2013
DOI: 10.1108/jkm-12-2012-0381
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Knowledge management and measurement: a critical review

Abstract: Purpose – Knowledge is the currency of the current economy, a vital organisational asset and a key to creating a sustainable competitive advantage. The consequent interest in knowledge management (KM) has spurred an exponential increase in publications covering a broad spectrum of diverse and overlapping research areas. The purpose of this paper is to provide a literature review and categorised analysis of the rapidly growing number of KM publications, and offer a comprehensive reference for new-comers embark… Show more

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Cited by 173 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…Sveiby (2010) mentions that the financial methods are useful in merger and acquisition situations and for stock market valuations, as well as, for comparisons between companies within the same industry. However, as Ragab and Arisha (2013) points out, financial methods do not always clarify where problems exist and the value-adding contribution (or lack) of different intellectual capital components. Kannan and Aulbur (2004) add that intangibles such as staff competencies, customer relationships, business models, and computer and administrative systems receive no recognition in the traditional financial methods.…”
Section: Knowledge Level Evaluation Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Sveiby (2010) mentions that the financial methods are useful in merger and acquisition situations and for stock market valuations, as well as, for comparisons between companies within the same industry. However, as Ragab and Arisha (2013) points out, financial methods do not always clarify where problems exist and the value-adding contribution (or lack) of different intellectual capital components. Kannan and Aulbur (2004) add that intangibles such as staff competencies, customer relationships, business models, and computer and administrative systems receive no recognition in the traditional financial methods.…”
Section: Knowledge Level Evaluation Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The various components of intellectual capital are identified and indicators and indices are generated and reported in scorecards or as graphs (Sveiby, 2010). In cases where metrics measure a qualitative attribute (such as motivation) scale-based surveys are used to convert qualitative values into quantitative figures (Ragab & Arisha, 2013). A composite index may or may not be produced (Sveiby, 2010).…”
Section: Knowledge Level Evaluation Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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