the enterprise knowledge market v1.2
DESCRIPTION
Outlines the value of trading knowledge in an Enterprise 2.0 environment.TRANSCRIPT
The Enterprise Knowledge Market
by Jeremy Thomas
September 2007
Emerging markets produce high quality goods and services at low costs.
Companies must therefore innovate to remain competitive (Rod Boothby).
The capacity of 1000’s of knowledge workers to
innovate is far greater than that of a few executives (Rod Boothby).
A knowledge worker is a professional who applies his or her intellectual capacities to the
acquisition, processing, management, and
communication of knowledge. (translationbureau.gc.ca)
Enterprise 2.0 connects knowledge workers so they can share ideas, collaborate and innovate.
Enteprise 2.0 flattens hierarchies and removes
contribution barriers. Output from troops in the trenches is directly visible to Generals on the hilltop.
Knowledge workers participate in an Enterprise 2.0
ecosystem because of the principles of the Invisible Hand (Adam Smith – the Wealth of Nations)
A knowledge worker “…intends only his own gain”, he seeks recognition which can ultimately lead to promotion and a pay raise.
And these “selfish” contributions make the
enterprise as a whole better off.
How, then, are knowledge workers recognized for the work they do?
The Enterprise Knowledge Market (EKM)
The EKM discovers information assets in blogs, wikis, legacy content repositories – the entire enterprise
information landscape.
An information asset is “a component or product of an information system that can be defined,
scoped, and managed for reuse” (nsw.gov.au)
Blog posts, wiki pages, project plans and detailed
design documents are all example information assets.
The EKM then converts information assets into information commodities.
An information commodity can be thought of as a knowledge “…item produced for exchange” (
wikipedia).
Information commodities are initially
valuated based on:
“Page Rank”Subscriber CountDownload CountAge
Then they’re left at the mercy of collective intelligence.
Knowledge workers “buy” or “sell” commodities in the EKM based on the value they derive from them.
Think Digg.com.
A commodity’s value rises and falls with each buy/sell transaction.
The EKM showcases enterprise information commodities and their value index:
Over time, the enterprise (a.k.a. “the market”) adjusts the value index of information commodities to reflect the
actual value the enterprise derives from them.
As a result useful information assets and genuinely
innovative ideas are given visibility.
Visibility leads to recognition
Knowledge workers compete for recognition.
Competition fuels participation.
Participation more quality information assets
increased probablility of innovative ideas
surfacing.
Innovation increased economic viability
happy enterprise.