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Where is the “Knowledge” for the Knowledge Worker?

Where is the “Knowledge” for the Knowledge Worker? . Carl Ascenzo CEO & Consultant. Introduction.

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Where is the “Knowledge” for the Knowledge Worker?

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  1. Where is the “Knowledge” for the Knowledge Worker? Carl Ascenzo CEO & Consultant

  2. Introduction Companies go through great effort and expense to recruit, train and retain employees for operational jobs such as customer service and back office operations. Unfortunately important interpersonal skills such as  professionalism, attitude, empathy and communication are often sacrificed for technical skills. Why? Because the challenge with technical competence often lies with the ability to memorize vasts amounts of information, complexity,  multiple information sources and systems, and is further hindered by change, incomplete documentation, and flawed policies and procedures. Technology has helped with the “work” component. Technologies such as automated call routing, interactive voice response, business process management and customer relationship management are a few examples. Companies should now focus on the “knowledge” part of the equation by proactively driving context-sensitive information to employees when, where and how they need it. Unfortunately most content and knowledge management systems don’t have this capability. Methodology and systems are now being introduced to compliment the work technologies, by providing real time knowledge deployment.

  3. … and why is this important? 1 DEMAND …for improved business operations performance is unrelenting and constant.

  4. why is this important? 2 OBSTACLES …limited qualified labor, more products/policies/procedures, new systems, increasing regulations, heightened risk management, accelerating change and complexity.

  5. Which means… Can’t Find… Frustrated Can’t Absorb… Overwhelmed Can’t Execute… Confused

  6. Resulting in underperformance…. More Errors Wasted Time Stress & Turnover • ….and a direct impact on profits

  7. Components of S&P 500 Market Capitalization1973 – 2007 (OCEAN TOMO) Market Premium: No Book Value Intangible Asset Book Value Tangible Asset Book Value …. intangible capital with no book value dominates value creation

  8. “Structural Capital”, particularly knowledge and business practices, is a largely untapped corporate asset. Intangible Capital with No Book Value RelationshipCapital (Customers, Vendors, Partners) Human Capital (Competencies, Experience, Skills) Structural Capital (Processes, Information, Knowledge, Practices) I-Capital Advisors

  9. Challenges to optimizing structural capital • Many enterprises do not think about structural capital and its impact on customers or costs • Eliminating all complexity is not practical, yet not dealing with it isn’t an option • Organizations assume knowledge management includes knowledge delivery • Traditional training emphases memorization, versus ongoing support and can’t keep pace with change • Adults learn best by doing; at that moment they have a high interest in the task, situation and related concepts

  10. average 10+ windows running simultaneously

  11. Page: 13 of 145 Words: 34,768 ↑ complexity = indigestible

  12. Technology Dilemma • BPM and CRM are architected for moving a transaction (data) on a path of tasks through a process • Document Mgmt and Content Mgmt are architected to store information in a catalogued way • Knowledge Mgmt and Collaboration are architected to facilitate team creation of work artifacts • Search is unpredictable in accuracy, granularity, speed • As transaction processing differs from data warehousing, knowledge delivery has to differ from Knowledge Mgmt

  13. evolution of systems Business Process Management Business Practice Guidance Collaboration Intranet CRM Electronic Document Management Speed to Information Knowledge Management Search Enterprise Portals Workflow Management eLearning HELP Content Management Paper Files Imaging < 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 > p a s s i v e v e r s u s a c t i v e

  14. Solution: Business Practice Guidance (BPG) To navigate through complexity faster and accurately without disrupting underlying business and technology systems. Business Practice Guidance is the capability to proactively drive real-time, accurate, context-relevant knowledge and information to employees when, where, and how they need it.

  15. BPG improvement – operations • Improves quality • Reduces errors • Improves consistency • Increases productivity • Reduces risk • Improves overall customer, employee experience • Simplifies complex processes • Turbo charges existing IT • Incorrect handling • 60 – 90% reduction • Average handle time • 10 – 30% reduction • First call resolution • 20 – 40% improvement • Escalation to expert • 40 – 70% reduction

  16. BPG improvement – compliance • Enables “active” adherence to policies, regulations, procedures • Enforces appropriate controls at all business levels • Enhances risk management • Provides audit capability • Immediate availability of additions & revisions

  17. BPG improvement – knowledge deployment • Delivers knowledge and information that is not operational • Captures knowledge in a structured way • Makes knowledge useful • Effectively maintains knowledge • Timely distributes knowledge

  18. BPG improvement – learning & development • Improved attrition • Reduced complexity & burnout • Faster adoption of business and systems change • Improved employee satisfaction & engagement • Transforming without pain • Formal classroom training • > 50% reduction • Initial & ongoing time to competency • 50 – 80% reduction • Effective on job training and support • Improved staffing flexibility

  19. case study: banking Financial Services • Significant increase in productivity (table on next slide) • 91% reduction in non-lending losses • 40% to 60% increase in employee engagement • 99% on-time service score • 99.9% transaction accuracy score • Faster implementation and ROI in rollout of 4 major systems

  20. case study: banking (continued) BEFORE AFTER

  21. case study: health insurance • Search times reduced 94% (from 120 to 7 seconds) • 10% reduction in customer hold time • 20 second reduction in average handle time • Significant decrease in Help Line calls • 80% CSR engagement in continuous improvement • New hire attrition rate reduced 26% Health Insurance

  22. Early Adopters • British Telecom – order management • National Australia Bank – call center & back office • Blue Cross NE Pennsylvania – member service • Caterpillar – dealership operations • Hewlett Packard – sales & service • Stellar – call center & BPO outsourcing • Celgene – risk management

  23. Summary “Structural Capital”, particularly knowledge and business practices, is a largely untapped corporate asset. For many enterprises…they do not think about complexity, its impact on customers or costs.” – Mark McDonald, Gartner. Adults learn best by doing things, so providing learning at the moment of need is a highly leveraged technique. – Gloria Gery Eliminating all complexity is not practical; dealing with it is not an option and needs to be a core competency for every organization. – Delphi Group Business Practice Guidance, proactively drives accurate, context relevant knowledge and information to employees when, where and how they need it. BPG is not Help, Search, BPM, CRM, CM or KM - BPG leverages these capabilities to increase operational performance.

  24. Carl Ascenzo CEO & Consultant O: 978.283.0408 M: 860.716.5893 Carl@AscentionConsult.com

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