MIT Sloan Website




STORE
Search   
 
Store Home View Cart Check Out Contact Us Help/FAQs

Back Issues
Business Ethics and Public Policy
Corporate Strategy
Collections
Financial Management
For Faculty and Schools
Global Business
Human Resources
Information Systems
Leadership
Managerial Economics
Marketing
Operations
Service and Quality
Sustainability
Technology and Innovation
Measuring and Managing Technological Knowledge
By Roger E. Bohn
Fall 1994
Reprint 3615
Volume 36, Number 1, pages 61-73, 13 pages
Primary Topic: Technology and Innovation

Summary

How much does your organization know? The vital impact of organizational knowledge on performance is now widely recognized, but the study of how to manage such knowledge is still in its infancy. The author defines technical knowledge and gives a framework for mapping and evaluating levels of knowledge. He shows how to apply the framework to measure how much your organization knows and doesn't know about its production processes, to learn where knowledge resides in your company, and to make better use of what you know. He shows why automation without adequate knowledge leads to disaster and how to manage knowledge in a world of continual organization learning.

OR

Includes one pdf to copy from.
Pricing is based on # of
copies made.

Info on pricing and academic discounts.


 
 
Copyright © Massachusetts Institute of Technology
1977-2009. All rights reserved.
877-727-7170, mitsmr@pubservice.com