Reproducing knowledge: Xerox and the story of knowledge management

This paper is a commentary on discursive transformations that occur in stories told about Xerox's photocopier technicians, comparing particularly Orr's brilliant ethnographic study and a later management case study. It argues that significant shifts take place in how knowledge is understood between these accounts so that what begins as elusive, oral, improvised and social becomes increasingly presented as encodable in a structured database, countable, auditable, individualistic. These ideological transformations seem much to do with Xerox's own historic need to rebrand itself, and simply to sell a commercial product. Thus, how knowledge is represented and what knowledge management might mean seems to be heavily influenced by corporate vested interests. The paper stresses the need to capture complexity in case studies if they are to promote a realistic or critical understanding of the organisation.

[1]  John Seely Brown,et al.  Research that reinvents the corporation , 1991 .

[2]  S. Barley,et al.  Occupational Communities: Culture and Control in Organizations , 1982 .

[3]  Julian E. Orr,et al.  Ethnography and Organizational Learning: In Pursuit of Learning at Work , 1995 .

[4]  E. Wenger Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity , 1998 .

[5]  Mary E. Boyce Organizational story and storytelling: a critical review , 1996 .

[6]  Barbara Czarniawska Narrating the Organization: Dramas of Institutional Identity , 1997 .

[7]  Hugh Willmott,et al.  Re-Embedding Situatedness: The Importance of Power Relations in Learning Theory , 2003, Organ. Sci..

[8]  Barbara Czarniawska A Narrative Approach to Organization Studies , 1998 .

[9]  F. Blackler Knowledge, Knowledge Work and Organizations: An Overview and Interpretation , 1995 .

[10]  Dan Shapiro,et al.  Book preview: The design of computer supported cooperative work and groupware systems , 1996, INTR.

[11]  M. Alvesson Knowledge Work And Knowledge-Intensive Firms , 2004 .

[12]  J. Orr,et al.  Talking About Machines: An Ethnography of a Modern Job. , 1997 .

[13]  Brigitte Jordan,et al.  Chapter 3 Ethnographic workplace studies and CSCW , 1996 .

[14]  Daniel G. Bobrow,et al.  Information use of service technicians in difficult cases , 2003, CHI '03.

[15]  William J. Clancey,et al.  Overview of the institute for research on learning , 1992, CHI.

[16]  D. Wellman,et al.  Talking About Machines: An Ethnography of a Modern Job. , 1997 .

[17]  Yiannis Gabriel,et al.  Storytelling in Organizations: Facts, Fictions, and Fantasies , 2000 .

[18]  Lucy A. Suchman,et al.  Making work visible , 1995, CACM.

[19]  H. V. Lente,et al.  Narrative Methods for Organizational and Communication Research , 2003 .

[20]  J. Potter,et al.  Discourse and Social Psychology: Beyond Attitudes and Behaviour , 1987 .

[21]  Robert F. Dennehy The Springboard: How Storytelling Ignites Action in Knowledge‐era Organizations , 2001 .

[22]  Etienne Wenger,et al.  Situated Learning: Legitimate Peripheral Participation , 1991 .

[23]  M. Alvesson,et al.  Odd Couple: Making Sense of the Curious Concept of Knowledge Management , 2001 .

[24]  Xerox PARC , 1996 .

[25]  D. Boje Narrative methods for organizational and communication research , 2001 .

[26]  Andrew Cox,et al.  What are communities of practice? A comparative review of four seminal works , 2005, J. Inf. Sci..

[27]  Daniel G. Bobrow,et al.  Community Knowledge Sharing in Practice: The Eureka Story , 2002 .

[28]  José Cláudio Terra,et al.  Realizing the Promise of Corporate Portals: Leveraging Knowledge for Business Success , 2002 .

[29]  Daniel G. Bobrow,et al.  Dynamic Documents and Situated Processes: Building on Local Knowledge in Field Service , 1998 .

[30]  Arthur Marwick,et al.  The new nature of history :knowledge, evidence, language , 2001 .

[31]  Barbara Czarniawska Forbidden Knowledge , 2003 .

[32]  Douglas K. Smith,et al.  Fumbling the Future: How Xerox Invented, Then Ignored, the First Personal Computer , 1988 .

[33]  Marietta L. Baba The Anthropology of Work in the Fortune 1000: A Critical Retrospective , 1998 .

[34]  D. Boje The storytelling organization: A study of story performance in an office-supply firm. , 1991 .

[35]  T. D. Wilson,et al.  The nonsense of knowledge management , 2002, Inf. Res..

[36]  Etienne Wenger,et al.  Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity , 1998 .

[37]  D. Hislop Knowledge Management in Organizations: A critical introduction , 2005 .

[38]  Michael Tomasello,et al.  Human behaviour: Share and share alike , 2008, Nature.

[39]  Keith Mattacks,et al.  Managing Knowledge Work , 2003 .

[40]  Stephen Denning,et al.  The Leader's Guide to Storytelling: Mastering the Art and Discipline of Business Narrative , 2005 .

[41]  Jennifer L. Steele,et al.  The Collaborative Advantage , 2008 .

[42]  Theodor Holm Nelson Way Out of the Box , 1999 .

[43]  Michael J. Earl,et al.  Knowledge Management Strategies: Toward a Taxonomy , 2001, J. Manag. Inf. Syst..

[44]  Michael A. Hiltzik,et al.  Dealers of lightning : Xerox PARC and the dawn of the computer age , 1999 .

[45]  J. Brown,et al.  Organizational Learning and Communities-of-Practice: Toward a Unified View of Working, Learning, and Innovation , 1991 .