2013
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-38862-0_3
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Success or Failure in Knowledge Management Systems: A Universal Issue,

Abstract: Abstract. This paper takes a sociotechnical viewpoint of knowledge management system (KMS) implementation in organizations considering issues such as stakeholder disenfranchisement, lack of communication, and the low involvement of key personnel in system design asking whether KMS designers could learn from applying sociotechnical principles to their systems. The paper discusses design elements drawn from the sociotechnical principles essential for the success of IS and makes recommendations to increase the su… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…For knowledge to transfer successfully, Coakes et al (2013: 55) recommend:requiring encouraging and rewarding the sharing of information through organizational policies, since we find that people do not share information because they do not want to part with their knowledge, or they do not feel that it is one of their tasks or job role.Similarly, Liebowitz (2016) argues that KM must be not siloed and must continue to be an integrative mechanism that bridges across the functional silos in an organization.…”
Section: Judging Effectiveness Of Kmmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…For knowledge to transfer successfully, Coakes et al (2013: 55) recommend:requiring encouraging and rewarding the sharing of information through organizational policies, since we find that people do not share information because they do not want to part with their knowledge, or they do not feel that it is one of their tasks or job role.Similarly, Liebowitz (2016) argues that KM must be not siloed and must continue to be an integrative mechanism that bridges across the functional silos in an organization.…”
Section: Judging Effectiveness Of Kmmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…This failure usually happens at the implementation phase (Abbasi, Tarhini, Elyas & Shah, 2015;Legris, Ingham & Collerette, 2003;Tan & Sutherland, 2004) and spans from under-usage to outright repudiation (Venkatesh and Davis, 2000). The primary reasons for such failures include poor alignment or fit between the system and its end users (Davis, 1993), weak configuration fit such as inconsistent strategy, structure and technology issues (Sauer, Southon & Dampney, 1997) and much recently human and organisational barriers (Coakes, Amar & Granados, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hurley and Green [26] argue that funding agencies are particularly eager to encourage knowledge sharing between organizations. Sharing knowledge implies that organizational silos are overcome and that organizations transit from a culture of information hoarding to information sharing [8]. On the fourth level, organizations embrace social media and the role of IT shifts from being central to being supportive.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An emergent design means that the problem is reconsidered based on new observations as the project is already deployed. Indeed, failure to include stakeholders in the design phase is seen as a major reason for failures in knowledge management [8].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%