Smith Schools HCIT
Center Opens The Knowledge Exchange
You
access a stock exchange to buy stock, the
futures exchange to trade grain, but where
do you go to trade in that rarest of
commodities, good ideas?
The Smith Schools Center for Human Capital,
Innovation, and Technology (HCIT) has the
answer in The Knowledge Exchange, a unique
gathering of research scholars and human
resource professionals at the Robert H.
Smith School of Business, held on April 25,
2003. Center Director Susan Taylor and
Associate Director Paul Tesluk presided over
a daylong discussion of one of the most
compelling topics in business today:
knowledge sharing among teams.
This is a perfect topic for the center to
bring forward, says Taylor. Our mission is
to explore the interface of human capital,
innovation, and technology -- and learn how
these resources can be managed to create
competitive advantage.
Marketers would argue that competitive
advantage lies in areas like pricing,
product distinction, and reputation, says
Tesluk, but in today's highly competitive
environment, firms need to look for an
advantage wherever they can find it.
Research shows that knowledge sharing among
teams is just such an advantage.
Tom Ruddy, director of human resources and
organizational development at Siemens
Corporation, presented the keynote
presentation, Using Teams to Leverage
Organizational Knowledge. Ruddy spent 13
years designing and implementing empowered
team strategies for Xerox's Worldwide
Customer Service organization. Drawing on
this experience in overseeing the
implementation of a worldwide knowledge
management system known as Eureka, and
leading Siemens human capital efforts, Ruddy
offered practical insights into the use of
technology to facilitate knowledge sharing
among teams. When you lay fiber-optic cable
through a jungle, says Ruddy, the experience
offers enormous benefits the next time you
do it. The challenge is capturing, and
sharing that information is essential.
Software programs, such as Siemens Sharenet,
have streamlined the process, but the
structured world we've come to admire in the
digital world presents distinct challenges
to human knowledge sharing.
Humans have exchanged knowledge throughout
history in all manner of stories, songs,
poetry, and its been effective, says Ruddy.
Today, the challenge is migrating those
essentially human forms of communication to
the computer. For example, Ruddy will talk
about the time a Xerox employee recorded a
sound into a knowledge management tool known
as Eureka. The technician used his personal
computer to record the sound the machine was
making. It was then added as an attachment
to the technical tip that was shared in the
electronic knowledge-sharing database. Ruddy
explained. When you heard that sound coming
out, the machine had a certain amount of
hours left before it failed. So when a
technician on the job hears that, he or she
says, Hey, I recognize that sound and knows
what to expect.
Other panel members included Kimberly Y.
Carter, quality coordinator for Bovis Land
Lease; Kimo Kippen, vice president of
Worldwide Learning Resources for Marriott
International; and David Moorehouse,
technical director of advanced composites
for Nurad Technologies.
The perspective they brought is that each of
them has had significant involvement in
leading or managing teams, says Tesluk. They
brought an important in-the-trenches
perspective from diverse areas and provided
an important source of knowledge exchange
for conference participants.