
we would see a certain kind of convergence. The urban concentration in Silicon
Valley occurred largely as a result of information 'spillover'. Companies which
had good competencies and good resources clustered because of collaboration and
they were in turn exploited by companies having less resources and competencies
and so on. The process becomes explainable or tractable if we make certain
assumptions such as the 'agents' that bring the process about are 'rational'.
That's how we do economics. We assume that agents are always motivated in a
certain way and use that assumption to start defining the system. As we become
increasingly sensitive to its complexity we have to pick out more and more
attributes with which to define it and there is increasing difficulty as we
attempt to give greater and greater autonomy to our agents.
In the case of human social systems, the problem of trying to be an 'independent
observer' becomes even more acute and because we are in the systems ourselves we
find the attributes we chose to define the systems are much harder to agree on.
We happily describe ants as being 'programmed' to do things, or we say birds
navigate by an 'instinctive' awareness of the position of the sun or the
configuration of the stars but we don't say that about humans so we have to talk
in terms of information. But information involves the notion of meaning and with
meaning the whole legitimisation of what constitutes knowledge becomes very
subjective.
'What counts as knowledge?'
If the problems are large in defining human organisations in a behaviouristic
way then we have to go to language and culture in order to make sense of them.
'Information space', or the realm of legitimate knowledge inside the language
and the culture is 'multidimensional' - which means it can be cut up in many
different ways. The problem of attribution is a social one and at the microlevel
comes down to value judgments. It can be looked at the macrolevel in terms of
the collective sympathy or resistance which determines whether or not an idea is taken up. Knowledge management is
therefore not really about 'managing' the knowledge or skills which people have
within an organisation but in 'making sense' of why something happened and
trying to influence the future by such intelligence. It's no good expecting a
metaphor to provide all the answers. Human social systems are unlike any other
animal system and largely indiscernible because we live in them. 'Biological
evolution', for example, may explain our evolution on the crude level of genetic
mutation subject to environmental pressures but 'fitness' in anthropological
terms is a very different matter. In the natural world we believe species get
selected for their ability to deal with the changing environment. They persist
if they have the requisite variety in their gene pool. Human organisation on the
other hand may get selected on value judgments. We often go for the best
regardless of diversity considerations. So we're saying that human behaviour
patterns are grounded in intentions. Looked at this way we can forge a
connection between say, some environmental practice and why it is imitated. It
is imitated because it is good. But if we try to unpack the idea of good
environmental practice then we have a very complex situation indeed.
Cultural evolution proceeds according to how we change our minds and knowledge
creation involves the kind of 'scanning', 'codification', 'diffusion' and
'absorption' that Max Boisot has worked on. It is language and culture that
condition the kind of behaviour that takes place in human organisations and it
is our language and culture which determine which patterns we pick. But in
information transfer there is also the problem of 'context dependency'.
Observations of environmental factors are always about particular situations
which for knowledge sake have to be abstracted and generalised. Too much
attention to the particular situation and generalisations get lost. Too little
description of the context and you inhibit information growth. So there's the
rub. But the proof of the pudding is in the eating; if the cognitive system is
inadequate so will be its strategy and the organisation will soon feel
uncomfortable. If we were thinking in scientific terms then we might say it was
time to shift the paradigm.
But paradigm shifts are not easily accomplished from inside an organisation. The
symptoms of an inadequate strategy, such as diminishing profits and disappearing
shareholders are easy to spot but the cure is more difficult. Restructuring an
organisation is not just an exercise in logistics. It involves changing the
'mindset' and to do this competencies and capabilities from outside the
organisation may have to be brought in.
It is the information space that has to be explored and understanding the
dynamic and relationships involved is important. Networks of relationships have
to be forged so that
new order is achieved and a 'phase transition' is effected.
Within an organisation there is always a set of core competencies and
capabilities and though it is often necessary to bring in outside expertise to
facilitate restructuring everybody in the organisation is a knowledge resource.
It is the members of the organisation that have to manage the parameters of what
they are and what the organisation is able to do. Co-operation is based on long
term payback and people will move and switch if it is unfavourable. Thus the idea
of a collective identity is a key motivator. The assumption that everybody is
motivated by money is crass but there has to be something which is analogous to
the reason that ants forage or birds flock. Autonomy implies choice. People who
volunteer knowledge need to be able to choose whether to do it or not, so at the
same time it is essential to nourish a sense of commitment.
