Managing Knowledge/Knowledge management systems Taking Apple Inc. similar organization reference: 1.Review efficiency effectiveness Apple's / selected organization's knowledge management systems: • Identifying knowledge requirements Apple/selected organisation's managers leaders.
Knowledge management systems
Historically, the labor force would be represented from people paid low wages and expected to operate the machines and to implement the decisions as taken and instructed by the managers. Throughout the past recent decades nevertheless, the society has modernized and it came to raise more challenges and opportunities for the labor force. For instance, legislations were developed to protect the employees, technologies evolved to allow an increase in operational efficiency and the economy shifted from industry and manufacturing to services.
Today then, the employees are the most valuable organizational assets and the economic agents make intense efforts to train and retain them (Lawler and Ulrich, 2008). One specific endeavor in this sense is represented by the corporate efforts made in the sense of knowledge management. This project as such sets out to assess the knowledge management systems at Apple Inc. And to propose some recommendations as to how this organization could further develop its knowledge management systems.
2. The knowledge management system at Apple Inc.
Since its foundation in1976, Apple Inc. has pushed one limit after the other and has managed to become the indisputable leader of the IT industry. Today, Apple's managerial model is complex and multifaceted, to focus on dimensions such as innovation and product development, cost efficiencies and product affordability, customer relationship management or human resource management.
And at the level of all these dimensions, Apple places an increased emphasis on knowledge management, understood not only as the management of information, but more so the creation of a material and immaterial environment in which information can thrive. Within the specialized literature, a universally accepted definition of knowledge management has yet to be devised and agreed upon, but the scope of commencing to understand the concept is well served by the definition below:
"Knowledge Management ('KM') comprises a range of practices used by organizations to identify, create, represent, and distribute knowledge. […] Knowledge Management programs are typically tied to organizational objectives such as improved performance, competitive advantage innovation, lessons learnt transfer (for example between projects) and the general development of collaborative practices. Knowledge Management is frequently linked to the idea of the learning organisation although neither practice encompasses the other" (Knowledge Management Online).
At Apple Inc., knowledge management systems are essential given the nature of the operations conducted and the industry in which the company operates. In such a setting then, it is now necessary to assess the effectiveness of the knowledge management systems at Apple Inc. from three distinctive levels, namely:
The knowledge requirements of the Apple leaders
The acquisition, creation and conversion of knowledge at Apple Inc., and last
The policies and procedures to protecting and disclosing information
2.1. Knowledge requirements
Apple is a knowledge intensive company, its very advancement having been based on innovation and knowledge. This virtually means that the level of knowledge within the firm is increased and the processes of knowledge management are intense.
In terms of the knowledge requirements, these are also increased as the Apple employees are expected to possess two different sets of skills. On the one hand, they are expected to possess vast technical skills in their specific field of operations. On the other hand, they are expected to possess valuable people skills (Website of Apple Inc., 2012). At the level of the employees, the people skills are necessary to ensure an adequate interaction among the employees themselves, but also between the employees and the customers. The organization recognizes the need for strong customer services and invests in the acquisition of knowledge that would allow the employees to improve the quality of the interaction between the company and the customers.
At the level of the Apple Inc. managers and executives, the people skills -- including good communication skills or empathy -- are necessary in order to best communicate amongst themselves, but also to best represent the interests of the organization in meetings with various categories of stakeholders, such as the general public, potential investors, business partners and so on.
At the general level, Apple places an increased emphasis on the technical and non-technical skills of the people it employs, be these managerial or non-managerial. The company as such relies on an internal culture based on high knowledge levels and expects these levels to be...
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