This paper examines the role of personal information management systems as they relate to knowledge work and knowledge management systems. It proposes that the individual knowledge worker's role within knowledge management has the potential to be expanded, as has been predicted, as more sophisticated electronic personal information management tools emerge. Using existing research on knowledge workers and personal information management (PIM) systems, I will examine how what we already know about the nature of knowledge work and personal information management systems can inform the design of more successful tools in this arena.
Knowledge management literature often describes knowledge management systems in terms of broad organizational ecologies referring to collective unified concepts such as organizational learning, organizational knowledge and organizational intelligence (Davenport & Prusak, 1998; Choo, 2002). The individual's role in these large systems, which are devised to identify, share, retain and make active use of knowledge, is often less clear. It has been acknowledged that knowledge management owes some of its history to theories of human capital, widely written about by Gary Becker among others, which identifies the importance of investing in education for individual workers (Prusak, 2001; Becker, 1964). According to Laurence Prusak, knowledge management still holds as one of its core tenants to, "continue making the value of human capital clear to organizational leaders while developing tools and techniques for investing and reaping benefits from it" (Prusak, 2001, 26 ). Despite this, it is usually understood that knowledge management is "more concerned with group knowledge and the processes of social capital that undergird group knowledge" (Prusak, 2001, 27).
Within the knowledge management framework there are specific roles laid out for individuals working in such systems, people commonly referred to as knowledge workers. The term knowledge worker was first advanced by Peter Drucker, who defined a knowledge worker as one who "puts to work what he has learned in systematic education, that is, concepts, ideas, and theories, rather than the man who puts to work manual skill or muscle" (Drucker, 1973, pg. 32). Different knowledge management theorists view organizational knowledge, knowledge work and the specific roles of knowledge workers differently (Choo, 2002). However, it is generally acknowledge that most people within an organization are somehow involved in the creation of knowledge while others are better suited to roles such as "knowledge integrators" or "information specialists" (Davenport & Prusak, 1998; Choo, 2002). These people serve to "extract knowledge from those who have it, put it in structured form, and maintain or refine it over time" (Davenport & Prusak, 1998, pg. 110). These roles exist primarily because there is a recognition that not everyone involved in a work scenario has the time nor the knowledge, skills and abilities to describe and preserve information about the work they are engaged in (Davenport & Prusak, 1998).
Despite this differentiation among knowledge worker roles, it has been predicted that successful knowledge management firms in the future "will make knowledge management every employee's responsibility not just that of a select few" (Davenport, 1995, 7). In order for this to happen, it seems necessary that the divisions among knowledge roles must be diminished to the point where individual workers themselves begin to serve in some small part in capacities that have previously been the domain of "knowledge integrators" and "information specialists". One way that this change may be ushered in is through development and adoption of new personal information management technologies.
Knowledge in organizations has been described as being "embedded not only in documents or repositories but also in organizational routines, processes, practices, and norms" (Davenport & Prusak, 1998, pg. 5). Along the same lines, individuals too have complex information habitats with unique routines, processes and practices that they use to manage knowledge at a personal level. If knowledge "originates and is applied in the minds of knowers", then surely the personal information systems developed by knowledge workers should be considered as an active and necessary part of a knowledge management system (Davenport & Prusak, 1998, pg. 5).
Missing in the discussions of knowledge acquisition and management is the idea that a great deal of what is known and learned within an organization comes from individuals who depend on their own personal information management and knowledge management systems. Beneath the larger organization knowledge structure, reside systems unique to each individual that are acquiring, filtering and storing the knowledge that goes into the organization. These systems should be viewed as fundamental building blocks on which organizational knowledge management may someday rest. In fact, in most cases it seems necessary that before knowledge can become an organizational asset, the process of knowledge gathering, maintenance and sharing has to occur on a personal level. It seems also very likely that personal information management systems could complement larger organizational and social knowledge management systems, or at least it would seem worthwhile to understand more about the way these two systems interact. It is the individuals and the interactions they have with each other's shared knowledge resources that ultimately makes up a large part of what we mean by organizational knowledge. If we are to have any impact on managing organizational knowledge, I think it is imperative that we first understand how personal information contributes to the larger knowledge management structure.
I am advocating that personal information management is indeed a fundamental building block to any kind of organizational knowledge management because it reflects how people are informing themselves, how easily what they have stored can be transferred to others, and in large part, defines what the organization itself would be capable of retaining. I am not suggesting that personal information systems completely support all organizational knowledge management systems, but they are certainly key factors in how well tacit knowledge is retained and how transferable information and knowledge is among sources in a given environment. As an example, if I can not locate or if I am unable to make sense of an information asset at a personal level, I am not capable of contributing that asset to the larger working knowledge of an organization. How can an organization expect to capitalize on employee knowledge if those employees' systems don't integrate with the organizational scheme? Or at the very least, wouldn't the broader knowledge management structure be optimized if it were?
There are numerous examples of ways in which a personal information management system can come into play in a larger collaborative and organizational context. Personal information search, retrieval and storage play significant role in organizational memory and knowledge. Consider an exchange one colleague might have with another via email. The first person sends an email with a Website attachment indicating a site he/she felt was worthwhile for consideration on a project they were working on. The email has a beginning message that indicates where and why this particular site is of interest. The idea is that the personal very quickly becomes the collaborative that in turn becomes organizational knowledge and information. There is really no separating out personal systems from organizational systems.
A tremendous amount of research has been done examining how knowledge workers use personal information stores in paper and electronic forms as well as how they work with electronic personal information management tools. These studies provide a great deal of insight into specific characteristics of knowledge workers' personal information management habits and habitats. I am choosing to purposefully avoid drawing a distinction between electronic PIM tools and PIM in general in this paper because I am interested in how people work with information regardless of format. The differences between handling paper and electronic documents as it affects user behavior is well documented elsewhere and is not of concern here. What is important for my purposes is discovering patterns of behavior related to personal information management and identifying how those behaviors may inform the design of better electronic personal information management tools.
The following are four broad themes I have identified from research that has explored the nature of knowledge work and personal information management:
The following design ideas for PIM technologies are based on what I have regarded as some of the key findings from what existing research tells us about how knowledge workers work and how they go about performing personal information management. I feel that these are important design considerations that developers of personal information management technologies should bear in mind when they are developing PIM tools.
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