Article(electronic)January 24, 2005

The dimensions of process knowledge

In: Knowledge and process management: the journal of corporate transformation ; the official journal of the Institute of Business Process Re-engineering, Volume 12, Issue 1, p. 65-76

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Abstract

AbstractMany researchers are of the view that a firm's knowledge assets include its structure, culture, processes, employees and physical artifacts. The knowledge management (KM) literature has tended to emphasize employee knowledge as a locus for KM efforts. While this viewpoint is perfectly rational and justifiable, there is also a considerable amount of knowledge embedded in the firm's operating procedures. In this paper, we espouse viewing organizational knowledge from this perspective and propose a framework to manage process knowledge. Starting with a definition, classification of processes, and a characterization of the knowledge generation process, we provide seven dimensions by which process knowledge can be viewed: structure, personnel and coordination, performance and tools, discourse, results, quality and implications. They are intended to serve as a starting point for managing process knowledge. The dimensions are illustrated with several examples and implications of the framework are pointed out. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Languages

English

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN: 1099-1441

DOI

10.1002/kpm.218

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