Abstraction and self organisation
Ants, birds and bees are supposed to be motivated by instinct - whatever that
means. They are perhaps unaware of what the whole system looks like. People use
ideas and language to understand what they are and how they fit into an
organisation by a process of 'abstraction'. It is this which creates the
'observer' viewpoint and enables them to see the identity and coherence within a
structure. But this process is a social one of learning. Some animals learn
collectively more than others. Birds such as tits co-operate to get the cream
out of milk bottles whilst robins which are more individually territorial don't.
Chimpanzees learn to crack nuts or fish for ants within the social group.
Those outside it don't learn the trick. So social interaction leads to
co-evolution and engenders the idea of expectancy or trust. But from customs and
habits come rules and sanctions. It's surprising how well the biological
metaphor fits this. Tribal communities in Somaliland live in a dynamic and
dangerous situation. In the atmosphere of intertribal warfare these clans are
tightly self regulating and self organising and they are very robust. Violate
the institutional rules and you get severely punished or worst of all, thrown
out. Cyber communities might be said to operate in much the same way.
Identity is the way people see themselves as a member of the organisation and
the value judgments made about it will condition the ways in which they will
defend it. But there's a trade off between a stable community and getting
trapped in a 'mindset' where the dominant logic results in tunnel vision. We
need to have the flexibility of strategy to cope with a changing environment. We
need to have the flocking and clustering of new knowledge groups that spring
from the autonomy of agents and we need to avoid the normative 'communities of
practice' that like the medieval craft guilds were doomed to extinction when the
economics of the society changed.
Learning in an organisation is not a process of introversion, it is combining
the new in a creative way with the old. Things which challenge may be due to
exploration outside the organisation or be generated from inside. Whilst the 'topdown'
influence is important in perpetuating what an organisation is and what it does,
the 'bottom up' influence that springs from the autonomy of agents and contact
with the outside environment builds flexible strategy. Allowing agents to
associate with people outside the organisation ('outliers') who are not doing
what the core community does offers opportunity for diversity.
Competing within cyberspace means that we must handle dynamic networks and
agents must be multi- skilled and able to change roles. Organisations come
together at different times and places, disciplinal boundaries are crossed and
it is necessary to create a large enough 'footprint' to ensure a stable space
within the overall information network. If we have such 'flocking' and
'swarming' then the question arises as to how we recognise the boundaries of an
organisation. How do we decide what attributes we need to define our identity?
We need to use 'abstraction' in the informational space to move above
constraining definitions to choose attributes that reflect the patterns that are
emerging. We have to understand the 'attractors' and 'phase spaces'. Information
leads to swarming but it is also the cause of shape formation. Agents in the
business environment are like organisms on a 'fitness landscape' their
interaction touches the lives of everybody in the social eco-pace whether it be
in terms of collaboration or competition.
The perpetuation of an organisation and its identity implies 'closure'. How do
we reconcile this autopoietic idea with that of the 'complex adaptive system'
which implies 'openness'? The perpetuation of an organisation does not involve
closure to new meanings though sensitivity to new meanings may alter the nature
of an organisation. Social systems are not autopoietic in the way that
biological organisms are. The metaphor is inadequate if it implies a closing
down of thinking. The attributes by which we define our organisation may be
physically based, technologically based or culturally based which is why
attribution in terms of what is meaningful and what works is so important..
The seven sins of 'knowledge management'
Knowledge management as a prescriptive practice is based on seven fallacies:
1. That knowledge can be managed:
Because of a confusion between the nature of 'tacit' (implied) knowledge and
that which can be made fully explicit people have come to assume that the former
is easily convertible into the latter. This in turn has lead to the belief that
knowledge or knowledge development can be managed. This is false on the grounds
that we always know more than we can tell and we can always tell more than we
can write down. In short there is always a loss of context and content when these processes are carried out. Failure to
understand this has led to a huge waste of money invested in so called
'intellectual capital management' systems. The mistake is also to assume that
the nature of knowledge development is a bit like collecting a number of bits
which are then put together to make a whole, rather like building an aeroplane.
Such an approach neglects the dynamic nature of knowledge acquisition. It
involves the confusion between something which is merely 'complicated' and
something which is 'complex'. An aircraft is complicated but we can take it
apart and put it together again and it is always the same thing - the whole is
always an aggregate of the parts. A complex system, however, changes when we
take it apart and changes when we put together again. The belief that knowledge
can be managed in the way that we might manage the production line or the
quality control of a product is wrong. It is imposing a mechanical system
concept on one that is essentially organic in nature.
2. That organisations can be 'designed':
The belief that a human business organisation can be designed in the same way
that we might design a piece of machinery is a case of misplaced generalisation.
