The
idea of knowledge delay or storage can be a difficult one to deal with. Although
it is something that we do from birth, it isn’t often that we are encouraged
to sit back and reflect on just how we hold onto and manage this stock of
personal capital. In the following sections I offer a number of ideas that might
help you to move down this road and think about how you can effectively manage
your ability to store and retrieve knowledge on demand. The key questions are:
·
How effective is my memory as a storage
system?
·
How do I use systems to retain
information?
·
What impact do emotions have on my
storage capability?
·
Do I store knowledge in partnership with
other people?
This
question might seem relativity easy to answer, but in reality they underpin your
entire capacity to create a market value. Consider any management meeting that
you have recently attended. The session was probably full of ideas, questions,
challenges and emotional learning. Now think about how much of that knowledge
was actually taken away and translated into something with real market value. In
my experience up to 90% of all ‘potential’ knowledge created in a team or
organisation is lost because of poor or missing processes to capture and harness
the knowledge. Unless we ask these types of questions and make the delay process
explicit then we are not capturing capital for future exploitation.
The purpose of this stage in the
model is to consider how we store, retain and reuse knowledge that has been
stockpiled for later use. The matrix considers primarily the human or fluid
aspect of storage, there is also the issue of fixed storage – i.e. logging
information on paper, in a system or even on a clay tablet.
The delay process can be considered in three ways: Fluid; Fixed and Firm. Although this offers a slightly simplistic view of the asset categories, it does help to understand how we structure and manage our knowledge.

|
Fluid - The elements of
knowledge that are contained within our hearts and minds and leave when we
leave the business. It might be personal experience accumulated over a
number of years in the business, or a long-term relationship cultivated
with a customer. Sometimes it can be shared knowledge that has yet to be
coded into the organisation’s systems and processes. This might be an
idea that a person has submitted, but has been excluded or lost in the
internal system. The bottom line is that if the person leaves, so does the
knowledge. | |
|
Fixed
- These are knowledge elements retained
when an individual leaves. Once knowledge is locked in the system as coded
information, it can be seen as hard capital. It is available for anyone in
the company to make use of it, irrespective of the originator's presence.
Such examples might be coded software, product upgrades or business
proposals. | |
|
Firm
– This is knowledge that sits between the fixed and fluid model in that
it has a dependency on both elements. This might be the unique sound that
is produced from a musical genius playing a quality instrument.
Individually each of the elements can perform to a satisfactory degree,
but in bringing the two together, there is an added presence, a synergy
that enhances the levels of knowledge. Conversely, the knowledge might
only be available when two separate elements are brought together, like
the need for two opposing polarities to generate an electrical current. An
example might be where an individual has independently created a database.
Anyone else who attempts to use it will not be able to extract the
information, because they do not have an intimate appreciation of the
system’s architecture. |
It
often boils to one of three choices, the fluid option, whereby you hold it
inside yourself; the firm option, where you partially codify the knowledge, but
record in a system that is personal to you; or you can take the fixed option and
hard code it into a system, process or report.
No one delay
process is right, as the decisions around this stage will be depend upon the
content of the knowledge and the context in which it is being stored. However,
they do come with various risks for both you and the organisation you work with.
The fluid choice keeps power with the knowledge owner and allows you to leverage
personal gain from the asset base. However, the risk for you is that you might
forget it and the risk to organisation is that when you walk out the door so
does the personal capital. The second option might be that you make a rough note
in a diary or log book. This gives you the security that it will be easier to
recall at a later date, but you are starting to hand over control of the capital
of the knowledge, especially if the log book system is owned by another person
or company. The final option is to opt for the fixed storage. Whilst this
guarantees the information will be there for others to access (unless password
protected), it can reduce your capital value and reduces your personal market
value.

(c) Mick Cope