Balancing Venturi and Laissez-Faire Management Styles: Insights from Fluid Mechanical Analogs

Mobilizing distributed Organizational Intelligence involves managerial efforts whereby the generation of new tacit knowledge requires dissemination of newly codified externalized knowledge. The managerial role in the early stage of knowledge creation is to support and stimulate the process of knowle...

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Main Author: Ruud Weijermars
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Institute of Informatics and Cybernetics 2007-12-01
Series:Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.iiisci.org/Journal/CV$/sci/pdfs/A916LMB.pdf
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spelling doaj-0699b16296d24c6b9fcc903fc8888ae32020-11-24T22:29:16ZengInternational Institute of Informatics and CyberneticsJournal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics1690-45242007-12-01568290Balancing Venturi and Laissez-Faire Management Styles: Insights from Fluid Mechanical AnalogsRuud Weijermars0 Department of Geotechnology, Delft University of Technology and Energy Delta Institute, PO Box 5048, 2600GA Delft, the Netherlands Mobilizing distributed Organizational Intelligence involves managerial efforts whereby the generation of new tacit knowledge requires dissemination of newly codified externalized knowledge. The managerial role in the early stage of knowledge creation is to support and stimulate the process of knowledge generation and to aid the diffusion of knowledge across organizational boundaries. In contrast, the subsequent 'harvesting' and goal-oriented application of knowledge requires convergence of human actors (H) as carriers of distributed intelligence (DI). Optimization of the organizational performance and improved workflow efficiency is best effectuated by applying insights from fluid mechanical analogs. Several such analogs are introduced here and these provide insight that helps to funnel tacit and explicit knowledge into tangible asset value. Three sets of managerial lessons are inferred from the analogs: (1) Social bonding between professionals needs to be stimulated because professionals with strong social bonds (S) can sustain effective workflows under relatively high pressures, while weak social bonds lead to turbulence and disruption; (2) Effective vision sharing is essential for goal-oriented and accelerated knowledge development in DI systems, and; (3) Managerial pressure may not overheat the critical limit that can be handled by resilient and strongly bonded DI networks, as this would result in disruptive turbulence even in experienced neural networks.http://www.iiisci.org/Journal/CV$/sci/pdfs/A916LMB.pdf Knowledge FlowsStrategies and Organizational BehaviorDistributed IntelligenceOrganizational LearningFluid Mechanical Analogs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ruud Weijermars
spellingShingle Ruud Weijermars
Balancing Venturi and Laissez-Faire Management Styles: Insights from Fluid Mechanical Analogs
Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics
Knowledge Flows
Strategies and Organizational Behavior
Distributed Intelligence
Organizational Learning
Fluid Mechanical Analogs
author_facet Ruud Weijermars
author_sort Ruud Weijermars
title Balancing Venturi and Laissez-Faire Management Styles: Insights from Fluid Mechanical Analogs
title_short Balancing Venturi and Laissez-Faire Management Styles: Insights from Fluid Mechanical Analogs
title_full Balancing Venturi and Laissez-Faire Management Styles: Insights from Fluid Mechanical Analogs
title_fullStr Balancing Venturi and Laissez-Faire Management Styles: Insights from Fluid Mechanical Analogs
title_full_unstemmed Balancing Venturi and Laissez-Faire Management Styles: Insights from Fluid Mechanical Analogs
title_sort balancing venturi and laissez-faire management styles: insights from fluid mechanical analogs
publisher International Institute of Informatics and Cybernetics
series Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics
issn 1690-4524
publishDate 2007-12-01
description Mobilizing distributed Organizational Intelligence involves managerial efforts whereby the generation of new tacit knowledge requires dissemination of newly codified externalized knowledge. The managerial role in the early stage of knowledge creation is to support and stimulate the process of knowledge generation and to aid the diffusion of knowledge across organizational boundaries. In contrast, the subsequent 'harvesting' and goal-oriented application of knowledge requires convergence of human actors (H) as carriers of distributed intelligence (DI). Optimization of the organizational performance and improved workflow efficiency is best effectuated by applying insights from fluid mechanical analogs. Several such analogs are introduced here and these provide insight that helps to funnel tacit and explicit knowledge into tangible asset value. Three sets of managerial lessons are inferred from the analogs: (1) Social bonding between professionals needs to be stimulated because professionals with strong social bonds (S) can sustain effective workflows under relatively high pressures, while weak social bonds lead to turbulence and disruption; (2) Effective vision sharing is essential for goal-oriented and accelerated knowledge development in DI systems, and; (3) Managerial pressure may not overheat the critical limit that can be handled by resilient and strongly bonded DI networks, as this would result in disruptive turbulence even in experienced neural networks.
topic Knowledge Flows
Strategies and Organizational Behavior
Distributed Intelligence
Organizational Learning
Fluid Mechanical Analogs
url http://www.iiisci.org/Journal/CV$/sci/pdfs/A916LMB.pdf
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