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Strategic SAP & IT Program Development for Measurable Business Value

ERP III – Is the Integration of Collaboration the Future of Enterprise Applications

February 11th, 2010

Corporate Collaboration

Back in the late 1990′s, while at Grant Thornton, and then later when the management consulting organization was sold to Hitachi I worked on a comprehensive knowledge management model (see the image below).  The model  has application and relevance to integrating collaboration tools into any enterprise application.

Carefully structured and planned integration of collaboration tools can produce great results,  but it is a challenge.  Finding ways to tie collaboration into the business technology for productive use in the enterprise is the goal of a lot of social media types but few of them have any idea how to do this.  Clearly there is a lot of hype around “Web 2.0″ interactive functionality but little in the way of productive business use.

By moving outside of the enterprise walls to integrate customer interaction and the extended supply chain the enterprise can gain valuable insight.  By using structured data gathering and organization techniques business value can be achieved.

In this post we will look at a few approaches I’ve taken over the years that have been effective and powerful for creating dynamic collaborative organizations.  They don’t use the trendy new tools like Facebook, or Twitter, or other communication mediums, but they do leverage the collaboration concept.  Maybe someone can create a use model for tools like Facebook or Twitter combined with enterprise applications.

Why Enterprise Collaboration Tools have Not Yet Taken Off

Too many organizations undertake the introduction of social media for the purpose of introducing social media into the enterprise.  In the Knowledge Management area this is like having information without any context of how to apply that information or the experience to apply it properly.  Information alone is NOT knowledge and social media or collaboration tools which do not have a specific business purpose are not very productive (if at all).  Without a specific “context” to apply social media tools, and the understanding of where they might fit, and how they will be used, they are more likely to be a distraction (see Social Media Fads and the Risk to the Enterprise ).

There are few methods, and even fewer tools to filter through all of the “noise” from social media tools to find what is meaningful.  From there, it is still even more difficult to distill what is meaningful into something useful.

Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter may NOT fit in your enterprise.  However, being able to capture employee, customer, and vendor knowledge, suggestions, or criticisms (information) and then publishing this internally to the right people (the context of applying that information) may make a huge difference for your company.

Few social media “gurus” have any idea on how to start this type of structured information gathering dialog from an unstructured information source (see the graphic below).  They do not know how to develop a structured program to take advantage of the unstructured data by finding meaningful ways to apply that information.  There are few methods, and even fewer tools to filter through all of the “noise” from social media tools to find what is meaningful.  From there, it is still even more difficult to distill what is meaningful into something useful.

What do they say in response to this?  What is their excuse?  You don’t understand social media and it is all about building relationships and you haven’t spent enough time and you can’t apply old business rules, etc., etc., etc.  Snake oil, snake oil, snake oil…  All you get are excuses and that you’re not doing enough or spending enough.  Few social media”gurus” have any idea at all on how to generate real value from these new channels.

Why Consultants and Collaboration Evangelists Have Not Shown Much Progress

Neither consultants nor business have learned how to use social media to drive business value.  There are few consultants out there with a coherent or even minimally functional method for business to use collaboration or social media tools to affect a company’s key value propositions.  Even moving down a layer there is still no coherent method for social media use which produces any kind of measurable business benefit.  Beyond things like video conferencing and webinars which help to reduce expenses related to travel and coordination, not much has been done to move social interaction and collaboration in business to the next level.  There is a lot of hype, a lot of claims that this is the “next big thing” but very little substance.

The real issue is not to use social or collaboration tools in the enterprise just to collaborate.  They must serve a business purpose and a business need.  The business enterprise is not a social club, but social tools can be used to serve the business purposes or goals.

In my prior post on SAP, ERP III, SOA — Learning Organizations through Social Media Collaboration there are 9 steps noted toward the end of that post on exactly how to use open source forum software for developing a learning organization.  That integration doesn’t deal with the cool, hip, or trendy social media tools of today, but they are effective collaboration methods.  The same concepts in that post can be generalized and applied to knowledge capture activities around innovation or customer experience.  The way you use these forum type tools inside the company depends on what your goals are, but the instructions for use are there.  And properly used they can be very powerful business tools for competitive advantage.  Little if any of this type of direct, clear, and understandable use case information exists for the “trendy” social media of today.

Toward Transforming Information to Knowledge – A Working Knowledge Management Model

By using collaboration tools properly, or by finding meaningful ways to use the Web 2.0 tools in a more structured way, it is possible to make systematic progress to support business purposes.

Back in 1997 and 1998 I worked through the model and developed a systematic approach, by using primitive collaboration and social media tools, to convert consulting into knowledge centered learning organizations.

It relied heavily on:

  • collaboration,
  • cooperation, and
  • information dissemination.

This was done by using the tools that were available at the time.  A systematic process was developed to capture, then synthesize, organize and disseminate the information to knowledgeable individuals throughout the organization.  By doing this the first seeds of a collaborative learning organization were planted.

The knowledge management graphic and model I produced years ago (see below) was used to advance the concept of a learning organization because that was a clear business fit for consulting companies.  A consultant’s capabilities are directly tied to their knowledge, and that knowledge is a consulting company’s capital or stock in trade.  From that learning organization real business transformation and business benefit can be achieved.  A learning organization is more dynamic and adapts to change more readily.  As a result of the ability to absorb change, dynamic market conditions help ensure you are a leader rather than a laggard in the marketplace.

