Exhibit 22.1 Knowledge Management and Change Management
Checklist: How to Gauge the Potential Success of Your
Knowledge Management Initiative
Change
Management
Factor Good Signs Bad Signs
- Leadership Managers and leaders have Managers and leaders are
and role stepped up as KM role just giving lip service to KM;
models models and are setting they are not employing it
proper expectations about themselves and don’t seem
its use. to require others to use it. - Success Users can see how others Users do not see examples of
stories have used knowledge the KM approach being
management successfully. successfully used, possibly
leading to disbelief in its
benefits. - Consequences KM has positive incentives KM has unintended
and incentives associated with it (such consequences associated
as recognition for with it (such as a lower
contributing knowledge to performance rating due to
the system or a higher the inefficient ramp-up time
performance rating due that was necessary to master
to greater efficiency of the system or a fear that the
knowledge work). new system might eliminate
jobs). - Value People understand and People don’t understand and
proposition accept the reason for and can’t describe what the
benefits of KM, and they benefits of the new KM
can discuss these with approach are to themselves
others. or to the organization. - Level of Users believe KM is being Users believe KM is being
participation implemented directly for done tothem rather than for
their benefit; they feel them or withthem.
included. - Hassle Users believe KM will Users believe KM will create
make their work (and more work, not less.
life) easier. - Impossibility Users believe they are Users believe, from the start,
adopting a winning that KM can’t be
approach. implemented; it will fail.
252 LEADINGORGANIZATIONALLEARNING