There is a tendency for management consultants to study five, ten or fifteen
companies over a period of five, ten, or fifteen weeks or months and produce
generalised models of 'best practice' that they assume are fully prescriptive
and imitating them will result in success. This kind of 'hypothesis based
consultancy' is fundamentally flawed. Its scientific metaphor is that of
Newtonian physics in which 'cause' is always assumed to be separate from
'effect' and that by gathering enough data on the relationship between the two
the effect can be determined by the manipulation of the cause. Again this
assumes a mechanical universe.
It is also a process of unwarranted generalisation. A bit like turning up in
Calais, seeing someone wearing glasses and concluding that all Frenchmen (or
women) do. Thinking about how people work in an organisation purely in terms in
terms of factory based production theory leads to the wrong sort of
organisational models. We need a new model in which the manager is not the
captain or navigator of the ship but rather the designer that sets the
parameters within which the ship can operate. A gardener rather than an
engineer. We can't produce drawings of a future organisation and hope to build
it. Once we see that an organisation is complex rather than merely complicated
we must try to start 'journeys' rather than aim for goals to be achieved.
3.The myth of the rational agent:
Most 'management science' consultants assume that individuals (or even groups of
individuals) behave on a rational basis if fed sufficient data. This imposes the
current model of computer based information flow onto interactions involving
people. It fails to recognise that the individual is part of a particular social
network and does not make each decision on a 'clean' basis. The way people
behave is not merely built up from their own interactions over time but the
'stories' passed down them by past generations. It is stories that largely
determine attitude and in some societies the 'script' is so structured that it
is impossible to break out of it.
4.Utilitarianism:
This is the belief that everything an agent does in a community or organisation
is based on the expectation of a 'return'. In most economic theory all
transactions are in terms of financial value.
Anthropological studies show that this is not the case in many societies
(perhaps
no society?) and most large business organisations tend to be tribal in nature
which involves status and deference. IBM has an overall staff of 380,000 but
this really consists of a network of tribes and dependencies or 'shadow'
networks that support each other.
Then again some businesses are run on feudal lines. Feudalism says that if
you control land, then everybody who lives on it and doesn't have any control of
it is your slave. In modern business organisations control of the budget is
analogous to control of the
land - anybody who has no say in it has to do whatever they are told.
5. A belief in Utopia:
In a recent edition of the 'Harvard Business Review' was an article stating the
'five qualities of leadership', implying that if you didn't have these qualities
you would never be a good leader. Making such value judgments and then
prescribing them 'willy nilly' is often found in current management consultancy.
Underlying the advice is the message: 'do it this way and everything will be
wonderful. The best advice is that it won't and rather than aim for such
perfection we should accept that nothing is ever perfect and be happy that for
now something appears to be working.
6. A belief in 'best practice':
This assumes that circumstances will remain the same and sometimes they do,
though inattention to how fast the business environment is changing has brought
down more companies than even the 'business process re-engineering' fashion that
has now fallen into disrepute. It is as well to remember that 'best practice' is
always past practice. Looking back in the business world is often a poor guide
to the future.
7. The organisation is merely a collection of individuals:
We have already looked at this fundamental mistake but it is often manifested in
the belief that if you optimise each individuals operation the organisation will
be optimised as a consequence. This is an entirely false view of the way people
interact and the kind of patterns that emerge from those interactions. Managing
people to achieve individual goals is only useful if as agents they are defined
as unalterable parts of an operation and that they work utterly independently.
In reality working in an organisation involves internal and external
relationships, the boundaries of which are sometimes rigid, sometimes loose and
sometimes constantly fluctuating.
The aim of exposing these fallacies is not to say that all traditional
methods of management science are worthless. If we happen to be sitting on top
of the only resource of something in the world and all we have to do is to dig
it up and sell it and optimise the process of doing so then fine. But even that
kind of captive market might find something else to use. What we have to do is
to see what part of our business process is accessible to a mechanical model and
what is truly complex. There is always a tendency to believe that the latest
theory should replace everything that went before, and people come out of Santa
Fe believing we should all embrace complexity and abandon traditional forms of
knowledge management and process re-engineering. We should remember that
Newtonian theory wasn't eclipsed by Heisenberg's 'Uncertainty Principle' or the
application of 'Quantum Theory'. We need to develop models in which present
knowledge management theory is a special case and that enables business
executives to recognise complexity when they come across it
'Action based research'
Helping an organisation to restructure initially involves 'action based
research'. The process of 'action based research' is basically to go in and
introduce a new 'model' or mode of thinking which disrupts the status quo and
then see how well the process can be restructured in terms of community,
strategy, culture, communication and knowledge exchange. There are four realms
or 'spaces' by which a business can be classified. But initially it is vital to
draw the 'boundaries of an organisation in terms of what it is and what it does.