Early Collaboration and Social Media Efforts that Started to Produce Results Shortly After Y2K

Even the most knowledgeable, talented, and proficient consultants get stuck at times. The nature of complex business and technology problems means there are times you need a little help.  Early on we recognized the need to have dynamic tools, templates, and resources available to consultants.  But the consultants were widely dispersed and didn’t all know each other.  At the same time we also recognized the need to be able to tap into other knowledgeable experts within the organization on a moment’s notice, even if the consultant who needed the help didn’t know the individual.  Outside of a consultant’s own personal network they didn’t know where to look for the specific skills or expertise they needed to resolve a particular issue.  The solution had to be simple, almost instantaneous, and be able to gain key information and insight even from someone you had never contacted before.

It had to be, the right knowledge, right now!

We wanted a structured method that was simple and intuitive to create a collaborative environment.  After looking at our technology landscape right after Y2K we started to use MS Exchange Public Folders, Outlook Shared User Folders, e-mail, and MS Messenger.  Today these collaboration tools have been rolled into SharePoint. 

A Simple Collaborative Solution Using MS Exchange Public Folders and MS Messenger (today it would be in SharePoint)

We developed an MS Exchange folder structure that matched our client project needs and sales force needs for tools, templates, resources and our own best practices on demand.  The beauty of MS Exchange was that the Web Access version allowed our consultants to leverage public folders through the web interface from anywhere, just like they were using MS Explorer / MS File Manager.  The public folder structure was the perfect fit because there was little to learn beyond the new folder structure of how we would store the data.  Dragging, dropping, and opening files in this MS Explorer like interface was intuitive and took no time to adjust to.  This was immensely helpful at some client sites where security is very high so that only the client’s computers or hardware were allowed on the client’s corporate network.  In other words, where access to internal resources would have been limited or non-existent this allowed for ready access to anything that was needed.  Add to this the MS Exchange folder permissions are robust so security was meaningful.

Together with this we used MS Messenger as our IM client but rather than just having an employee’s  name which was unknown to those outside that employees “circle” or network, we applied their key skill to the logon name.  From a standard list of key skill codes for SAP (SD, MM, PP, FI, CO, AM, CRM, SRM, APO, etc.) we placed that in front of the person’s name so that it automatically grouped like skills, and placed the skill reference first in a list of over a hundred resources.  In an instant if you needed some input from a seasoned Sales and Distribution person you would just look on your IM list for those names starting with SD_Employee_Name.  SAP practice users were then exposed to each other all over the United States and even in other countries by their skill codes so that even if they did not know the user, if they had a question of a colleague or peer they could ask in real time.  This was part of the “pull” information exchange infrastructure.

There was also a regular weekly publication containing special “tips and tricks” for productivity or functionality.  This was part of the “push” information exchange sent through e-mail and a copy stored in the knowledge management folder in MS Exchange.  It could be referenced at any time in the future.  This created a reusable but organized information  repository that allowed the quality of the tools, templates, resources, presentations, and other material to be continually advanced and quickly reused.

When I left we had just started on the internal forum posting initiative and unfortunately I do not believe it was completed.  This was to provide a central location to capture knowledge sharing or information discussions in a searchable database.  Using open source content management systems and open source integrated forums our goal was to create a central communication collaboration hub to capture and exchange ideas, custom coded solutions, and best practices.  With the many available add-ons to the open source CMS systems we considered adding an internal high level project management status tracking system and resource request system for senior level managers to gain near real-time visibility to the status and resource needs of all of the many projects taking place all over the country.

This was a very practical way we leveraged existing social and collaboration technology by building the structure and processes to add business value.  It enhanced the customer value proposition by providing better and faster customer solutions, more customer focus, and better internal employee interaction.  In other words, this whole solution was low cost and used existing collaboration tools to advance business interests.  It helped to promote end client satisfaction because of the nature and ability to gain “the right answer right now.”  It started to produce a “learning organization.”

Refinements, Enhancements, and New Dimensions to Collaboration and Knowledge Tools

As the efforts and my research on the subject matured I wrote a piece about my perspective on this issue as it had matured and called it SAP, ERP III, SOA — Learning Organizations through Social Media Collaboration.  That article laid out a way to integrate social media tools like Forum software into the SAP help system.  What this means is that end users can capture real time information about the system, or shortcuts, or requests for simplification or other useful information and disseminate it to the organization.  This also provides a method for workers in any department or area, in real time, to provide feedback that focuses on the company value proposition or competitive pressures.  Here is the model I produced:

1)  Raw Information:  The unstructured data, ideas, “crib notes,” and thoughts that we all have.  However in this instance, it is the raw information surrounding the job or responsibility that the individual performs within the enterprise.  Sometimes these are the “workarounds” to get something done when you run into obstacles or roadblocks, other times they are just shortcuts, techniques, to perform a job or function.

Knowledge Management Process

2)    Organized Information:  This is the process of capturing and classifying that raw information.  This is where the “knowledge bases” and other types of information systems come in.  Many enterprises make it this far. Sometimes these are the “workarounds” to get something done when you run into roadblocks or obstacles.  Other times they might be the shortcuts or techniques to more efficiently perform a job or function.

