As part of the CTI blog series “knowledge management via process management”, we introduce Probst’s building block model and report on our experiences with the individual building blocks of
knowledge identification, knowledge acquisition, knowledge development, knowledge distribution (knowledge transfer), knowledge use and knowledge preservation based on practical use cases from our consulting practice. This article on knowledge acquisition is the third article in this series.
Knowledge Acquisition
After identifying the knowledge already available in the company and its knowledge carriers, as presented in the last blog article, it must be evaluated which knowledge should be developed or acquired internally. This is particularly important against the backdrop of constantly advancing technological developments, especially if, for example, the company’s business model is undergoing major change as part of a digitalization initiative.
Possibilities of acquiring knowledge
Knowledge can be acquired through the use of external consultants, by taking over entire organizations, by hiring new employees or through a network of partners.
Another way of acquiring knowledge is employee acquisition. You need new employees with the required new skills, especially to counter the pessimists who claim that you have already tried “this or that”, but it “wouldn’t work for us”. Proof of external expertise is important to convince these naysayers otherwise. The procurement of employees with key qualifications is therefore a relevant aspect, but is not the only focus here. In this context, it is particularly important to have innovative and creative employees, who to a certain extent form the spearhead when it comes to acquiring new knowledge.
The best way to gain new knowledge is to combine internal and external experience. By sharing their personal experience, externally acquired expertise and newly acquired employees can make an important contribution to the further development of the knowledge base and stimulate new or disruptive thinking, while internal expertise has a more direct insight into the existing organizational process.
Knowledge is often acquired from outside as part of larger projects. The background to this is that it is often difficult for companies to integrate labor- and knowledge-intensive projects into their existing day-to-day work. In these cases, the acquisition of external reinforcement with relevant knowledge can lead to a faster and possibly higher quality project result.
The acquisition of knowledge can also be supported by maintaining alumni networks of former employees as well as close, collaborative cooperation with suppliers, customers and partners, which serve to exchange information on current topics. In addition, such networks make it possible to quickly acquire required knowledge in the form of consultants, for example, without first having to analyze the market at great expense.
Our offer
As we can see, there are many ways to acquire knowledge. Above all, your own company should not be seen as a closed system. Your own knowledge base always needs impulses and corrections from outside. The foundation for the successful acquisition of knowledge is therefore laid at the strategic level. Procurement strategies for the acquisition of knowledge should be developed in a targeted manner, similar to the professional way in which procurement is already carried out for materials and capital goods. After all, knowledge is the key factor that sets companies apart from the competition in the digitalization process.
CTI CONSULTING supports you in the identification, development, acquisition, distribution, use and preservation of your company-specific knowledge. Through the interdisciplinary collaboration of different skills, we achieve the ideal balance for you between schedule, budget and a sustainable target architecture.
In addition, CTI CONSULTING offers you comprehensive knowledge in the field of process and architecture management. CTI CONSULTING accompanies you from process mapping, modeling and evaluation of your business processes to the conception of an ideal target architecture. The introduction of process management should always go hand in hand with knowledge management measures and thus ensure that knowledge is available within the company regardless of who is involved.
Our main areas of work:
- Process management
- BPM tool Signavio
- Enterprise Architecture Management
- Application Portfolio Management
- Data and process integration
- Project coordination (project management, architecture management office)
- Expertise in SAP and OpenText, in particular document and workflow-supported processes, e.g. vendor invoice management
You can find more articles on this topic here.