A large amount of sense making is filling in boundaries to make them
distinctive. If we don't have 'solid' boundaries we end up trying to manage in
all four spaces. Many organisations tend to use a single model when they should
be looking at divergent ones. There's a handy metaphor to remember: 'If you go
to the top of a mountain and you find a plateau covered with mist you get lost easily. If you go to
the top and its a sharp point you don't get lost because the boundaries are
clear. You can navigate down the ridges and deal with the spaces.
Knowing the boundaries is vital in enabling members of an organisation to make
their own decisions and act. The poet Robert Frost tells a story of two farmers
repairing the fences between the two lands. The work is hot and tiring and one
says to the other,
'why are we doing this, my pine trees won't eat your apples'. But the other
farmer only says, 'good fences make good neighbours'. We should think about how
we manage children. We don't design their environment but we do hope to set them
on a course
with particular values and customs which we think will enable them to survive.
We mustn't draw the boundaries too tight otherwise we will get rebellion and we
will lose authority, but if they're too loose chaos is likely to ensue.
Four 'realms' by which a business can be classified according to it knowledge
'management'
|
1
Knowledge flow is sufficient to keep the business process going |
2
Knowledge flow
enables the process to be optimised. |
|
4
Knowledge creation and exchange is chaotic. |
3
Knowledge is created and exchanged in a complex way. |
1. This state or realm describes an organisation where the current
information flow is sufficient for the process. Increase the information flow by
new knowledge capture and the business becomes less efficient. You are exploring
rather than exploiting. Reduce the information flow and you may be able to
exploit the knowledge you have to a greater degree but you reduce the
possibility of diversification. Most of the time people have sufficient
knowledge for the business to run smoothly but a cyclical phase of disruption
should be introduced to avoid 'entrainment' and conservative thinking which
prevents an advance to new markets.
2. This is the realm of 'hypothesis based' consultancy. The information flow is
sufficient to allow the efficient use of existing knowledge and the promulgation
of new knowledge. But the working paradigm is insufficient if the external
business environment changes fast (in much the same way that determinist physics
is inadequate at subatomic levels). However if you don't have a high dynamic of
change then the pursuit of 'best practice' is a legitimate one.
3. This is a business process that is complex in the way we have defined it.
It is where the
……interaction of agents within the organisation gives a high information
flow in existing and new knowledge but the organisation may still fail in
dealing with environmental change because its sense of community, strategy,
culture and communication is inadequate. Once a situation is recognised as
complex it is possible to make small changes which cost very little money but
can improve the situation enormously. A bank in Bangledesh provides an example.
There was a massive problem with debt repayment and an investigation was
launched into the patterns of repayment including a profile of the kind of
person likely to default and the adequacy of controls and checks and so on. More
and more questionnaires and employee guidelines were produced but the problem
refused to go away. The reason was that the situation was being treated as
merely complicated instead of complex. In fact the more rules were introduced
into the system the easier it became to default. Eventually someone found the
solution. Anybody could have a loan provided four other members of the village
took out a loan at the same time and they all guaranteed each others loans. In
retrospect the solution seems obvious. A person knows others in his or her
village in a way no bank manager can know them. Each person has respect and
social obligations in the village and would be ashamed to default. Nobody is
going to support another in taking out a loan unless they really believe it will
be repaid. Simple intervention produced dramatic results. One of the ways in
which a complex process is detected is by reviewing the solution. In retrospect
the solution often makes rather obvious sense but we could never have predicted
it in advance. Rationalisation in retrospect is like the difference between
understanding in a Newtonian type paradigm in which three dimensional space is
absolute and understanding in one which is multidimensional and relative. From
an information or knowledge standpoint we can say that 'meaning is always
retrospective but never predictable'. Meaning is an emergent property that
arises from a certain discourse level in a community. Action based research
involves increasing discourse levels and responding to the emerging new meaning.
4. If a business finds itself in this realm it is important not to increase
discourse levels because that will only increase the turbulence or chaos. David
gave the example of a colleague who was asked to deal with an organisation in
this situation. He didn't do any analysis but rather made certain changes (which
he didn't articulate) and noted the impact on such things as cash flow, the
order book, and the perception of the shareholders. The changes were simple but
they introduced 'baffles' which redirected the flow and reduced the turbulence
so that the business could be moved into other realms.
The principle of sense making is to understand into which realm a process
falls and to what extent. It is more important to know 'what we do not do',
rather than what 'we must do' just in the same way that we learn more from
failure than we do from success. David's work on 'storytelling' shows that
stories about failure are more valuable than those about success. Communities
which rely heavily on narrative to pass wisdom down the generations use
archetypal accounts to convey key cultural mores. Some companies have even
introduced fictitious archetypal characters so that employees can tell stories
about failure without blame being attributed which is very important to a
'lessons learnt' program as opposed to a 'best practice' one.
