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Balanced Organization: 5 Basic Elements
Corporate
Capabilities (Water):
Benefits of Knowledge Communities
Knowledge communities organized around the principles of
entrepreneurship have the best
chance at success. Members of these communities – exciting, entrepreneurial, and
highly profitable – would emulate
entrepreneurs
acting less like followers and more like empowered founders
and builders of new organizational value.
Three Steps to
Establishing Knowledge Communities
Use entrepreneurial approaches to organize
knowledge communities
within your organization to give it what it needs most –
radical innovation. To establish
cross-functional knowledge communities in your organization from scratch,
you may need to go through the following three stages1:
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Information sharing – through
task forces, cross-departmental activities, e-mail.
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Cross-departmental Cooperation
– through
cross-functional teams
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Knowledge community – a vision of knowledge
community has been embraced by the organization; supportive culture and
connectivity established
10 Roles of an
Inspirational Leader
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Build teams and promote and teamwork,
leverage diversity.
Teamwork is essential for competing in today's global arena.
Build a star team, not a team of stars. Diversity of thought,
perception, background and experience enhance the creativity and
innovation. A team should not just be diverse; it has to make the
most of it. Involve everyone, facilitate cross-pollination of ideas,
build and empower
cross-functional teams if you wish to
harness the power of diversity. Challenge people from different
disciplines and
cultures to come up with something better together and achieve
creative breakthroughs...
More
Case in Point
British Petroleum
British Petroleum has a worldwide reputation for commitment to
knowledge management (KM).
BP became one of the first few companies to treat knowledge management as a
separate discipline when it established a Knowledge Management Team (KMT) in
1997.
In order to integrate the efforts of the
business units engaged in the same business activities, they were organized
into peer groups.
They met periodically to discuss the performance of their
businesses. The purpose of the reorganization was to
facilitate knowledge sharing and build
synergies, i.e. to exchange
knowledge and synergize creative capabilities and expertise of the employees
working in different business units of BP. ..
More
Case in Point
GE
General Electric (GE)
Work-Out "Town Meetings"
gave the corporation access to an unlimited resource of imagination and
energy of its talented employees.

"Nobody wears a tie at our quarterly
two-days meetings," says
Jack Welch."
We take a coffee breaks for almost an hour sometimes so people can swap
ideas. We bring in an outside speaker to every meeting – the heads of
Wal-Mart, Pepsi-Cola, and Compaq. We have dinner together and drinks after
eating. We run this place like a family grocery store."2

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