Originally posted 19-Apr-18

As part of the research for my book, Proven Practices for Promoting a Knowledge Management Program, I interviewed widely recognized KM leaders to get their take on the secrets to successful KM strategy development and implementation. One of these leaders was with Microsoft.

According to Jean-Claude Monney, former Microsoft Chief Knowledge Officer — Enterprise Services Delivery, the biggest obstacles to selling KM are culture and not being understood. He believes if you rely on a tool to collaborate and you don’t understand culture, you will fail. So, he regularly shared how they do KM at Microsoft — having talked to over 70 customers — and regularly gave speeches worldwide. He believes that by showing a different way of doing things, success breeds success. The knowledge-sharing culture that Microsoft created helps people change — but those changes are a result of defining what is and is not accepted.

Jean-Claude’s Top Tips

  1. Culture — Culture eats strategy for breakfast. Align performance management and desired goals to encourage sharing, collaboration, and reuse.
  2. CoPs — Communities of Practice are the heart and soul of KM. Have one and only one per domain. Don’t put goals on them but measure their “health”. Their diversity of thought is their richness.
  3. Process — Have a documented end-to-end KM process that includes knowledge value categories. Examples of processes are creation, reuse, capture, and growth. Write the details down. If you don’t, you can’t scale.
  4. Tools — Solutions are to support the KM processes. They should include social and formal collaboration, discovery, knowledge bases, and all related telemetry.
  5. Outcome — Partner with the business to define business outcomes and key performance indicators (KPIs). Just as finance is not responsible for sales or profits, the KM team is not responsible for business outcomes, but has insights on how to improve them using KM practices.

If you’d like to read the details of my research on Microsoft’s KM culture, and proven practices from other organizations, please read my book, published by Lucidea Press, Proven Practices for Promoting a Knowledge Management Program, which offers a broad range of advice and insights drawn from my career as a KM practitioner and my research in the discipline.

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Stan Garfield
Stan Garfield

Written by Stan Garfield

Knowledge Management Author and Speaker, Founder of SIKM Leaders Community, Community Evangelist, Knowledge Manager https://sites.google.com/site/stangarfield/

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