3)    Acquired Information Experience: This is the interaction with the organized information.  This can be through search functions, employed taxonomies, reports, or other methods of accessing the organized information.  This is after the capture of the information in steps 1) and 2) above, and involves its wider availability than in the individual who originally developed or “held” the knowledge or information.  Few organizations or enterprises make it much further than this.  However, this is the beginning of the true learning organization.

4)    Applied Experience (Knowledge!):  This is the practical application of the organized information after it has been acquired.  Whether this acquisition is through word of mouth, training, or some type of information management system (that is wrong named a knowledge management system) or through a “knowledge base”. This is where the cost savings, revenue opportunities, continuous process improvement opportunities, and real competitive advantage begins to come to fruition.

5)    Refined Experience:  This is more of the inherent “knowing” what to do in a broad variety of contexts that may not be directly related to the task or issue at hand.  It is when an individual can draw on that level of inner experiences mixed with intuition and make the right decision or provide the right answers when there is not enough information to make such a determination under normal circumstances.  This can also be a type of “making the complex appear to be simple.”

This knowledge model I created in the late 90′s seems to be pretty well accepted today [Fn1].  Notice it is very different than an information model because knowledge by its very nature requires information together with the context of how, what, and when to apply that information together with experience.

The ERP III future will rely heavily on delivering on the value propositions of customer focus and innovation.  By moving outside of the enterprise walls to integrate customer interaction and the extended supply chain the enterprise can gain valuable insight.  By using structured data gathering and organization techniques business value can be achieved.

It is my belief that both of these pillars will occur through the use of corporate collaboration tools–, but only corporate collaboration tools that are focused on the business goals of capturing critical “knowledge” and information around these two key premises.

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[FN1]  The knowledge model I produced was based on a synthesis of a number of sources I had studied at the time to try to bring some clarity around the confusion between “information management” and “knowledge management.”  At that time, or possibly earlier, there may have been someone else with the same ideas and a similar model but I couldn’t find it then.  Today I see too many variations of these terms but the same basic process all over the place.  If someone else can claim *earlier* authorship I won’t dispute it.  I produced my first version before Y2K.

Related Posts:

Business Strategy and IT Strategy to Reproduce Apple Innovation

December 2nd, 2009

innovation and strategic direction

What are the Apple Innovation Secrets of Steve Jobs’? 

Steve Jobs focuses Apple innovation on competitive pressures and value propositions.  It’s basic to his DNA and core to his management style to relentlessly focus organizational energy on customer centered innovation and customer experience.  In a nutshell Apple’s innovation “secret” (if it can be called that) is the relentless pursuit of innovation around the customer experience.  As early as 2002 Steve Jobs told the world what his competitive strategy was, and it is clear that as CEO he was carefully evaluating competitive pressures and opportunities in the marketplace:

For those paying attention after Jobs’ return, the CEO was telegraphing Apple’s trajectory.  “I would rather compete with Sony than compete in another product category with Microsoft… We’re the only company that owns the whole widget–, the hardware, the software, and the operating system. We can take full responsibility for the user experience.  We can do things the other guys can’t do.” (comments to Time in early 2002).

Lashinsky, Adam, “The Decade of Steve – How Apple’s imperious, brilliant CEO transformed American Business,” Fortune Magazine, pg. 96. November 23, 2009. 

Apple’s CEO owns the Apple corporate strategy, and he has chosen to do one simple thing that many companies talk about but few execute very well–, Steve Jobs’ Business and IT strategy is 100% focused on customer centered innovation.  He knew that you find business benefit looking outward, looking at market and business drivers rather than at products or services that exist in a silo.

I recently read a Fortune Magazine article extolling the virtues, or more the impact, of Apple’s Steve Jobs on business.  Certainly under Steve Jobs’ guidance Apple has come to represent the best of business innovation for several reasons:

  • Jobs built Apple as an innovative company
  • After he left Apple the company nearly collapsed
  • He returned and turned the company around from the brink of collapse
  • Jobs at Apple, through his innovative guidance, has transformed three primary industries –; personal computers (laptops and desktops), personal music, personal cell phones.

For this and other reasons Steve Jobs’ time at Apple has helped him become the king of American business transformation, at least according to Fortune Magazine.

The Direction of Apple’s Innovative Recovery and Company Turnaround

Just after the Y2K scare, while the world was buzzing about the tech bubble burst; speculating about Apple’s survival with Steve Jobs return; watching the AMD and Intel Chip wars heat up–, Apple strategically avoided a battle with its “logical” arch-rival Microsoft.  Instead Steve Jobs made a conscious decision to “take his marbles” and play a completely different game.

Rather than taking a weak company that was struggling to stay afloat and challenge the dominant market maker Steve Jobs defined the Apple innovation strategy to focus on the integration of technology and entertainment.  Apple’s core competence at the time was in PCs and Laptops, but as Jobs said, they were the only vendor that did it all, hardware, software, and operating system.  He took that same approach with music, helping to develop the ecosystem to support the IPod and to transform digital music distribution through ITunes and the online purchase of songs.

