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Knowledge management: the newest battle between the neats and the scruffies

by Jim McGee

“There are two groups of people, those who divide people into two groups and those who don’t.” –Robert Benchley

Years ago, when I was doing work in the field of AI, I came across one of those binary splits that continues to be useful for my thinking; the split between “neats” and “scruffies.” In the field of AI, the split differentiated between those favoring highly structured, logically precise approaches and those preferred something more along the lines of “whatever works.” Wikipedia offers a nice summary of the debate from that field.

Back in my school days, I think I was a neat (philosophically, not in terms of my room or study skills). When I first delve into new areas I am drawn to those who argue the neat case. As I get older and, I hope, more experienced, however, I find myself increasingly scruffy.

Much of the recent debate in the narrow field of knowledge management can be interpreted as one more recapitulation of the neats vs. scruffies argument. The technologies of blogs, wikis, and social media that collectively comprise the emerging notion of Enterprise 2.0 celebrate scruffiness as the essence of success in knowledge-intensive enterprises. The claim, backed by appropriately messy and sketchy anecdotal evidence, is that a loose set of simple technologies made available to the knowledge workers of an organization can provide an environment in which the organization and its knowledge workers can make more effective use of their collective and individual knowledge capital. Grass roots efforts will yield value where large-scale, centralized, knowledge management initiatives have failed.

Several implications flow from adopting a scruffy point of view. For one, “management” becomes a suspect term. If you can manage at all, you must do so at another level of abstraction. You aren’t managing knowledge; instead you are trying to manage the conditions under which knowledge work takes place and within which valuable knowledge might be created or put to use. At that point, it becomes more productive to think in terms of leadership rather than management; particularly if you subscribe to Colin Powell’s characterization of a leader as someone you’ll follow to discover where they’re going.

Second, you will need to deal with the problems that the neats have created in previous runs at knowledge management without alienating them at the same time. In most large organizations, knowledge management has been characterized as a technology problem or as a analog to financial management; placing it squarely within the purview of the organization’s neatest neats. This is a recipe for disappointment, if not outright failure.

It might possibly be an open question whether knowledge management can be eventually reduced to something as structured as accounting or library science. But it is a lousy place to start. Most organizations aren’t yet mature or sophisticated enough about knowledge work issues and questions to be obsessing about taxonomies or measurement and reward systems for knowledge work. But those are activities that are neat and specifiable and only superficially relevant. They lead to complex efforts to get to the right answer when we would be better served by simpler efforts to make things better.

 

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3 Comments

Paula ThorntonJuly 8th, 2007 at 8:12 pm

Ah, but the science of complexity is in the ‘in between’. It’s the turbulent moving continuum between order and chaos. It’s the edge of consistency amid change. It’s just enough structure to facilitate order, but not enough to stifle creativity (itself, the middle between success and failure).

It’s not one or the other; it’s not yin or yang. It’s the intersection between the both, changing to optimize the conditions at hand.

We tend to see the world as if everything were about choosing between two things. The real world is not about poles, but continuums between the poles.
There needs to be structure, but componetized (ala. the architecture FAST has adopted). Where and how structure is introduced is the art of the science (see The Philosophy of Enterprise 2.0

Jim McGeeJuly 9th, 2007 at 9:46 am

I ultimately found complexity science in its current incarnation to be disappointing when I tried adapting it to organizational problems. I found the language system to be too ethereal for most of the managers that I interacted with. That’s actually one of the reasons that I like the “neat”/”scruffy” labels; they’re simple and evocative.

It is, of course, about trying to find pragmatic balances.

Jordan FrankJuly 18th, 2007 at 11:18 am

I really like the Neat to Scruffy continuum here. The key concluding point here is that you “were a neat” and are becoming “increasingly scruffy.” You are celebrating the creativity that comes out of a reduction but not abandonment of process or structure. I just posted a detailed note building on this point, specifically about the Yin and Yang of Enterprise 2.0. A core structure, such as the one in the ShoreBank Case Study example provides a leverage point upon which a group can Coordinate their Collaboration (Yin) in the Wiki while allowing for Collaborative Creativity and some Chaos (Yang) .

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