Volume: 3, Issue: 4(2004)
pp. 347-372 DOI: 10.1142/S0219649204000936
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Full Text (PDF, 381KB)
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| Title: |
Knowledge Management Styles and Organizational Performance: An Empirical Study in a K-Space Framework
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| Author(s): |
Maen Al-Hawari
Corresponding author. Department of Information Systems,
University of Wollongong, Wollongong, AustraliaHelen Hasan Department of Information Systems,
University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia
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| Abstract: |
This paper addresses the relationships between certain attributes of
knowledge, knowledge management styles and organizational performance. From
an extensive study of the literature, an innovative knowledge space
(K-Space) model of organizational knowledge was developed as the first stage
of the research. This led to the identification of four knowledge management
styles and a framework that relates these styles to knowledge creation and
improved organizational performance. A survey instrument was developed to
measure the constructs contributing to the relationships in this framework
and mailed to 338 organizations in different Australian industries. The
results confirm that an organization can improve its performance through
better management of its knowledge capabilities. Using a MANOVA analysis,
the four knowledge management styles were found to be deployed in
significantly different ways by organizations in different industry types.
There is, however, in all organizations a particular benefit from deploying
a balance of knowledge management styles which combine the human and
technology perspectives. The findings of the study also demonstrate that the
K-Space model provides a basis for a new way of conceptualising knowledge
creation processes within organizations. |
| Keywords: |
Knowledge management styles; organizational performance; knowledge availability; knowledge codifiability; knowledge applicability; empirical study
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