The PC wasn’t new, but Jobs’ approach to customer centered innovation was.  The music player wasn’t new, but the IPod certainly was, and it was focused like a laser on the end of Sony Walkman dominance.  Selling music “singles” wasn’t new, but Jobs’ focused Apple’s innovation on the ITunes store together with the widespread use of the IPod.  He created the device to play the music and he created the channel to distribute the music.  The cell phone wasn’t new, and while Blackberry and Nokia owned the market, the IPhone focused like a laser on innovative customer experience.

Start with a gut sense of an opportunity, and the conversations start rolling.

What do we hate?

A: Our cell phones.

What do we have the technology to make?

A: A cell phone with a Mac inside.

What would we like to own?

A: An iPhone, what else?

But Jobs also explained that in this specific conversation, there were big debates across the organization about whether or not they could and should do it. Ultimately, he looked around and said, “Let’s do it.”

I think it’s clear they also benefit from the inauspicious “leak” to the market. By that I mean this overly tight-lipped organization occasionally leaks early ideas to the market to see what kind of response they might generate. Again, what other company benefits from having thousands of adoring designers come up with beautifully rendered concepts of what they think the next great product should look like?

This PragMatic Marketing Post is about the idea that “you can’t innovate like Appleand I say, BALONEY!  

Steve Jobs isn’t dumb, quite the contrary, he’s smart enough to know that you CAN innovate like Apple and that’s why Apple’s internal innovation methods are kept so secret!  Not only that, the ACTUAL workings of Apple’s innovation is a secret and PragMatic article, like so many others, merely speculates about the details of the inner workings.  This article looks at the actual company history and Jobs’ statements.

From the very beginning of any market action by Apple, the corporate strategy is focused on being a market disrupter, and in turn a market maker, by focusing relentlessly on the customer experience.  And not just a focus with existing products or services, new products and services are designed, developed, and relentlessly pursued to please the end customer.  Have you visited an Apple store?  Maybe it’s time you did.

The Apple innovation difference is less about an inward focus on how to squeeze every last penny out of some process or on reducing costs, such as what “Lean” and “Six Sigma” advocates.  Instead, the Apple corporate focus as driven by the CEO was outwardly focused on the marketplace, on the customer, and how to direct that energy into improving revenue and profitability by addressing the frustrations (or needs /wants) of customers.  The Apple innovation difference is where the role of CEO is fixated on customer centered innovation.  Customer experience with Apple products was the center of innovation.  New products, new applications, and new markets all focused on customer experience.

Steve Jobs Innate Understanding of Marketing and Economics

One thing Apple did well was listen to the market, and then shrewdly move marketing programs to create “pent up demand” for a product that had not yet been released.  These new products were designed to elegantly, and as intuitively as possible, address marketplace frustration. 

Many commentators have described this as him having a “knack” for making market moves at the right time.  Baloney, Steve Jobs understands the fundamental core concepts of sales, marketing, and economics that few teach today. 

Apple’s core of innovation is centered on one thing, market demand.  There is no “law of supply and demand” there is only the law of demand.  The supply side of the economic paradigm is completely irrelevant.  The one thing that is important is the law of demand only. Stop for a moment and think about that, internalize it, and one day I’ll offer some insight that I gained from a wise college economics professor who taught me this.

Where there is marketplace frustration there is internal “pent up demand” for that frustration to be addressed. 

You can see this thinking in Apple’s current move today.  With the deep pockets of several successful product strategies, and on the heels of Microsoft’s dismal Vista operating system launch, Apple is now aggressively going after the company’s old arch rival.  The market has complained about Vista, about Microsoft security problems, about the forced upgrade march, about a whole host of problems Microsoft has experienced lately.  Apple is seizing on the market frustration with Microsoft products and the inherent, pent up demand for an alternative.  Apple’s timing is simply capitalizing on the Microsoft promotion of Windows 7.  Apple’s marketing message is resonating with the general populace and the pent up demand that is inherent in marketplace frustration with prior versions of Microsoft Windows.  That message is that the new Windows 7 operating system is simply another “fix” to a long line of broken operating systems.

At the time Microsoft is bringing out its latest flagship product, Windows 7, to address criticism of the Vista product, Apple is offering an alternative. A very successful and financially healthy Apple is now targeting Microsoft directly.

Steve Jobs as the Apple CEO has become quite skilled at setting strategic direction along a future timeline.  As the calculus of the recent attack on Microsoft’s new Windows 7 operating system shows Steve Jobs is also very adept and skilled at holding back to determine the right timing to attack a market.  Think about it, everyone in the IT world has known about the Windows Vista complaints for years.  And over the last few years that frustration in the marketplace has been building.  And right on the heels of Microsoft’s boatloads of marketing spend to address negative market perceptions with a “new” Windows 7 flagship product Apple then pounces.

None of this is magic, none of it is really that mysterious.  Steve Jobs as Apple’s CEO understands competitive pressures and value propositions.  Steve Jobs gets it, plain and simple he understands that the primary role of the CEO is to set strategic direction and long term goals.  He understands the real reason executive participation creates project success.

Does anyone really believe that the launch of ITunes, and the IPod, and the IPhone, or Pixar, or the latest attack ads on Microsoft were some seat of the pants reaction?  The quality and polish of Apple products, even when there are glitches, indicates that planning and strategy for all of these ventures took place quite some time in advance.  Even rapid development cycles for some of the hardware, software, and operating systems takes quite some time.  Just to get the integration as seamless as Apple products often are is no small task.  So many of these plans were probably several years in the making before being released to the public.

