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What is Knowledge Hoarding

Handbook of Research on Organizational Culture Strategies for Effective Knowledge Management and Performance
When teams or individuals withhold knowledge, information or learnings from the organization’s knowledge repository and others in the organization. This behavior is usually motivated by self-preservation, a need to feel secure within the organization, or some other general need to have power over others. It negatively impacts the organization’s knowledge management strategy because the organization does not have access to what these individuals know.
Published in Chapter:
Enabling Knowledge Flow: The Knowledge Management Triangle Model
Dana Tessier (Independent Researcher, Canada)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-7422-5.ch009
Abstract
Organizations are facing many challenges to remain relevant in the face of new technology, emerging markets, and changing consumer behaviors. Many organizations look to become learning organizations with knowledge management strategies to leverage their knowledge assets and continuously innovate their strategies and products. However, organizations struggle to achieve success with knowledge management because their organizational culture does not support knowledge-sharing and must be adapted for this new behavior. Knowledge must flow through the organization, and so, therefore, these necessary behaviors must work within the existing corporate culture. Observations from a case study at a software company are discussed, and a new knowledge management model, the Knowledge Management Triangle, is introduced. The Knowledge Management Triangle is a simple model to explain and implement knowledge management within organizations and is customizable to work within the organization's culture to ensure the new knowledge management behaviors are appropriately adopted.
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