Principles of Knowledge Auditing: Foundations for Knowledge Management Implementation

Principles of Knowledge Auditing: Foundations for Knowledge Management Implementation

by Patrick Lambe
Principles of Knowledge Auditing: Foundations for Knowledge Management Implementation

Principles of Knowledge Auditing: Foundations for Knowledge Management Implementation

by Patrick Lambe

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Overview

A comprehensive theoretical and practical guide to the operating principles of knowledge auditing, illustrated with numerous case studies.

A knowledge audit provides an “at a glance” view of an organization's needs and opportunities. Its purpose is to improve an organization's effectiveness through a better understanding of the dynamics and levers of knowledge production, access, and use. However, this developing field is hampered by the lack of a common language about the origins and nature of knowledge auditing. In Principles of Knowledge Auditing, Patrick Lambe integrates the theory and practices of the field, laying out principles and guidelines for a clearer and more pragmatic approach to knowledge auditing that makes it more accessible to practitioners and researchers.

Lambe examines knowledge auditing in the context of the development of communications, information, and knowledge management in the twentieth century. He critiques and clarifies ambiguities in how knowledge audits are approached and described, as well as how the results are conveyed within organizations. He discusses the benefits and risks of knowledge management standards. Knowledge auditors, he says, need a common frame of reference more than they need standards. Standards have their uses, but they provide only markers and sign posts and are poor representations of the richness of the landscape. He concludes with a set of guiding principles for practitioners.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262373159
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 05/02/2023
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 424
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Patrick Lambe is Principal Consultant at Straits Knowledge. He is the author of Organising Knowledge: Taxonomies, Knowledge and Organisational Effectiveness and coauthor of the award-winning The Knowledge Manager's Handbook: A Step-by-Step Guide to Embedding Effective Knowledge Management in Your Organization.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1
I Recovering Our Past
1 Seeking to Understand Knowledge in Organizations 15
2 The History of Knowledge Audits 23
II Speaking Clearly about Audits
3 What is an Audit? A Definitional Approach 31
4 What Kind of Audit Is a Knowledge Audit? A Naturalistic Approach 43
5 What Are We Auditing? 63
III Drivers and Motivations
6 What Stimulated the Emergence of Knowledge-Related Audits? 77
7 Beginnings and Improvisations: Discovery Review, Inventory, and Participative Goal-Setting Audits 101
8 Authority Envy: Assessment Audits and Standards in Communication and Information Audits 127
9 The Battle for Standards in Knowledge Management 145
IV Speaking Clearly about Knowledge
10 Risky Metaphors 185
11 The Syllepsis Trap: When Choice of Language Becomes Problematic 191
12 The Language of Value: Assets and Capital 203
13 The Language of Value: Resources 227
14 Ascribing Value to Knowledge and the Implications for Influence and Control 245
15 The Inventory Audit: Auditing Knowledge Stocks 253
16 Unhelpful Dualisms: The Personal-Collective Dualism 261
17 Unhelpful Dualisms: The Tacit-Explicit Dualism 283
18 Typologies of Personal Knowledge 293
19 Typologies of Organizational Knowledge 301
20 Toward Integration: Typologies of Functional Knowledge 331
21 Conclusion: Possibilities 347
References 355
Index 393

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“This book provides a comprehensive and critical review of mainstream knowledge management from its inception to the current day. It also covers the role and nature of knowledge audits, but it is much more than that. Lambe writes in an engaging and rigorous style, and this book represents a major contribution to the field with clear lessons for future development.” 
—Dave Snowden, Director and Founder, the Cynefin Centre
  
“Knowledge auditing is a key element in the study of organizational knowledge, and no one I know knows more about this than Patrick Lambe. He has the distinct advantage of being both a practitioner and a theorist, which gives him a very practical perspective on a subject that can be too abstract and elusive to the user.” 
—Laurence Prusak, Principal of the Smart Mission Group; co-author of Working Knowledge
  
“Knowledge management has struggled to become a mainstream management practice for many organizations. How can that be? We are in the middle of a knowledge-driven economic era, where identifying and managing knowledge effectively and systematically should be one of the core activities for all organizations. This book is a great addition to the core knowledge management references, and it will benefit both practitioners and academics.” 
—Vincent Ribiere, Managing Director of the Institute for Knowledge and Innovation Southeast Asia (IKI-SEA), Bangkok University

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