It needs to be said that Steve Jobs’ approach to innovation isn’t really a secret, the specific details may be, but the approach is plain old business and IT strategy–, Steve Jobs gets it! He plain understands business and IT strategy. 

What Does All of this Have to do with ERP and SAP?

A properly implemented ERP system, such as SAP, requires a solid corporate strategy that addresses competitive pressures.  To achieve that elusive business benefit from the technology spend it is crucial to have business drivers, business strategy, and the future state direction built into the application.

The underlying ERP and SAP business case for ROI, business benefit, and success must be focused on the intersection IT and business strategy.  The most successful business strategy is always looking carefully for upcoming market opportunities, and for enhancing the value proposition.  In that business strategy there are revenue, profitability, customer retention, and customer acquisition opportunities while focusing on the competitive drivers in the marketplace.  At the intersection of that business strategy is where IT, ERP, and SAP strategy intersect to enable the business strategy.  In the end, like any capital investment it’s all about how the asset is used, or not used, which determines payback and success with its deployment. 

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More Posts on How to Successfully Carry Out Innovation Initiatives in the Enterprise

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From Collaboration to Innovation to Market – Toward a Working Model
http://www.r3now.com/from-collaboration-to-innovation-to-market-toward-a-working-model

A process orieted approach to with the first steps of a process model for moving from innovation to market.  A first pass at integrating collaboration with a structured creative process and moving from idea to design to market.

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Striving for a Customer Focused Approach to Innovation 1 of 3
http://www.r3now.com/striving-for-a-customer-focused-approach-to-innovation-1-of-3

Categorizing and Defining the 3 primary types of corporate innovation. I’ve dubbed them “Stoic” (minimalist or continuous improvement); the “Stretch” (striving for a known future state); and the “Maelstrom” (directionless chaotic storm of ideas). The names you use really don’t matter, but these are the 3 types of what companies call “innovation” that I have seen.

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Striving for a Customer Focused Approach to Innovation 2 of 3
http://www.r3now.com/striving-for-a-customer-focused-approach-to-innovation-2-of-3

Explaining the use of an “innovation narrative” in the “Stretch” type of innovation. This method produces a future state narrative which may not be achievable but provides a customer and market focused direction to aspire to for new products or services. That narrative acts as a future state blueprint for product or service development to move toward.

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Striving for a Customer Focused Approach to Innovation 3 of 3
http://www.r3now.com/striving-for-a-customer-focused-approach-to-innovation-3-of-3

Practical ideas and practical application of some methods of moving toward an innovation culture. Some specific examples around how SAP (the big ERP vendor) has been very successful at integrating their customers, vendors, and their internal organization into an extended development dialog are explored. Includes an overview of how this all ties into the collaboration model I started in a post entitled “From Collaboration to Innovation to Market – Toward a Working Model”.

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Business Strategy and IT Strategy to Reproduce Apple Innovation
http://www.r3now.com/business-strategy-and-it-strategy-to-reproduce-apple-innovation

Overview of Apple Innovation and the focus on Jobs as the head of Apple.  The apple innovation secret (if it can be called that at all) is about relentlessly pursuing the customer experience at the point of customer frustration.  Where there is customer frustration or customer dissatisfaction there is opportunity for gaining market share for the company who is able to address that point of frustration.

Related Posts:

SAP, ERP III, SOA — Learning Organizations through Social Media Collaboration

April 27th, 2007

SAP, ERP III, SOA, and collaboration

SAP, ERP III, SOA, and collaboration

 

SAP Knowledge Management Introduction

Everyone’s heard the buzzwords, ERP, SAP, SOA, you name it.  In the technology area they’re everywhere.  These are just acronyms for ways companies try to leverage technology for competitive business advantage.  Reduce costs, streamline operations, increase revenue, and transform your organization.[1]

Since ERP applications like SAP have entered the business world there remains one area that enterprises struggle with –, the realm of capturing and then converting employee “know how” into ERP solutions–, Knowledge Management [2],[3].  I call part of that ability to leverage both employee “know how” and to collaborate with the broader customer community ERP III.  For a detailed explanation of the different versions see ERP vs. ERP II vs. ERP III Future Enterprise Applications .

There is a simple and inexpensive way to implement ERP III, enabling your ERP application to transform your enterprise into a learning organization.  ERP III is a way to capture that employee “know how” to develop business solutions to create real competitive advantage.  In this post we look at this idea in the context of SOA (Service Oriented Architecture), however it can be more widely applied and adopted to virtually anywhere in the enterprise.

Background for SOA, Knowledge Management, and ERP III

The ERP revolution began with integrating the “back office” functions of the enterprise: purchasing, ordering, financials, HR, distribution, inventory, etc.  The idea is that the whole enterprise relies upon a common set of data from a single database which provides one version of the truth–, a single version to rely upon or correct.  Next came ERP II, extending the ERP application from the back office to the extended supply chain, to the web, to the banks, and beyond.

Enter SOA or Service Oriented architecture, the idea of “universal” and completely reusable application services that can be “plugged in” to other applications.  This SOA architecture would then allow for the rapid assembly of dynamic process and application chains as business and opportunity needs arise.  SOA (or sometimes SaaS) holds tremendous promise to enhance and extend the idea of ERP II even further, but an idea that will take time and tremendous effort to do effectively. 

