Creation, sharing, and utilization of knowledge
A critical evaluation of the extent to which the creation, sharing, and utilization of knowledge is central to the Resource-Based View of competitive advantage.
Fabrice Tshiyoyi Banyingela
Theories of Management
UU-MBA-712-ZM
17 March 2024
1. Introduction
Businesses strive to
increase profits and maintain sustainability by gaining market share leadership
through innovative and unique attributes over competitors. Dasgupta and Gupta
stated that “sustainable development cannot happen without innovation. The
challenge before every organization is to develop innovation strategies that
not only respond to changes in the environment and societal pressures but also
consider the needs and expectations of various stakeholders” (Dasgupta &.
Gupta, 2009, p.204). Businesses can achieve this by prioritizing knowledge
management and innovation strategies, allowing them to effectively adapt to external
pressures. Knowledge drives innovation by providing a foundation and
inspiration, driving meaningful change and progress in various fields.
Innovation is crucial for a business's success, bringing positive change and
improvement to products, services, or methods. Neglecting this management
strategy could be detrimental to the business's survival and industry. Global
economic growth is significantly influenced by a country's competitiveness of
companies. The competition drives companies’ ability to meet consumers’ needs
through production and increase revenues to remain sustainable. This type of
environment fosters growth in different sectors of any industry. Thus,
Organizations should continuously invest in learning to adapt to the evolving
business environment. Dasgupta and Gupta (2009) emphasize the importance of
organizations focusing on their organizational resources and capabilities to
face the turbulence of external business. Knowledge is identified as a crucial
strategic resource, making knowledge creation, sharing, and utilization the
center of innovation for business development and sustainability. Therefore,
this paper explores the role of knowledge creation, sharing, and utilization in
management for innovation and boosting any organization’s competitive edge,
referencing Dasgupta et Gupta's work.
The success of a firm – RBV
of Competitive Edge
The Resource-Based View (RBV) is a
strategic management theory that suggests an organization's competitive
advantage is achieved through effective knowledge management of its assets. It
emphasizes the importance of strategic management that focuses on internal
resources and capabilities as a source of competitive advantage rather than external
factors. It also emphasizes mobilizing and organizing tangible assets like
technology, premises, and equipment, and intangible assets like trademarks,
reputation, and expertise. A
knowledge management plan is essential for organizations to foster a safe
learning environment, enabling employees to generate new knowledge and retain
it for future use. This plan facilitates the sharing of existing knowledge
among members, with management guiding them to achieve strategic goals and
objectives. Knowledge
incorporates an organization's understanding of services, products, processes,
mistakes, successes, and customers.
Existing resources alone
cannot guarantee an organization's success. Research
indicates that businesses that fail to invest in intellectual capital, such as
knowledge, can be severely impacted. Knowledge can be explicit, tacit, or
cultural. Explicit knowledge is available to everyone and can be documented or
codified. Tacit knowledge is personal experience and skills, difficult to
transfer but crucial for problem-solving, innovation, and social cohesion.
Cultural knowledge refers to shared beliefs within a community. Each type of
knowledge influences employees' motivation to innovate. Countries like Saudi
Arabia prioritize modesty, limiting luxury fashion brands from establishing a strong market despite
their innovation. Thus, knowledge is essential for innovation, competitiveness, and adaptability. However, according to Dasgupta and Gupta, several authors
underline that it is not existing knowledge in a firm that is the source of
competitive advantage. It is the ability to apply that knowledge effectively to
create new knowledge (Dasgupta and Gupta, 2009, p.208). Gift Mpho, a
South African man financed and mentored by his mother, failed three times to
start his own business due to a lack of knowledge management. He often lacked
sufficient information about different industries, hindering innovation. This
lack of knowledge can create silos within departments, leading to inefficiency
and wasted resources. It can also result in the reinvention of existing
solutions, loss of expertise, and limited creativity. Knowledge management is a
critical tool in assisting struggling businesses to restructure their
operations and regain competitiveness.
Knowledge management
strategies promote knowledge creation and utilization, enhancing efficiency,
scalability, and consistency within organizations leading to innovation, and
can be categorized into personalization and codification. Personalization enhances
user engagement and loyalty by tailoring experiences to specific preferences.
Codification standardizes business processes and knowledge, reducing reliance
on individual expertise. Both strategies emphasize knowledge creation, sharing,
and use through continuous learning.
2.
Through knowledge, national prosperity is created, not
inherited.
Innovation is a dynamic
process influenced by factors like consumers and company knowledge. Effective
knowledge management practices ensure accessible insights and diverse
perspectives for collective brainstorming, fostering a more innovative
environment. Alexis De Tocqueville recognized that “countries are not
automatically rich in proportion to their natural resources. If that were so then Russia would be the
richest country in the world. She has
everything: oil, gas, diamonds, platinum, gold, silver, industrial metals,
timber, and rich soil. Countries are rich whose
governments have policies which encourage the essential creativity, initiative,
and enterprise of man and recognize his desire to do better for his family.”
