TY - CHAP
T1 - The Human Side of Knowledge Management
AU - Castaneda Zapata, Delio Ignacio
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023.
PY - 2023/11/1
Y1 - 2023/11/1
N2 - The emergence of knowledge management in the 1990s made it clear that information management was not enough to achieve organizational strategy. As multiple authors have documented, knowledge is information in agents’ heads. Information without people is static. Individuals dynamize information and convert it into knowledge. If knowledge implies that people acquire, process, create, share, and apply knowledge, a fundamental question is why some individuals want to do it and some do not. From the organizational behavior field, human actions depend on individual variables and environmental conditions, including organizational variables. The two dimensions are equally important; however, in this chapter, only three of the most relevant human variables were described based on research results: attitudes, self-efficacy, and trust. Attitudes are evaluations people make of others, things, situations, and concepts. Many publications confirm the relationship between attitudes and knowledge management, especially in the knowledge sharing component. This chapter presented some of them. Self-efficacy is an individual’s confidence in his or her abilities to execute a particular task. Self-efficacy influences how people think, feel, and act and therefore their achievements. There is a positive relationship between self-efficacy and knowledge sharing, and some studies were presented. Trust is a belief, assessment, or assumption about an exchange partner that results from the partner’s expertise, reliability, benevolence, and deliberateness. Trust has a positive impact on knowledge sharing. When there is trust within a group, the intensity of knowledge sharing increases.
AB - The emergence of knowledge management in the 1990s made it clear that information management was not enough to achieve organizational strategy. As multiple authors have documented, knowledge is information in agents’ heads. Information without people is static. Individuals dynamize information and convert it into knowledge. If knowledge implies that people acquire, process, create, share, and apply knowledge, a fundamental question is why some individuals want to do it and some do not. From the organizational behavior field, human actions depend on individual variables and environmental conditions, including organizational variables. The two dimensions are equally important; however, in this chapter, only three of the most relevant human variables were described based on research results: attitudes, self-efficacy, and trust. Attitudes are evaluations people make of others, things, situations, and concepts. Many publications confirm the relationship between attitudes and knowledge management, especially in the knowledge sharing component. This chapter presented some of them. Self-efficacy is an individual’s confidence in his or her abilities to execute a particular task. Self-efficacy influences how people think, feel, and act and therefore their achievements. There is a positive relationship between self-efficacy and knowledge sharing, and some studies were presented. Trust is a belief, assessment, or assumption about an exchange partner that results from the partner’s expertise, reliability, benevolence, and deliberateness. Trust has a positive impact on knowledge sharing. When there is trust within a group, the intensity of knowledge sharing increases.
KW - Attitudes
KW - Human variables
KW - Knowledge management
KW - Knowledge sharing
KW - Self-efficacy
KW - Trust
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85178371315&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/bd97d029-26c0-3b2f-a52d-c698dbb67d6c/
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-031-38696-1_7
DO - 10.1007/978-3-031-38696-1_7
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85178371315
SN - 978-3-031-38695-4
VL - 12
T3 - Knowledge Management and Organizational Learning
SP - 131
EP - 148
BT - The Future of Knowledge Management
PB - Springer
CY - Switzerland
ER -