3 ways to look at the KM Paradigm Shift
Here is another couple of ways to characterise the KM paradigm shift.
Image from wikimedia commons |
When I looked at this topic in 2009, I saw the KM paradigm shift as a shift from seeing knowledge as personal and individual property, to seeing it as collective. I presented the shift as follows:
The “individual to collective” culture shift
From | To |
I know | We know |
Knowledge is mine | Knowledge is ours |
Knowledge is owned | Knowledge is shared |
Knowledge is personal property | Knowledge is collective/community property |
Knowledge is personal advantage | Knowledge is company advantage |
Knowledge is personal | Knowledge is inter-personal |
I defend what I know | I am open to better knowledge |
Not invented here (i.e. by me) | Invented in my community |
New knowledge competes with my personal knowledge | New knowledge improves my personal knowledge |
other people’s knowledge is a threat to me | Shared knowledge helps me |
Admitting I don’t know is weakness | Admitting I don’t know is the first step to learning |
Here is another way to look at this shift, taken from a paper on The Learning Organisation, by organisational Psychologist Gitte Haslebo, translated by Maja Loua Haslebo.
Shift to a learning organisation
From | To |
Knowledge has permanent validity | Knowledge has temporary validity |
Knowledge = Adding of information from the outside | Knowledge = Insight created from within |
Learning activates the intellect | Learning activates thoughts, values, emotions and action |
The right answers must be found | The central questions must be formulated |
The expert finds the right solution | New ways and new methods are co-created by the employees |
This mirrors the transition from Knower to Learner, and Gitte suggests it is accompanied by a shift in the attitudes of managers and knowledge workers to transition from the attitudes we learned at school to the new attitudes we need at work.
Shift in learning attitudes
From | To |
Do not make mistakes | Learn from your mistakes |
Do not reveal that there is something you do not know | It is a good thing to admit that there is something you do not know |
Do not make a fool of yourself | It is important to explain what you wonder about. |
Know that the teacher is always right | Know that your manager may be wrong. |
What counts is the individual achievement | What matters is teamwork |
If you ask the person sitting next to you, you are cheating | When there is something you do not know, ask your colleague |
So there are 3 ways to look at the shift, with significant overlap between them. They give you some ideas of the culture you need to aim for in KM – the sort of attitudes and behaviours that a learning organisation, and the people within it, should exhibit.
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