Knowledge Safety – Insights from the SME Sector

Purpose: This paper aims to explore the topic of knowledge safety, defined as the state of knowledge being safe from loss, leakage, attrition, oblivion, waste or theft. The paper first presents a theoretical background and review of previous studies on knowledge loss and ways of overcoming it, and t...

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Main Author: Małgorzata Zięba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kozminski University 2017-11-01
Series:Journal of Management and Business Administration, Central Europe
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.degruyter.com/downloadpdf/j/jmbace.2017.25.issue-3/jmba.ce.2450-7814.203/jmba.ce.2450-7814.203.pdf
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spelling doaj-30cb882ffc704b42bb6b25b777e349942020-11-24T22:54:37ZengKozminski UniversityJournal of Management and Business Administration, Central Europe2450-78142450-88292017-11-01253789610.7206/jmba.ce.2450-7814.203Knowledge Safety – Insights from the SME SectorMałgorzata Zięba0Gdansk University of TechnologyPurpose: This paper aims to explore the topic of knowledge safety, defined as the state of knowledge being safe from loss, leakage, attrition, oblivion, waste or theft. The paper first presents a theoretical background and review of previous studies on knowledge loss and ways of overcoming it, and then illustrates the topic of knowledge safety with ten case studies from the small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) sector. Methodology: The paper is based on an analysis of Knowledge Management (KM) literature devoted to knowledge loss and its potential types in companies, and on the results of case study research. Knowledge safety was first defined and contrasted with other terms, and then examined in 10 selected SMEs. The research resulted in a clarification of what SMEs understand by the term of “knowledge safety” and what kind of measures they take to ensure it. Findings: As the analysis shows, the examined SMEs attribute diversified significance to the issue of knowledge safety. For some of them, such problem does not exist at all and they state that they can ensure knowledge safety in all aspects of their operations. Some companies perceive it mainly through the safety of the knowledge stored in electronic databases, while others link it with the human factor only. Research limitations: Research results are limited to ten companies operating in Poland. As such, they cannot illustrate the whole picture of the existing small or medium-sized companies. Research implications: The findings of both literature review and case study analysis indicate that there is a need to further examine the issue of knowledge safety by analysing the potential factors which may endanger knowledge safety and the methods to eliminate such risks. Practical implications: The paper examines important aspects of knowledge safety and provides guidelines on how it can be ensured by managers or owners of SMEs. Originality/value: The term of knowledge safety has been absent from the related literature so far. The paper defines it and explores both the theoretical and the practical aspects thereof. The paper also suggests further research possibilities in this area.https://www.degruyter.com/downloadpdf/j/jmbace.2017.25.issue-3/jmba.ce.2450-7814.203/jmba.ce.2450-7814.203.pdfknowledge safetyknowledge losssmall and medium-sized enterprisescase study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Małgorzata Zięba
spellingShingle Małgorzata Zięba
Knowledge Safety – Insights from the SME Sector
Journal of Management and Business Administration, Central Europe
knowledge safety
knowledge loss
small and medium-sized enterprises
case study
author_facet Małgorzata Zięba
author_sort Małgorzata Zięba
title Knowledge Safety – Insights from the SME Sector
title_short Knowledge Safety – Insights from the SME Sector
title_full Knowledge Safety – Insights from the SME Sector
title_fullStr Knowledge Safety – Insights from the SME Sector
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge Safety – Insights from the SME Sector
title_sort knowledge safety – insights from the sme sector
publisher Kozminski University
series Journal of Management and Business Administration, Central Europe
issn 2450-7814
2450-8829
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Purpose: This paper aims to explore the topic of knowledge safety, defined as the state of knowledge being safe from loss, leakage, attrition, oblivion, waste or theft. The paper first presents a theoretical background and review of previous studies on knowledge loss and ways of overcoming it, and then illustrates the topic of knowledge safety with ten case studies from the small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) sector. Methodology: The paper is based on an analysis of Knowledge Management (KM) literature devoted to knowledge loss and its potential types in companies, and on the results of case study research. Knowledge safety was first defined and contrasted with other terms, and then examined in 10 selected SMEs. The research resulted in a clarification of what SMEs understand by the term of “knowledge safety” and what kind of measures they take to ensure it. Findings: As the analysis shows, the examined SMEs attribute diversified significance to the issue of knowledge safety. For some of them, such problem does not exist at all and they state that they can ensure knowledge safety in all aspects of their operations. Some companies perceive it mainly through the safety of the knowledge stored in electronic databases, while others link it with the human factor only. Research limitations: Research results are limited to ten companies operating in Poland. As such, they cannot illustrate the whole picture of the existing small or medium-sized companies. Research implications: The findings of both literature review and case study analysis indicate that there is a need to further examine the issue of knowledge safety by analysing the potential factors which may endanger knowledge safety and the methods to eliminate such risks. Practical implications: The paper examines important aspects of knowledge safety and provides guidelines on how it can be ensured by managers or owners of SMEs. Originality/value: The term of knowledge safety has been absent from the related literature so far. The paper defines it and explores both the theoretical and the practical aspects thereof. The paper also suggests further research possibilities in this area.
topic knowledge safety
knowledge loss
small and medium-sized enterprises
case study
url https://www.degruyter.com/downloadpdf/j/jmbace.2017.25.issue-3/jmba.ce.2450-7814.203/jmba.ce.2450-7814.203.pdf
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