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Organising Knowledge: Methods and Case Studies PDF

245 Pages·2004·1.173 MB·English
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Organising Knowledge Methods and Case Studies Edited by Johannes Gadner, Renate Buber and Lyn Richards Organising Knowledge Also by the same editors Applying Quantitative Methods to Marketing Management Research Organising Knowledge Methods and Case Studies Edited by Johannes Gadner Renate Buber and Lyn Richards Selection and editorial matter © Johannes Gadner, Renate Buber and Lyn Richards 2004 Individual chapters © the contributors 2004 Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 20 04 978-1-4039-1 661-7 All rights reserved.No reproduction,copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced,copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright,Designs and Patents Act 1988,or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency,90 Tottenham Court Road,London W1T 4LP. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. The authors have asserted their rights to be identified as the authors of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. First published 2004 by PALGRAVE MACMILLAN Houndmills,Basingstoke,Hampshire RG21 6XS and 175 Fifth Avenue,New York,N.Y.10010 Companies and representatives throughout the world PALGRAVE MACMILLAN is the global academic imprint of the Palgrave Macmillan division of St.Martin’s Press,LLC and of Palgrave Macmillan Ltd. Macmillan® is a registered trademark in the United States,United Kingdom and other countries.Palgrave is a registered trademark in the European Union and other countries. ISBN 978-1-349-51290-4 ISBN 978-0-230-52311-1 (eBook) DOI 10.1057/9780230523111 This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Organising knowledge:methods and case studies / editors,Johannes Gadner, Renate Buber,Lyn Richards. p.cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-4039-1661-6 (cloth) 1.Knowledge,Theory of.2.Knowledge management.3.Gabek (Computer file) I.Gadner,Johannes.II.Buber,Renate,1954- III.Richard,Lyn. BD175.0595 2003 001-dc22 2003056407 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 Contents Preface vii Notes on the Contributors xii Acknowledgements xvi Part I Theoretical and Methodological Issues 1 Structures and Diversity in Everyday Knowledge: From Reality to Cognition, Knowledge and Back 3 Markus Franz Peschl 2 Situatedness and Artefacts in Expert Knowledge and Activity 28 Hanna Risku 3 The Human Foundation of Knowledge Management 43 Thomas Bernhard Seiler 4 Conceptual Knowledge Organisation and the Problem of Understanding 60 Johannes Gadner and Doris Ohnesorge 5 Gestalt-Based Linguistics and the GABEK Method: What Cognitive Science has to Say on ‘Space Logic’ in Everyday Thought 75 Michael Kimmel 6 Managing Complexity: Knowledge Organisation and Qualitative Software 93 Lyn Richards Part II Case Studies 7 Consumers’ Knowledge of Controlled Ventilation Systems 113 Johannes Gadner and Renate Buber v vi Contents 8 The Process of Web Personalisation: A Framework to Determine Appropriate Personalisation Systems 125 Sonja Grabner-Kräuter 9 Evaluating a Computer-Based Marketing Course by Means of Focus Groups and Interviews 138 Regina Höld 10 The Job Image of Young Sales Assistants: Introspection and Young Consumers’ Assessment 153 Renate Buber 11 Venture Brazil: Studying Austro-Brazilian Joint Ventures by Means of GABEK and WinRelan 168 Jürgen Mühlbacher and Jochen Penker 12 Austrian Furniture Retailers’ Perspective on the Austrian Design Sector 180 Renate Buber and Marion Friedmann 13 Influences of Organisational Learning on Organisational Performance and Success 193 Roland Yeo Index 215 Preface Knowledge forms the basis of all human behaviour in general and management activities in particular. Although the identification, acqui- sition, organisation and storage of knowledge, as well as the efficient use of knowledge, are not new in the scientific and economic worlds, the systematic development and use of methods and tools to organise and manage knowledge constitute a new and increasingly important aspect of academic research and management practice (McDonald et al., 1997; Stewart, 1997; von Müller, 2000; Wille, 1999a; Reimann- Rothmeier and McElroy, 2002; Mandl, 2000). In management practice knowledge organisation mostly involves the use of databases and the development of data-mining tools, but in academic research the search for adequate definitions of knowledge, knowledge organisation and knowledge management is ongoing (Schreyögg and Geiger, 2003). This book aims to help bridge the gap between scientific research on knowledge organisation and the economic use of knowledge manage- ment applications by providing both a theoretical discussion of issues in knowledge organisation and knowledge management, and several case studies focusing on knowledge-based problem situations in man- agement and the application of qualitative methods to solve them. To cover the wide range of research perspectives and practical applications (themes, approaches, methods, levels of generalisability), knowledge is defined here as actively processed networks of cognitive maps based on the experiences and intrinsic capacities of individuals as well as social/cultural standards, patterns and schemes for organising perceptive information on environmental effects and regulating indi- vidual behaviour within social systems (Oeser and Seitelberger, 1995, pp. 203–6; Shore, 1996, pp. 311–15). This definition is critically exam- ined and elaborated on in order to point out the problems of systemat- ically and theoretically oriented research in knowledge organisation and management. Following Schreyögg and Geiger (2003, pp. 12–13), the kind of knowl- edge dealt with here is characterised