Why some knowledge is also information, also vice versa, and what to do about it.
Not all knowledge is information, not all infomation is knowledge. However some knowledge exists also as information, and therefore needs to be managed by both disciplines in parallel.
This blog post is about the knowledge continuum, the relationship between knowledge and information, and how information management and knowledge management both handle the overlap between the two. This is still a thorny topic, and there are still organisations that think information management and knowledge management are essentially the same thing.
But they aren’t, and here’s why.
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The Knowledge continuum |
The continuum
- There is the knowledge you don’t know you have – the deep tacit knowledge, which is intimately linked with the person themselves, and which can only be deployed by deploying the person;
- There is the knowledge you know you have but haven’t yet expressed – explicit knowledge by the original definition (knowledge that can be readily articulated, codified, accessed and verbalised), or sometimes referred to as implicit knowledge. This knowledge can be transferred form one person to another by bringing them together in conversation;
- This knowledge then, in conversation, moves to the next stage of the continuum and becomes knowledge you have expressed but not recorded. This is explicit uncodified knowledge – spread through conversation, and open to being recorded.
- Finally there is knowledge you have recorded – explicit codified knowledge in the form of documents or recordings which contain know-how, and which can guide or advise others towards action. Here are your recipes, your tips and hints, your guidance notes, training material, best practices, standard operating procedures and checklists.
As knowledge moves from the left of the continuum to the right, it loses richness and context, but gains in both manageability and robustness. By robustness I mean that much of the deep tacit knowledge may be a combination of real knowledge, options, biases and falsehoods (see here for a discussion of tacit knowledge and cognitive bias) and it is only through conversation and synthesis that these opinions are tested and become validated as knowledge.
Information and Knowledge are not exclusive alternatives in some sort of Western Dualism, and something in our stage 4 above can be both information and knowledge.
However there is one more item on our continuum.
- The codified explicit knowledge, which is held in the form of documents, finds itself rubbing shoulders with other documents – the documents which are not codified knowledge at all.
The grey zone, and the relationship between information management and knowledge management.
However I would argue that class 4, being both information and knowledge, needs to be addressed by both disciplines.
- Codified knowledge, because it is in the form of information, is managed as information. It needs to comply with the IM requirements and needs to be categorised with the correct metadata using the correct taxonomy or ontology, and needs to follow the rules of information architecture and information lifecycle.
- Because it contains knowledge, it needs to comply with knowledge management, and the knowledge which the document contains needs to be valid, up-to-date, and structured in such a way as to be maximally useful to the reader.
- Knowledge Management and Information Management are two separate but complementary disciplines.
- Knowledge Management focuses on Knowledge, with the aim of developing and deploying collective know-how for business improvement. Information Management focuses on information, with the aim of getting the right information to the right people at the right time.
- Where knowledge is carried in the form of information, as codified knowledge within documents, then to these documents both disciplines are applicable. Information management is concerned with management of the document itself, knowledge management with the contents of the document.
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