ERP III and the Learning Organization

The next generation of business transformation is ERP III, or the customer integrated ERP enabled learning organization.[4] However, SOA’s success and timeliness are  directly tied to how well an enterprise is able to create a “learning organization” within its development and IT ranks. 

This learning organization approach is one of the key backbones to a successful SOA initiative as well.  The cornerstone of effective SOA re-use policies and procedures, service standards, and validated service development is directly correlated to how well the enterprise’s developers are able to collaborate and coordinate their efforts (especially in an ad hoc manner).

A learning organization starts with knowledge management and is best supported by a culture which generates and also consumes information. 

Service Oriented Architecture, or “SOA” requires a level of participation, collaboration, and information exchange like never before to be successful.  True “SOA” requires a blending of technology, collaboration, and cooperation with highly structured standards to achieve a significant level of trust in the development work.  While many suggest that this level of collaboration, integration, and reliability within the enterprise may take enterprises as long as 10 years to accomplish, the methods defined in this paper can dramatically reduce that time and effort. [5] 

What is Knowledge Management?  [6]

A learning organization starts with knowledge management and is best supported by a culture which generates and also consumes information.  There seems to be no widely accepted “definition” for knowledge management, and as I review the information on Wikipedia about Knowledge Management I find a rambling discussion of high level theoretical constructs with little substance.  As a result I am offering my definition here, and some clarification, which helps to distinguish knowledge from information. 

“Knowledge Management is not information management.  It is the process of transforming unstructured data into contextual information and then applying that information.  Knowledge as “contextual information” is the ability to draw on information and combine it with experience by applying it to a particular situation or circumstance when it is needed.  Knowledge Management is the process of capturing, codifying, and disseminating information so that it provides some value in a particular context.”  Bill Wood, R3Now Consulting, originally drafted in the late 90′s, updated in 2006.

My personal opinion is that the reason there is little consensus on a Knowledge Management definition is because most “knowledge management” discussions surround information management.  What people call “knowledge” is the codification or classification of information.  Often “knowledge management” is referred to as the systems that help to capture and codify knowledge but this is still just information in a structured context.  They do not take knowledge to the next step of infusing it into the enterprise (or creating a learning organization) by creating methods to take that information and apply it in a value added context for day to day activities.  It is only with the application of information coupled with experience and context that something becomes “knowledge”–, it is NOT a system. 

Sytems can facilitate knowledge management.  Systems contain information, not knowledge.  Knowledge is the application of information in a relevant context.  Systems do not add context, situations add context.

For the enterprise to continue to “wring value” out of the ERP implementation or other technology investments, the enterprise must change.  For effective enterprise level change to take place technology must support the capture, organization, and implementation of the unstructured knowledge and information contained in people’s heads, or jotted down on crib sheets.  This is not an easy task.

Knowledge is not data and information. Data consists of facts, observations, occurrences, numbers, and things that are objectively perceived.

Information is a collection of various aggregated or synthesized data points. From there, Knowledge is the mix of information, experience, and context adding value [to a particular situation]…

Knowledge Management is the systematic process by which an organization maximizes the uncodified and codified knowledge within an organization.

Original author(s) unkown, further adapted and modified by Bill Wood.

Why is Knowledge Management So Misunderstood?

Before beginning it is crucial to understand the often misused, misunderstood, and even abused concept of “Knowledge Management.”  Contrary to so many of the technology offerings out there, knowledge management rarely (if ever) is a system, however systems can facilitate knowledge management.  Systems contain information, not knowledge.  Knowledge is the application of information in a relevant context.  Systems do not add context, situations add context.

Systems, by their nature and design are information tools.  Too many times the term “Knowledge Management” is used to describe information gathering and classification systems–, information systems.  Some even call their systems “knowledge bases,” and maybe they are bases for knowledge, however, they are not knowledge management systems.  Until information is learned, and then applied, it is not knowledge, it is merely information.

Knowledge Management, Collaboration Tools, and ERP III – Current and Future State

The initial process of implementing SAP requires taking structured and unstructured data, along with the processes from legacy systems and “institutionaly knowledge” and then you place this information into a highly structured application.  At its most effective, the initial SAP implementation captures some cost savings, process improvements, and revenue generating opportunities.  However, no initial implementation is able to capture the vast unstructured information and knowledge that resides in people’s heads. 

It is only with the application of information, in a particular context, coupled with experience where something becomes “knowledge”–, it is NOT some system.

The SAP enterprise current state, with the application you’ve implemented, and possibly some of the ERP II enhancements, still has the possibility to deliver far greater benefit without significant cost.  To capture and leverage that benefit requires an enterprise wide cultural transformation.  People must begin to both act and think differently.  And this change has to occur not just in the larger enterprise but within the IT organization itself.

To extend the SAP application’s usefulness and achieve greater benefit it is critical to a) capture useful “unstructured” information, b) then organize, classify, or categorize it, and then c) translate it into more useful application solutions.  This process also facilitates the implementation of SOA within the SAP environment.