Communities or cultures can be managed either from a ritual or a rule basis. If
you define the individual in terms of his or her uniqueness then you tend to get
a system of rules for the individual. If you define the individual solely in
terms of the part he or she plays in the collective then you tend to get a
ritual based community. Go to a North Eastern U.S consultancy and you will find
the former. Go to a West Coast company and it's ritual communication based.
There is a word in Welsh which in English is roughly pronounced 'cunevin' (spelt
'Cynefin'). A literal translation is 'habitat' though this trivialises the word
which actually
means 'the place to which you belong, your community, history and spiritual
home'. The relevance for us here is that everything we do has some connections
with our collective history and community based perceptions. Interpretation of the present and
action in the future is determined by perception of the past. Management
consultancies tend to assume a 'green field', something they can design from
scratch - which is an engineering approach. But in real human communities you
get 'cynefin' which implies a certain continuity.
'Learning' in the context of what an organisation does is ambiguous between
inculcating that which is already known and allowing for individuals to discover
new things. Levels of language have a huge impact on learning within an
organisation. We have to always assess 'intellect capital' in terms of knowledge
transfer. In 'communities of practice' experts tend to 'close' the language
because they assume other experts have been through the same initiation into the
jargon. But such expert language enables
communication at very high levels of abstraction. High levels of abstraction
enable density of communication but the language is highly symbolic. In a
culture references to past experience, values or beliefs are often unstated.
Within a culture 80% of active knowledge transfer can be in the form of symbolic
language. This may be at the national language level and still have an important
impact on the organisation. Recently the number of people in the world who speak
English as a second language exceeded those who speak it as a first language.
Speaking English as a first language is now a disadvantage in a large
international company because those that do communicate less well because of
assumed cultural reference
IBM's Model
IBM employees work in different countries and often from home using the
computer. There are few rules as far as 'virtual' collaboration and to date
there are 75,000 of these collaboration clubs and some 55 formal ones. So this
'shadow community' is one in which people are self organising and creating vast
tracts of knowledge that the company could never hope to manage formally. In
fact individuals sometimes do not wish to collaborate formally for fear that
their ideas will be taken by those they do not know and who will give them no
credit. When forced to do so they will often resort to 'camouflage'.
Because IBM would neither wish to nor be able to manage all the 'spaces' and
'boundaries' of such groups they use a process which has been dubbed 'just in
time knowledge management'. The company has created structures which enable it
to call up and move information across boundaries on a 'just in time' basis.
This started more or less accidentally when it was 'flagged' that a virtual 'teamroom',
including David Snowden in the UK were working on 'story' - the use of narrative
to pass on knowledge or expertise. Once it was put out that a report was in
progress and any information would be welcome there was a number of e mails from
people interested which became a flood when an article was published in the
Harvard Business Review. Although David was about to write what would have been
a very sizable report the questions in the discourse enabled him to focus on
what was really relevant and at what level of abstraction.
IBM now have a search engine called 'tacit' that can trawl the 'team rooms' on
the intranet and pick up any key words that might give a clue to information on
any current problem that they have. An e-mail is then sent requesting help and a
task force can be quickly assembled. But privacy is respected in that only key
words and not text are picked up. Also whether a person responds is up to them.
If for example you are looking for an expert on 'story' you may not pick up
David Snowden's but he gets informed that you are looking. If he knows that you
are a person that's likely to steal his ideas he doesn't respond. If you're
someone that he knows and trusts then he might phone. In a bureaucratic
organisation the thief would prosper but in this kind of 'shadow' system he or
she gets starved of the access to knowledge on which the exploitation depends.
Again we have an example of a system that is complex in that individuals cluster
and form their own information groups. IBM does not 'manage' this process, but
by tapping in to it it has access to a huge intellectual capital.
In a rapidly changing business world the ability to tap into such business
eco-systems is a key to survival. Using a tool like 'tacit' to identify where
communities that are useful exist, enables the company to create a structure
from the 'shadow' world and make it formal if it wishes. We cannot form a
community of this size by management fiat, the clustering and swarming that
occurs is a natural consequence of the dynamic though we could organise a
voluntary weekend, issue a paper, organise discussion or chat lines and see what
will swarm. Clustering and swarming lead to sustainable communities which can
subsequently be made formal. Survival in business may well come down to how fast
you can access your own information space and how fast you can access other
people's.
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