Additionally, Michael E. Porter highlighted that “national prosperity is
created, not inherited. That companies achieve competitive advantage through
acts of innovation.” He added that “companies gain advantage against the
world’s best competitors because of pressure and challenge. They benefit from
having strong domestic rivals, aggressive home-based suppliers, and demanding
local customers.” Therefore, knowledge is the key to innovation. According
to Momaya, global economic growth is largely due to increased competitiveness
among companies, which has grown and adapted to change through recent
innovations, positively impacting the economies of most countries (Momaya et
al., 2019).
Organizations use knowledge
as a tool for innovation, creating, sharing, and utilizing existing and new
knowledge to satisfy stakeholders. Knowledge creation involves extensive
research, while knowledge sharing encourages collaboration and upgrades existing
knowledge before making it available to the public. Knowledge use aims to use
existing knowledge to achieve strategic goals and objectives within an
organization. Formal and informal communication channels, technology-enabled
platforms, and a culture that encourages open communication facilitate
knowledge sharing. To fully realize the benefits of knowledge, organizations
must effectively utilize it in decision-making processes and operational
activities. This involves aligning knowledge with strategic objectives and
competitive priorities, translating acquired knowledge into actionable
strategies, and fostering a culture that supports evidence-based decision-making
and continuous learning. Four factors influence knowledge creation, sharing,
and use in an organization's long-term success and sustainability: culture, structure, technology, and leadership. These factors constitute the backbone of
an organization’s learning process.
2.1. Culture
Dasgupta and Gupta define
organizational culture as “the deeply seated (often subconscious) values and
beliefs shared by personnel in an organization. It is manifested in the typical
characteristics of the organization.” Additionally, Hellreigal, Smith, and
Cronje state that organizational culture comprises routine behavior, norms,
values, philosophy, rules of the game, and feelings (as cited in Martins and
Terblanche 2003). An effective organizational culture enhances job and customer
satisfaction, improves communication, and encourages innovation, enabling
organizations to navigate challenges effectively. Dasgupta and Gupta identified
five ways to enhance knowledge management: managing and developing intellectual capital, developing a learning and participative climate, changing the mindset
of people and inculcating trust, effective communication, and organizational memory.
2.1.1. Managing and Developing Intellectual Capital
Intellectual capital, an intangible
asset, enhances an organization's competitive advantage through innovation. It
can be managed through decision-making and continuous learning and training,
crucial for sustainable market competitiveness and knowledge creation,
fostering innovation. This leads to
many benefits in an organization such as enhanced innovation, improved
performance, increased employee engagement, and better decision-making. A learning culture encourages adaptive learning through job
rotation, inter-divisional teams, and delegation of responsibility, promoting
knowledge creation, sharing, and use in workplace routines and processes.
However, organizations face challenges in retaining employee’s knowledge after
resignation or death, find difficulties in quantifying intangible assets, and
resistance to change. A well-developed intellectual capital strategy helps lead
the industry and become sustainable, while investing in employee intellectual
development, ensuring a sustainable approach to knowledge sharing and adoption.
2.1.2. Developing a Learning and
Participative Climate
A learning and participative
organizational climate fosters employee engagement, collaboration, and
innovation by encouraging continuous learning, open communication, and active
decision-making. A participative or creative environment is crucial for growth,
innovation, and productivity. Key elements include physical safety,
psychological safety, inclusivity, and diversity, encouraging creativity,
supportive feedback, empowerment, and continuous learning. Physical safety
ensures a clean and organized space, while psychological safety promotes a
culture of respect and open communication. Inclusivity and diversity promote
equity and respect, while creativity encourages exploration and innovation.
Supportive feedback is crucial for personal growth, while empowerment allows
individuals to take ownership of their learning process. Continuous learning
encourages continuous growth through training programs and resources. The
learning climate fosters knowledge creation, sharing, and utilization in
workplace routines and processes (Shipton, Fay, West, Patterson, and Birdi
2005).
2.1.3. Changing Mind-Set of People
and Inculcating Trust
Culture is crucial in an
organization's internal integration and coordination, fostering a sense of
identity and commitment. It also fosters an effective environment for
communication and knowledge sharing. This process requires deliberate efforts
to foster understanding, communication, education, leadership, honesty, and
integrity. A sense of confidence and competence encourages employees to share
knowledge (Lin and Kuo 2007). Organizations should benchmark their internal
processes to align with industry best practices, identify knowledge gaps, and
bridge them through acquisition or resource utilization (Massa and Testa 2004).
