Dr
Neil Béchervaise
NB
Consulting (Australasia) Pty Ltd
Exchanging
Payload Knowledge:
Knowledge Exchange in Consulting Communities of Practice
Kevin
M. McKenzie
and
Neil E. Béchervaise
Abstract
Managing relationship
capital in organisations may be seen as the only form of long-term
strategic competitive advantage, since community-based relationships
facilitate the exchange and creation of knowledge. Viewing knowledge
as something that is socially constructed and inseparable from the
communities of practice in which it is held is an alternative paradigm
to the codification and storage strategy for knowledge management.
Through a case study
examination of consultants, a process-based model of the interpersonal
knowledge exchange steps that take place was developed and is presented.
By focusing on payload knowledge (a concept that emerged from the
research data as comprising the mix of tacit and explicit knowledge
required to solve problems for clients), the interpersonal knowledge
exchange process is shown to be predicable in terms of passing through
eight identifiable stages, yet unpredictable in terms of knowing
how each community interaction will lead to payload knowledge. In
this model, the process of sourcing, handover and implementation
of payload knowledge is seen to be an artistic endeavour, characterised
by social community based exchanges that hop the consultants
toward their specific contextual need.
A key advantage of the
interpersonal process described is the decontextualisation and recontextualisation
process that is carried out at both the request negotiation stage
and the knowledge handover stage of the process. This process uses
the community's shared language, mental models, social etiquette
and cultural norms to compress and funnel the meaning of the knowledge
into a form that can be transferred meaningfully to the requesting
consultant (payload knowledge).
Consultants prefer this
interpersonal process primarily because the decontextualisation
and recontextualisation process allows them to exchange payload
knowledge that is directly and specifically relevant to their current
client context and to the problems they need to solve. The process
saves consultants time, and provides an opportunity to confirm their
personal knowledge as up-to-date and relevant to the specific context.
By using the interpersonal process, consultants abide by the community's
social etiquette, which dictates an interpersonal process as the
preferred exchange mechanism. The interpersonal process allows them
to practice and learn the consulting community's professional artistry
and, in the process, enjoy the exchange experiences.
Through understanding
the process and the reasons that consultants prefer the interpersonal
knowledge exchange process, it is anticipated that managers will
be better able to produce a knowledge-based sustainable competitive
advantage for their firms based through improved relationship capital.
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