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The knowledge-creating company : how Japanese companies create the dynamics of innovation

TLDR
In this article, Nonaka and Takeuchi argue that Japanese firms are successful precisely because they are innovative, because they create new knowledge and use it to produce successful products and technologies, and they reveal how Japanese companies translate tacit to explicit knowledge.
Abstract
How has Japan become a major economic power, a world leader in the automotive and electronics industries? What is the secret of their success? The consensus has been that, though the Japanese are not particularly innovative, they are exceptionally skilful at imitation, at improving products that already exist. But now two leading Japanese business experts, Ikujiro Nonaka and Hiro Takeuchi, turn this conventional wisdom on its head: Japanese firms are successful, they contend, precisely because they are innovative, because they create new knowledge and use it to produce successful products and technologies. Examining case studies drawn from such firms as Honda, Canon, Matsushita, NEC, 3M, GE, and the U.S. Marines, this book reveals how Japanese companies translate tacit to explicit knowledge and use it to produce new processes, products, and services.

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Citations
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Review: Knowledge management and knowledge management systems: conceptual foundations and research issues

TL;DR: The objective of KMS is to support creation, transfer, and application of knowledge in organizations by promoting a class of information systems, referred to as knowledge management systems.
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Knowledge Management: An Organizational Capabilities Perspective

TL;DR: This research suggests that a knowledge infrastructure consisting of technology, structure, and culture along with a knowledge process architecture of acquisition, conversion, application, and protection are essential organizational capabilities or "preconditions" for effective knowledge management.
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Managing the co-creation of value

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the nature of value co-creation in the context of service-dominant (S-D) logic and develop a conceptual framework for understanding and managing value cocreation.
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The Influence of Intellectual Capital on the Types of Innovative Capabilities

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined how aspects of intellectual capital influenced various innovative capabilities in organizations and found that human, organizational, and social capital and their interrelationships selectively influenced incremental and radical innovative capabilities.
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Knowing in practice: Enacting a collective capability in distributed organizing

TL;DR: It is suggested that the competence to do global product development is both collective and distributed, grounded in the everyday practices of organizational members, and not a static embedded capability or stable disposition.
References
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a research model that explores the relationships among knowledge management structures, organizational agility, and firm performance using partial least squares structural equation modeling on a dataset of 112 large Spanish companies.

Web 2.0 in Government: Why and How?

David Osimo
TL;DR: In this article, a survey of existing initiatives in the public and private sector is presented, based on which the authors argue that web 2.0 applications affect both front and back office activities, such as: regulation, cross-agency collaboration, knowledge management, service provision, political participation and transparency, and law enforcement.
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External commercialization of knowledge: Review and research agenda

TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed overview of the literature on external knowledge exploitation is established, and the key characteristics of externally leveraging knowledge assets are presented, and a research agenda is set up.
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