2.1.4. Effective Communication
While communication refers to the transfer of
information from the sender to the receiver using a medium, effective
communication involves the clear, concise, and understandable transfer of information
from the sender to the receiver, ensuring that the information is conveyed
effectively and efficiently. It is a great skill for
every member of an organization and a personal setting as it builds strong
relationships, fosters collaboration, resolves conflicts, and achieves common
goals. And this is made possible through an organizational culture that promotes
trust. The organization’s success relies on maintaining consistent service
levels between offices and customers. Therefore, organizations must maintain effective communication with all internal and external stakeholders because
stakeholders are good sources of information for innovation as they know what
they possess and decide what they want or need. Feedback on services or
products can be achieved through market research by using surveys,
questionnaires, customer interviews, social media monitoring, or other review
channels to help the company improve. For example, Microsoft faced significant
product issues with Windows Vista in 2007, including hardware requirements,
compatibility issues, and slow performance. Feedback led to the development of
Windows 7, which addressed these issues in 2009, ensuring user satisfaction. Many
Studies highlight customer knowledge as a crucial organizational knowledgebase,
and there's a growing interest in coproduction, either individually or through
communities, to enhance innovation and business performance (Dasgupta and
Gupta, 2009, p.212). No matter the distance between members, managers must
create efficient space management to promote open communication and
collaboration within the organization. Through effective communication, trust is built, and ideas are shared without fear of
being belittled or discriminated against, which in return fosters innovation.
This can involve strategic workspace arrangement, technology use, employee
preferences, budget constraints, and sustainability to create a collaborative
environment. Huang, Wei, and Chang argue that distance affects communication
probability and the likelihood of communication decreases with increasing
distance. Organizations should optimize employee distance through efficient
space management to enhance communication (Huang, Wei, and Chang 2007). Effective
communication provides several benefits like
enhancing decision-making, constructive conflict resolution, and increased
productivity. This enables firms and suppliers to create, correct, improve, or
discontinue services or products to meet customer satisfaction.
2.1.5. Organizational Memory
Organizational memory is the
accumulated knowledge and experiences of an organization, guiding its actions
and storing it in various forms like databases, documentation, and employee
experiences. This serves as the current collected intellectual knowledge of an
organization and is crucial for an organization's success, enabling learning
from past experiences, improving decision-making, productivity, innovation, and
ensuring continuity during change or transition. A company's learning process is greatly impacted by organizational
memory, necessitating a culture of utilizing current knowledge rather than
continuously creating new ones. Knowledge degradation, knowledge hoarding, and
knowledge loss are problems for organizational memory management. There is
always a high risk of knowledge lost when workers pass away, quit, or retire,
which lowers competitiveness and productivity. Knowledge hoarding is the
deliberate or inadvertent concealing of information, which results in wasted
effort and poor decision-making. Technology-induced knowledge decay can result
in information that is out-of-date or irrelevant.
Conclusion on Organizational
Culture
Sustainability, long-term performance, and
knowledge acquisition are all strongly impacted by organizational culture.
Building a culture that values ongoing education, motivation, and staff
involvement encourages development, creativity, and adaptability. Long-term
success and sustainability are influenced by organizational culture, which has
a major impact on knowledge generation, sharing, and application. Strong
cultures that value education, teamwork, and flexibility foster creativity,
responsiveness to market changes, and competitiveness. Through the
implementation of knowledge management strategies and continuous learning,
firms can establish a long-lasting competitive advantage. For long-term success
and sustainability, then, an organizational culture and technology synergy are
essential. A strong organizational culture that fosters learning, creativity,
and teamwork equips workers for advancement and competition.
2.2. Technology
For an organization to create, share, and use
information effectively and sustainably over the long run, technology is an
essential tool. It improves knowledge management skills, which boosts
creativity, competitive advantage, and decision-making. Technology makes it
easier to create knowledge by facilitating communication, teamwork, and
information availability. It encourages the formation of multidisciplinary
knowledge and an innovative culture. Effective
knowledge sharing is essential for organizational growth, with platforms like
intranets, social collaboration tools, and knowledge management systems
facilitating the sharing of best practices. Dasgupta and Gupta explained that
technology significantly enhances organizational learning and knowledge management
by regulating the flow and access of knowledge within an organization through
its technical systems (Dasgupta and Gupta, p.212, 2009). Technology also allows
organizations to harness collective knowledge through data mining, machine
learning algorithms, and artificial intelligence, providing actionable insights
for strategic decision-making and continuous improvement.
