Chapter 4 - Case Study Report
Chapter 4 - Case Study Report
Chapter 4 - Case Study Report
Outline
Introducing the situation:
Introducing Coalblack Industries company. Developing knowledge cultures in Coalblack Industries company: Building strategies and applying it in practice. The results of building knowledge culture in three divisions. Questions and answers.
50 years. Location: some main divisions are located in Sydney, Australia. Besides, it also have some regional offices across Australia, Asia, the Middle East and Europe. Activity fields: exploration, development and mining activities, sector development, chemicals, national infrastructure building in the Third World, and any other form of resource expansion which seems profitable.
Company tries to develop a strong knowledge culture, and encourages those who are willing to share and collaborate.
Developing knowledge cultures in Coalblack Industries company I- Building strategies and applying it in practice
Collaborative and innovative culture
in short term.
New employees are provided with a pocket guide when they start their duties.
New staffs are provided 3 days training and return for refresher in 6 months. New employees are given a detailed introduction about the structure of organisation.
knowledge sharing.
members, and are encouraged to see that their fresh insights are both beneficial and useful to other members
Members are also committed and motivated.
managers. (Eveden: some errors were repeated) Managers does not easily access information on past projects. Staff who travel off-shore to work on projects often hand their local projects over to another staff member. Others hold two jobs. The work pressure is very high in this division
Question2: Review the three divisions and analyse the existing factors which contribute toward the development of a knowledge culture. Using figure 4.1, consider which elements are evidence in the Exploration Division but appear to be absent from the other two divisions.
Answer: The existing factors which contribute toward the development of a knowledge culture in three divisions: Exploration Division: Members share their knowledge positively. Its membership is diverse. The producivity is noticeably high Members are highly committed and motivated. Chemical Division: Most of staffs in this divion are experienced. They had been employed for 20 years. Engineering Division: There is little of learning transferring across project managers. Significant expertise is hired to meet short- term need. A new director has been appointed to develop a strong knowledge focus.
Regurlar communication across levels and organisational units is demonstrated Knowledge sharing is actively encouraged by supervisors and leaders Collleagues invite sharing and learning
Figure 4.1
Question 3: If you were asked to advise organisation on its diagnosis of the culture and knowledge barriers, what strategies might you suggest?
Answer: Strategies to diagnose the culture and
knowledge barriers of organisation: Interviews Trend analysis Observation Questionnaires Action research
Question 4: Imagine you are the new director of the Engineering Division. Review the stages of orgnisational development and consider how you would plan to improve the knowledge culture. Answer: Plan to improve knowledge culture in Engineering Division: After a project team is established, members will gather to discuss about the way to finish the project. Encouraging the project manager in past project share the information with the new project manager. Minimizing to hire new experts, using experts who have worked in some past project. Staff who travel off-shore to work on project have to hand their local projects to another staff and share all of the informaion about the project for them. Reduce the work pressure by adding some staffs.
Question 5: Communities of practice play an important role in knowledge environments. How would you encourage their development in this type of organisation? Answer: Encouraging the CoPs development in organisation: Organizations can support communities of practice by recognizing the work of sustaining them by giving members the time to participate in activities; and by creating an environment in which the value communities bring is acknowledged. Introducing the term "communities of practice" into an organization's vocabulary. Facilitate the identification of potential members Support key members. Provide opportunities to interact across CoPs. It help to find out the common interest between various group and identify the potential members.