Purpose – A significant part of knowledge and experience in an organization belongs not to the organization itself, but to the individuals it employs. Therefore, knowledge management (KM) tasks should include eliciting knowledge from knowledgeable individuals. The paper aims to argue that the current palette of methods proposed for this in KM discourse is limited by idealistic assumptions about the behavior of knowledge owners. This paper also aims to enrich the repertoire of methods that can be used in an organization to extract knowledge (both tacit and explicit) from its employees by bridging KM and knowledge engineering and its accomplishments in the knowledge elicitation field. Design/methodology/approach – This paper is based on extensive literature review and 20 years of experience of one of the authors in applying various knowledge elicitation techniques in multiple companies and contexts. Findings – The paper proposes that the special agent (analyst) might be needed to elicit knowledge from individ
Язык оригиналаанглийский
ЖурналJournal of Knowledge Management
Том16
Номер выпуска4
DOI
СостояниеОпубликовано - 2012

    Области исследований

  • РИНЦ, SCOPUS

ID: 5461101