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Organizational knowledge retention and knowledge loss
by
Chan, Yolande E
, Levallet, Nadège
in
Attrition
/ Case studies
/ Codification
/ Collaboration
/ Demographics
/ Employees
/ Executives
/ Experts
/ Government agencies
/ High risk
/ Information sharing
/ Information technology
/ Knowledge
/ Knowledge management
/ Knowledge organization
/ Meetings
/ Organizational effectiveness
/ Organizational research
/ Public service
/ Research design
/ Research methodology
/ Retention
/ Retreats
/ Retrieval
/ Reuse
/ Tacit knowledge
2019
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Organizational knowledge retention and knowledge loss
by
Chan, Yolande E
, Levallet, Nadège
in
Attrition
/ Case studies
/ Codification
/ Collaboration
/ Demographics
/ Employees
/ Executives
/ Experts
/ Government agencies
/ High risk
/ Information sharing
/ Information technology
/ Knowledge
/ Knowledge management
/ Knowledge organization
/ Meetings
/ Organizational effectiveness
/ Organizational research
/ Public service
/ Research design
/ Research methodology
/ Retention
/ Retreats
/ Retrieval
/ Reuse
/ Tacit knowledge
2019
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Do you wish to request the book?
Organizational knowledge retention and knowledge loss
by
Chan, Yolande E
, Levallet, Nadège
in
Attrition
/ Case studies
/ Codification
/ Collaboration
/ Demographics
/ Employees
/ Executives
/ Experts
/ Government agencies
/ High risk
/ Information sharing
/ Information technology
/ Knowledge
/ Knowledge management
/ Knowledge organization
/ Meetings
/ Organizational effectiveness
/ Organizational research
/ Public service
/ Research design
/ Research methodology
/ Retention
/ Retreats
/ Retrieval
/ Reuse
/ Tacit knowledge
2019
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Journal Article
Organizational knowledge retention and knowledge loss
2019
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Overview
Purpose
This paper aims to examine the effectiveness of organizational information technology (IT)-based and non-IT-based knowledge transfer mechanisms (KTMs) for the retention of different types of knowledge from mobile experts. It differentiates among four types of knowledge loss (KL), namely, conscious knowledge (i.e. individual explicit knowledge that can be codified); codified knowledge (i.e. explicit knowledge captured at the social level); automatic knowledge (i.e. implicit individual knowledge); and collective knowledge (i.e. implicit knowledge embedded in the organization).
Design/methodology/approach
A research framework connecting the organizational knowledge retention (KR) cycle to KL is developed and an exploratory analysis is conducted using data from two case studies in the Canadian federal public service. Findings are confirmed using a third government agency.
Findings
Without the right processes in place for organizational knowledge retrieval and reuse, the KR cycle is not complete, leading to KL. The lack of available social KTMs for the conversion of individual to social objectified knowledge leads to KL. KTMs shortcomings increase the risk of automatic and objectified KL.
Research limitations/implications
Exploratory results demonstrate that KL does not always equate to lack of KR. Implementing knowledge-specific organizational KTMs is important to encourage the retention of individual knowledge at the social level. Propositions and a framework are developed for future research.
Practical implications
Mobile experts hold valuable knowledge at high risk of being lost by organizations. This paper provides managers with a set of guidelines to develop a knowledge-specific strategy focused on KTMs that increase KR and mitigate KL.
Originality/value
This paper challenges the assumption that KL only results from poor retention and studies both retention and loss to identify additional types of unintentional loss that occur when individual knowledge is not converted to social knowledge.
Publisher
Emerald Publishing Limited,Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Subject
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