The
literature has discussed organizational knowledge both as a resource
[Grant, R., 1996] and a process of learning [Argyris and Schon, 1978,
Senge, P., 1990], often emphasizing one aspect over the other.
There is 3 theorizing knowledge in organizational :
1. Knowledge as resource and Process
Through
the resource perspective, organizations view knowledge as a
fundamental resource in addition to the traditional resources of land,
labor, and capital. It is held that the knowledge that the firm
possesses is a source of sustainable competitive advantage, and is,
accordingly, regarded as a strategic resource of the firm in need of
management attention.
2. Interactions for knowledge creation
While
knowledge itself may be perceived as a resource, its creation occurs
through human interactions, whether physical or virtual. For example,
for knowledge to emerge from within a group, interactions that occur
among its members shape the knowledge that emerges from the mutual
engagement and participation of the group members.Those with a
communication and interaction perspective have argued that through
discourse and dialectics, individuals shape and re-shape the thought
processes of others, eventually leading to a situation of negotiated
ormutually co-constructed reasoning for action and knowledge [von Krogh
et al.,1998].
3. Activity as Context
Proposes
that knowledge can be observed as emerging out of the tensions that
arise within an organization’s activity systems, that is, among
individuals and their communities, their environment (rules and
regulations), and the instruments and resources that mediate their
activities. Through immersion in joint activity, individuals in
organizations gain tacit knowledge, the sharing of which occurs as a
result of the mutual participation [Tsoukas, H., 1996].