by three factors. First, knowledge is propositional, that is, it is directly bound to communication and has to be negotiated in discourses. Second, every proposition explicitly or implicitly claims validity. This means that knowledge demands reasons. vii viii Preface Third, it is not sufficient just to propose reasons for qualifying proposi- tions as knowledge – these reasons must be recognised within the specific context being researched. Thus knowledge in this context refers to all sorts of conceptual knowledge, that is, knowledge properties that are available from verbal expression and as text. In this book, various methods and tools that are used to organise and manage verbal data – that is, propositional knowledge – are described theoretically and their practicability in various contexts is demonstrated. In addition the terms knowledge organisation and knowledge manage- ment are discussed. The core reason for knowledge organisation is to ease access to knowledge and to make complex knowledge properties more intelligible (Wille, 1999a,b; Kiel and Rost, 2003). Knowledge organisation can be defined as a precondition for knowledge manage- ment which focuses on the systematic and strategic use of knowledge in economic situations (McElroy, 2002). In short, knowledge has to be organised systematically in order to manage and use it efficiantly. This book is a result of the ‘First International Workshop on Qualitative Research in Marketing and Management’ organised by the Department of Retailing and Marketing at the Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration (VUEBA), QSR International (Qualitative Solutions in Research), Melbourne, and the Institute for Knowledge Organisation (IWO–Institut für Wissens organisation), Vienna–which took place at VUEBA 9–11 April 2002. The IWO was responsible for organising the third day of the workshop which dealt with qualitative methods for knowledge organisation and their applica- tion to marketing and management research and practice-the outcome % is presented in the 13 chapters of this book. The book is divided into two parts. Part I contains six approaches to various issues in knowledge organisation and knowledge management. In Chapter 1 Markus F. Peschl defines different sorts of knowledge from an interdisciplinary perspective. He describes various approaches to and definitions of knowledge, as well as their cognitive scientific back- grounds. The use of knowledge properties in several scientific and practical contexts is also addressed. From a conceptual point of view, a model of everyday and expert knowledge is developed. In Chapter 2 Hanna Risku critically examines situatedness and artefacts in expert knowledge and activity. She starts from the point where everyday knowledge is transformed into expert knowledge by creating flexible reference models based on recurring regularities or pat- terns. These general reference models distinguish experts from novices who use superficial characteristics to categorise problems, relying on explicit, visible keywords. Preface ix In Chapter 3 Thomas Bernhard Seiler analyses the nature and funda- mental conditions of knowledge as prerequisites for knowledge organi- sation and management. The analysis reveals a contrast between objectified knowledge and its idiosyncratic origin, and it is shown that assessment of the knowledge that is implicit in the structure of an organisation and in the behaviour of its members requires qualitative research methods. In Chapter 4 Johannes Gadner and Doris Ohnesorge focus on methodological aspects of the use of conceptual structures for the organisation and systematisation of knowledge and the problem of understanding. After a general and theoretical overview of Gordon Pask’s notion of protolanguage, two computer-supported qualitative methods of knowledge organisation based on this concept are described. In Chapter 5 Michael Kimmel discusses recent findings in cognitive linguistics and their relevance for the computer-supported process of gestalt building using the GABEK method. While the method’s under- lying assumption about the condensation and spatial grouping of knowledge into gestalt clusters is confirmed, cognitive approaches point to the method’s shortcomings and the constraints on automated gestalt building in on-line cognition. In Chapter 6 Lyn Richards discusses the problem of managing complexity. She argues that all (software-assisted) qualitative research requires the organisation of knowledge that is provided a priori, discov- ered during enquiry and derived from search and scrutiny. She describes a number of software packages and various ways of organising, process- ing and representing knowledge in form of conceptual data. Part II presents case studies of the organisation and management of knowledge. In Chapter 7 Johannes Gadner and Renate Buber, concentrate on consumers’ knowledge of and attitudes towards energy-efficient build- ings with controlled ventilation systems. From their daily experiences of their living and working environments, consumers know about certain aspects of the products and technologies they use. The authors discuss how the knowledge and experiences of inhabitants of energy- efficient buildings could be used to design targeted marketing strategies. In Chapter 8, Sonja Grabner-Kräuter focuses on web-usage mining, which is defined as the discovery of knowledge about user access pat- terns from web servers. It comprises the systematic organisation of gen- eral access pattern tracking and customised usage tracking. The chapter provides an overview of recommendation systems and analyses the main factors that have to be considered when determining whether a system is adequate. It is shown that the success of personalisation

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