The first step toward the future state is to create a collaborative learning organization.  A learning organization is an organization that is constantly acquiring and applying new information and thereby gaining knowledge.  Once that information is captured, it can then be structured into solutions, some process based, and others technology based. Some of the solutions can be translated into additional, value added SAP enhancements, additional SAP functionality, or market-based business opportunities around innovation and customer focus.

A Collaborative Knowledge Management Model for a Learning Organization

Based on my time at Grant Thornton (and later Hitachi Consulting) as the SAP Knowledge Manager, I made use of the best resources I could find in the arena of “Knowledge Management.”  Based on that research, and leveraging the pioneering efforts of other true knowledge managers, I created the model you see here.  It is consistent with much of the literature that exists today, however, in the late 90′s when it was developed, and then in 2000 when it was instituted, it was a pioneering effort.

1)  Raw Data:  The unstructured data, ideas, “crib notes,” and thoughts that we all have.  However in this instance, it is the raw data surrounding the job or responsibility that the individual performs within the enterprise.  Sometimes these are the “workarounds” to get something done when you run into obstacles or roadblocks, other times they are just shortcuts or techniques to perform a job or function.

Knowledge Management Process

2)    Organized Information:  This is the process of capturing and classifying that raw data.  This is where the “knowledge bases” and other types of information systems come in.  Many enterprises make it this far. Sometimes these are the “workarounds” to get something done when you run into roadblocks or obstacles.  Other times they might be the shortcuts or techniques to more efficiently perform a job or function.

3)    Acquired Information Experience: This is the interaction with the organized information.  This can be through search functions, employed taxonomies, reports, or other methods of accessing the organized information.  This is after the capture of the information in steps 1) and 2) above, and involves its wider availability than in the individual who originally developed or “held” the knowledge or information.  Few organizations or enterprises make it much further than this.  However, this is the beginning of the true learning organization.

4)    Applied Experience (Knowledge!):  This is the practical application of the organized information after it has been acquired.  Whether this acquisition is through word of mouth, training, or some type of information management system (that is wrong named a knowledge management system) or through a “knowledge base”. This is where the cost savings, revenue opportunities, continuous process improvement opportunities, and real competitive advantage begins to come to fruition.

5)    Refined Experience (accurate intuition and forecasting):  This is more of the inherent “knowing” what to do in a broad variety of contexts that may not be directly related to the task or issue at hand.  It is when an individual can draw on that level of inner experiences mixed with intuition and make the right decision or provide the right answers when there is not enough information to make such a determination under normal circumstances.  This can also be a type of “making the complex appear to be simple.” 

There is a simple and effective method to capture the unstructured information, organize and classify it, and then disseminate it in such a way as to create a true learning organization.  This method, outlined below, will help to move your organization through the 5 steps noted here.

Practical and Inexpensive Ways to Move Toward ERP III and SOA Today!

Since I am not a big fan of reinventing the wheel I look for existing ways to solve current problems.  To that end, the key to moving ahead on ERP III is to create a collaborative culture, from the collaborative culture, you create a learning organization by using some of the existing collaborative tools.  The answer lies in using some of the popular web technologies making a splash today.

Enter the “cool” and the “fun” factor in the enterprise–, “social networking” is one of the hottest, and most vibrant collaborative uses of technology anywhere–, these sites connect people for personal exchanges.  While not appropriate for the types of personal exchanges on the world wide web, that same technology can be used to create a collaborative environment around cost savings, process improvements, system enhancements, revenue opportunities, customer acquisition, customer retention, customer experience, enhanced products, better services, and general business improvement for competitive advantage.  The list of possibilities is only limited by what you can imagine can be leveraged from participant knowledge.  The same technology options which can enable SOA are avaliable to capture the uncodified end user “raw information.”

Forums are One Effective Method of Acquiring, Categorizing, and Synthesizing Unstructured Data and Information

Forums or other social media outlets can also be used to capture SOA related standards, common development services, and to do code or object reviews.  They can be used to capture SOA best practices while facilitating broader development community participation in standards, services, and object re-use policies.  The collaborative nature, and the ability to offer code improvement suggestions, bug fixes, standards exchanges, or development and solutions discussions, in a threaded forum will prove invaluable to an organizations SOA initiatives.

To make this a reality, the key is to leverage tools, and define a process that captures the unstructured information .  Once it is captured, methodically move that to process changes or to structured application solutions within SAP or an SOA initiative.

Defined below is a set of free tools, along with proposed solutions on how to apply those tools in a practical manner.  Please keep in mind, this is ONE solution option.  There are many more and there are also some very specific and interesting ways to incorporate this type of solution DIRECTLY into the SAP application.  Here is one method to get started:

1)    ANY networked PC (you don’t really need “heavy duty” hardware here unless you just must have blistering performance)

2)    Download the free Uniform Server application that works on Windows.  It contains Apache Web Server, MySQL, and PHP (including PHP My Admin).  http://www.uniformserver.com/   You only need to unzip this file to a local directory, and then double-click (or execute) the Start Server file.

3)    Download and Install the latest PHP Bulletin Board open source application:  http://www.phpbb.com/downloads/   (Set up the MySQL database and copy the web files to the proper local directory of the newly created web server from step 2).  To see the forums in action, go to the PHPBB site at: http://www.phpbb.com/community/

4)    Structure the Groups to match the business department (create a new forum “group”), and then create 4 sub-areas under each department link.  A)  Cost Savings, B)  Revenue Generation, C)  Process Improvement,  D) System Changes.

