Knowledge Management:

Managing Knowledge Workers

Case Study:  Silicon Valley

Attracting People to Opportunities, Challenges, and Growth

By Vadim Kotelnikov. Main source of information: "Relentless Growth", Christopher Meyer

"All employees ought to be viewed as consultants." – Ed McCracken, CEO, Silicon Graphics

Getting the Best Response from Knowledge Workers

  1. Professional Status and Identity

    • Peers and networking – using public praise, positions as a "chief scientist" or corporate fellow, and even peer review as extremely powerful motivators; using peer networks actively for solving problems.

    • Keep current, keep happy – facilitating the latest information and knowledge exchange, even with competitors, as an essential component of sustained success.

    • Showcase professional contributions – publishing or presenting at industry conferences; "what really drives highly educated knowledge workers is pride in accomplishment."

    • The ultimate skin: gain sharing – stock options, unlimited percentage of profits.

  2. Providing Challenging Work...

  3. Minimizing Management Overhead...

 

The Valley's Approach to Gain Sharing

Five Beneficial Effects

  1. It evokes entrepreneurial spirit which in turn heightens energy and pushes creativity

  2. It forces people to look beyond technology to the value it creates for the customer

  3. It makes technical people better team players, because they realize that they cannot deliver customer value unless their efforts mesh with others

  4. It makes technical people greedy – as a result, people won't waste their time on ideas that can't be commercialized

  5. It eliminates resentment, demotivation, and turnover that frequently occur when the technologist receives only a patent certificate, while corporate managers get wealthy from stock options

Related Chapters

Innovation-friendly Organization

Flat Organizational Structure

Case Studies

Silicon Valley: Relentless Approach to Innovation

Silicon Valley 2010 Goals

Silicon Valley Incorporated – a Virtual Company

Silicon Valley is often characterized as a community where people really don't work for individual firms – everyone works for a virtual company: Silicon Valley Incorporated. "Skills are both so abundant and in such demand that most people could quickly contribute at several Valley firms." A unique Valley norm is that when you are facing a really tough problem, you may contact anyone who may help, regardless of where they work, even if they work for competitors. "The inducements that companies have historically used to secure loyalty have lost their clout; compensation and benefit party is essential to get people through the from door, but it won't be sufficient to retain them."

Flat and Participative Management Structures

Organizational and management structures in Silicon Valley firms are flat and participative. In a meeting rooms at most Silicon Valley companies, the mix of people, expertise, and ages is striking. More importantly, the degree of candor is tremendous. You don't expect to find such level of frankness in hierarchical companies.

In more direct cultures, such as Intel or Sun Microsystems, you can witness easily an intense argument between a senior executive and an entry-level engineer. Status and seniority aren't based on age or position; they're based on what you know and can deliver.

 

 

The Collective Power of Passion

Silicon Valley leaders recognized the value of passion and continually try to evoke, rather than mute, people passions. Once evoked, the passion is tough to control. It can result in a series of twenty-hours workdays, fun and pranks. The passion to go well beyond the extra mile is what drives people to create insanely great products and services.

The spirit and passion of Silicon Valley is best seen at the extremes of the workdays. "Flex time" means that there's not time when people aren't willing to probe and test new opportunities.

Idea Evaluation: "The Five Minute Rule"

Several firms in Silicon Valley have installed a "five minute rule." The rule permits anyone to suggest an idea.  Then for the first five minutes after the idea is expressed only positive comments can be made.  By the time the idea is talked about for five minutes it has usually spun into an impromptu brainstorm session that cultivates truly great ideas and some form of the discussion is often implemented... More

 

 

Map

Ranked #1

Search

Glossary

Free Downloads

  Products

Testimonials

Training

 Contact

We invented Business e-Coaching in 2001

Today, we have customers in 100+ countries!

Our customers:

3M, ABB, Adidas, Alcatel, American Express, Bayer, Boeing, British American Tobacco, BP, Canon, Cisco, Citigroup, Colgate, Corning, Deloitte, Ernst & Young, Fujitsu-Siemens, GE, Goldman Sachs, HP, Hitachi, Huyndai, IBM, Intel, Johnson & Johnson, JP Morgan Chase, KPMG, Lufthansa, Microsoft, Motorola, Nokia, Oracle, Renault, Samsung, Shell, Siemens, Sony, United Bank of Switzerland

Ten3 Mini-courses: SMART & FAST sets Full version of Ten3 Business e-Coach Ten3 Business e-Coach (home page)

Ten3 Business e-Coach

Inventor, Author & Founder – Vadim Kotelnikov

© Vadim Kotelnikov, GIVIS