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Home > Bookshelf > Strategy

Buying Knowledge: Effective Acquisition of External Knowledge


Purchase options:
* £49.50 Amazon.co.uk

* $94.95 amazon.com

Details:
* ISBN:0566086352

* Published by Gower Publishing Company

* Written by Peter A. Sammons

* Book published April 2005

Other opinions:
* Review and customer comments at amazon.co.uk
 

Title:

Buying Knowledge: Effective Acquisition Of External Knowledge

Review:

Peter Sammons is a purchasing professional, who sees knowledge buying as a subset of knowledge management. The book is aimed at managers in business, as he says that at some point in their career, most managers will by responsible for a project to buy new knowledge.

There are introductory chapters which explain the recent worldwide growth of R&D and knowledge. There is a useful chapter on intellectual property rights, which defines copyright, the patent of invention, the rights of employed inventors, trade secrecy and design rights.

The chapter entitled 'Why buy knowledge?' is very valuable reading for anyone who has to buy information or knowledge for business. Sammons lays considerable emphasis on the decision as to whether knowledge should be created internally or bought in, and the comparative costs associated with both approaches. I find this interesting, as at present many organisations are dispensing with the services of internal knowledge creators. However, later on in the book, he described Microsoft's recent strategy, which was to buy the owners of the knowledge, in other words to recruit the top researchers in the field on to the permanent staff. The researchers were given freedom to follow their own agenda and in this way to advance the 'state of the art' in software. Sammons works on the premise that the driver for knowledge acquisition is to move into new areas and that little knowledge is needed for operational requirements.

Sammons uses various yardsticks to indicate the value of particular types of knowledge to an organisation. One measurement is the closeness or proximity of the knowledge owner to your organisation. Therefore, knowledge obtained from industry trade associations is much closer than central government. He has also developed a ranking of the value of knowledge obtained via various knowledge-acquisition strategies. For example, hiring employees with specific knowledge or acquiring knowledge-rich firms is ranked higher than knowledge purchase. Knowledge scanning is seen as the lowest of the strategies, partly because it is the least integrated. Integration is defined as the closeness of formal contractual links. Similarly, he describes knowledge transfer models: these start with latent knowledge, for example, a law book, which can be used for reference when required; moving on to knowledge transfer with skills enhancement; and then to extremely active knowledge transfer, which will effect a strategic change.

The book contains some extremely useful acquisition-planning information: how to assess vendors throughout the contract; advantages and disadvantages of competitive tendering or negotiation; specifying the work and project management: contract costing. The yardstick for return on investment should be a minimum payback of 3:1 and if this target cannot be reached, then the organisation should look for another way to acquire the new knowledge.

The book finishes with chapters on acquiring knowledge from consultants, contract research organisations and universities. It offers insight into some procurement techniques and how organisations perceive the value of acquired knowledge.

Free Pint Reviewer:

Olivia Freeman works on freelance basis, as a trainer, researcher and information management specialist. She was previously Head of Business Information at HSBC Bank, where she started the global service. She was responsible for planning and development plus the procurement and exploitation of electronic resources. Olivia specialises in training on the selection of e-resources and vendor management. She also runs tailored workshops for individuals and companies. She is a judge for the 2005 International Information Industry Awards 'FreePint Award for Best Customer Service Team' <http://www.freepint.com/events/online-info-2005/>..

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