A company's ability to
connect with its stakeholders, suppliers, and customers through an efficient
internal technology setup promotes ongoing learning and improvements that are
advantageous to the business. According to Dasgupta and Gupta, by enhancing the
ability of innovators to work together and find pertinent knowledge and
information, information management fosters creativity. However, by
standardizing and automating current operations and processes, information
technology may hinder innovation. (Dasgupta and Gupta, p.213, 2009). Technology
facilitates knowledge creation, sharing, and utilization within an
organization, fostering innovation and employee involvement, ultimately leading
to long-term success, sustainability, and scalability. It also enhances
collaboration, data analytics, automation, communication, and knowledge
repositories, facilitating personalized learning experiences, and improving
operational efficiency, employee productivity, innovation, and agile market
responses.
2.3. Structure
Peter Drucker described
Structure as “the rules, policies, procedures, processes, hierarchy of
reporting relationships, incentive systems, and departmental boundaries that
organize tasks within the firm” (cited in Gold, Malhotra, and Segars 2001). Within
an organization, knowledge creation, sharing, and utilization are significantly
influenced by organizational structure. Because of the inflexible divisions
between departments and management levels, a hierarchical structure may hinder
the creation of new information, whereas a flat, decentralized organization
encourages free communication and teamwork. In a centralized organization, when
information and choices are controlled by a small number of people, knowledge
exchange is made from top to bottom minimizing any attempt at innovation.
Employees with a decentralized framework are empowered to share their
knowledge. A rigid, hierarchical structure may limit knowledge utilization due
to slow information flow and decision-making. Knowledge usage is improved via a
flexible, networked framework that facilitates speedier communication and
decision-making. By encouraging a culture of learning and innovation, a
well-designed organizational structure helps an organization be competitive and
successful over the long term. It also helps the firm adapt to changing market
conditions. Dasgupta and Gupta concluded that organizations face rapid change
in their business environment, requiring adaptability and market orientation.
Adaptability involves seeking new technologies and ideas, while market
orientation reflects understanding customer needs and competitive situations.
To remain agile, organizations should form learning networks across
geographical locations and boundaries (Dasgupta and Gupta, 2009, p.213).
Organizational structure significantly influences knowledge creation, sharing,
and use. Long-term success, leadership development, and improved
knowledge management may all be achieved with a flexible, decentralized
structure that fosters learning, open communication, and teamwork.
2.4. Leadership
Effective leadership is crucial for building
strong organizational cultures. Mindi Cox once
said, “The core of your company culture is the relationship individual
employees have with their immediate leader.” As the first line of defense, leaders uphold and embody the
principles, objectives, and policies of the organization. The culture will
suffer if staff members don't perceive their leaders exhibiting these
objectives. Processes for creating, sharing, and utilizing knowledge inside an
organization are greatly influenced by organizational leadership. It creates an
environment that supports innovation, continual learning, and knowledge
management. Curiosity, experimentation, and learning are fostered by effective
leaders, who create an atmosphere that propels innovation and the creation of
new goods, services, and procedures. They make it easier for staff members to
share expertise, encouraging open communication, cooperation, and teamwork.
Employees can solve complicated problems and make better decisions by utilizing
one other's knowledge and experiences in this environment.
Dasgupta and Gupta argue that “past research
indicates that a strong leader-subordinate relationship, characterized by
challenging tasks, risk-taking support, and recognition, fosters individual
innovation and improves the relationship between subordinates and superiors,
according to previous studies” (Dasgupta and Gupta, 2009, p.215). To promote organizational success, leaders ensure
that knowledge is not only created and shared but also put into practice. They
enable staff members to use their expertise in their day-to-day work, match
data to strategic goals, and arrive at the decisions that can be defended
considering facts and insights. By laying the groundwork for long-term success
and sustainability, this strategy assists businesses in staying ahead of the
competition, spotting emerging trends, and adjusting to shifting market
conditions.
3.
Conclusion
The major sources of sustained
advantage for a corporation are its internal resources and capabilities,
according to the resource-based view (RBV) of competitive advantage. This
concept emphasizes the importance of knowledge creation, sharing, and usage.
Knowledge creation is the process of coming up with fresh concepts,
perceptions, and data that help businesses establish distinctive advantages
that are hard for rivals to match. To promote a culture of learning and
guarantee that important insights are available to all departments and levels
of the organization, knowledge sharing entails the distribution of information
and expertise among personnel within the company. This makes it easier to
collaborate, innovate, and integrate different points of view—all of which help
create a competitive edge. The use of knowledge resources to support creative
thinking, problem-solving, and strategic decision-making inside a company is
known as knowledge utilization. Organizations may swiftly adjust when they use
information effectively. Over time, companies may improve their competitive position by
integrating information into their systems, procedures, and practices. One of
the main drivers of the world's rapid economic growth is innovation. Innovation
propels economic growth through a variety of ways, including technological
advancement, increased productivity, the creation of new markets, economies of
scale and scope, and absorptive capacity. Long-term economic growth requires
fostering innovation through favorable laws, investments in Research and Development,
educational initiatives, and the development of human capital.
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