5)    Structure additional groups to match SOA service development.  An SOA topic with sub-forums for A) standards, B) services, C) objects, etc.

6)    Have the users create the hyperlinks in their SAP user menu.  A hyperlink for that departments topic in the bulletin board is easy to add to the SAP user menu (right click on the favorites menu, then add a web address, it’s really that simple.)

7)    Adjust department and user goals to include evaluating forum contributions, based on points earned for participation, and aligned with the forum structure that applies to them (for example, cost savings, revenue generation, SOA standards, etc.)

8)    For the system changes option, create an inexpensive interface to read the MySQL table for this area and generate a separate approval / response process.  This way the changes, and responses to those change requests, as well as the details of the change request, are captured in an easily searchable database.

9)    To produce the most useful solutions, follow a “PDCA” process (Plan, Do, Check, Act).  After a discussion thread has reached a certain point where the exchanges have stopped, reduced to a trickle, or a specific date deadline, have someone review the entire threaded discussion, capture the most salient posts (by using the hyperlinks to the posts), and then summarize those hyperlinks into a single post. Call a meeting with the key stakeholders, review the salient points and produce a position paper or some other summary document and then publish that for final review.

The PHPBB forum software contains several developer implemented modifications that are available, and fully supported at no charge [7].  For example they have a “cash” modification that is nothing more than adding a point system based [8] on how active a forum participant is.  In combination with the ability to develop groups, and to have moderators approve posts, this is an effective way to manage the information “clutter.”

Goals can be based on the number of points.  Posts can be reviewed and approved by the department supervisor, or even a skip-level manager as the moderator.  This ensures that the submissions are both high quality, and that they are being reviewed. 

Over time, in areas such as manufacturing maintenance, or any other similar situations, enough quality information could be captured to create solution databases.  This would facilitate the introduction of PM (Plant Maintenance) [9] for both preventive and predictive maintenance programs.

The searchable nature of the forums allows for quick and easy information retrieval in the short term.  Over a longer period of time, the information can be structured and implemented as various types of system solutions to address recurring themes or various business opportunities. 

Collaboration, virtual discussions, and even “debates” will ultimately occur in such a way that they help to refine various business issues or problems.  In the future, as the issues arise again, going back through the old dialogs may yield a new perspective or new direction for the future.  In the end, the cultural change to a learning organization will begin, and along with it new information and ultimately new knowledge will emerge to use for competitive advantage.

ERP III, Knowledge Management, Collaboration, and Learning Organizations – The Conclusion

Competitive advantage and the emergence of the extended enterprise through SOA, and the extended supply chain demand greater collaboration.  This collaboration is a key component of creating the learning organization.

SOA and additional benefit realization from an SAP implementation depend heavily on the ability of an organization to capture competitive advantage from the knowledge of the employee base.  Even skilled IT contractors must rely heavily upon the acquired knowledge and wisdom of those who actually perform the enterprise’s processes on a day to day basis. 

No matter how skilled an IT professional may be, there will always be some things that escape detection or discovery because of the nature of intangible “knowledge” that exists within any individual or organization.  The key to leveraging the IT investment in SAP and in implementing an effective SOA program is in finding ways to create collaborative communities to expose that knowledge.  This collaboration can become the basis of a “learning organization” that is a key to transforming both the enterprise and the IT infrastructure that supports it. Using today’s “social networking” tools, as a means to advance that collaborative culture is one of the most cost effective ways to accomplish the task of organizational transformation.

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[1]  SAP as a Change Enabler  http://www.r3now.com/sap-as-a-change-enabler

[2]  Knowledge Management—Emerging Perspectives: http://www.systems-thinking.org/kmgmt/kmgmt.htm

[3]  Knowledge Management Journal – Business process modeling through the knowledge management perspective: http://www.emeraldinsight.com/Insight/ViewContentServlet?Filename=Published/EmeraldFullTextArticle/Articles/2300100303.html

[4]  Learning Organization from Wikipedia – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Learning_organization

[5]  Hitachi Consulting, where I previously worked in the SAP practice as a functional consultant and the SAP Knowledge Manager has published a white paper on SOA that explains both its promise and its drawbacks; SOA – CIO Savior or Nemesis, http://www.hitachiconsulting.com/downloadPdf.cfm?ID=414

[6]  One important distinction to note here is that this paper will focus on the implementation of the “learning organization” in practical ways throughout the enterprise.  This “learning organization” approach has far reaching affects beyond SOA, it has the ability to transform business through the use of enabling technologies.

[7]  For example, see this forum which lists many of the validated and approved modifications, along with full support information and enhancement options.  http://www.phpbb.com/community/viewforum.php?f=15

[8] Forum with information for installing, updating, and enhancing or modifying the “cash” (i.e. points) modification to the PHPBB forum.  http://www.phpbb.com/community/viewtopic.php?p=539420

How to access the modifications while the modification database is unavailable (it is currently undergoing a complete update and re-write).  http://www.phpbb.com/community/viewtopic.php?f=15&t=527421

[9]  For example, see SAP’s Plant Maintenance solution:  http://help.sap.com/saphelp_47x200/helpdata/en/66/158661547611d182cc0000e829fbfe/frameset.htm

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