New Zealander Stephen Billings has been publishing a series of interesting and thought-provoking items on his blog – Changing Organisations – exploring the difference between organisational learning – people learning in an organisational context, and learning organisations – where the organisation itself is seen as being able to learn.
Maybe we could argue that learning organisations are more in the realm of Knowledge Management than L&D, and let ourselves off a thorny little cluster of hooks, but the supposed appeal of learning organisations is too tantalising for that, surely? And Billings is explicitly asking if ‘learning organisations’ (in his definition) are even possible – and not allowing himself to duck the question.
Some previous writers have cut themselves considerably more slack. Here’s John Denton, in the introduction to his book, Organisational Learning and Effectiveness:
Many previous works have used the terms organisational learning and learning organisations interchangeably. We will follow this convention here. Thus we are saying, in effect, that a learning organisation can be defined as an organisation that practices organisational learning. Conversely, organisational learning is the distinctive organisational behaviour that is practiced in a learning organisation. Thus the two terms are effectively synonyms, but there are differences of nuance that should be pointed out. A learning organisation is an entity, while organisational learning is a process, a set of action: organisational learning is something the organisation does; a learning organisation is something the organisation is.”
For Billings, it’s just not that easy. In his post Can Organisations Learn? He logically points out that learning organisations require not just processes but a metaphysical transformation:
After all, an organisation has no physical body (an organisation is only a convenient legal construction) and no mind of its own. The decisions of the organisation are made through interaction between people, such as debate amongst the senior managers. So, to me, saying that an organisation can learn, i.e. “Let’s create a learning organisation,” amounts not only to saying that an organisation is a thing in itself, but to anthropomorphise the organisation – to give it the characteristics of a human being.”
I’m not decrying Knowledge Management (KM), which has become an increasingly widespread practice over the last 25 years, as Bain & Co’s introduction to it as a management tool shows. One of my favourite blogs is about it, and one of its recent posts What do we talk about when we talk about work? points in a direction that might illuminate thinking on this particular little knot. Indeed, let’s requote its quoting of David Weinberger:
The promise of KM is that it’ll make your organization smarter. That’s not an asset. It’s not a thing of any sort. Suppose for the moment that knowledge is a conversation. Suppose making your organization smarter means raising the level of conversation. After all, the aim of KM was never to take knowledge from the brain of a smart person and bury it inside some other container like a document or a database. The aim was to share it, and that means getting it talked about.”
Which is all true and good and inspiring, except I want to wave my arm about frantically like the child at the back of class and shout ‘But Sir, there’s more … !’. There’s a difference between smarter and wise that’s the same difference as the one between data and information: the former is a raw ingredient of the latter. And – when it comes to organisational performance and leadership (which is our focus here, rather than KM itself) – simply being smarter isn’t the whole story. Clever people still do stupid things, often on a regular (or worse, repeated) basis. Wise people, on the other hand, change their ways.
So if making the real difference isn’t knowing or understanding but doing, is it really even ‘learning’ we’re talking about, or is it developing? And if behaviour is as important as knowledge, how do we codify behaviour and invent Behavioural Management systems to sit alongside their KM software cousins? Is that even such a good idea?
Between 1994 and 2004, The Learning-Org ran an online debate on the whole notion of the learning organisation. A lot of soul-searching and ontological headscratching ensued, as participants responses to the question “Why a Learning Organisation?” demonstrate.
But one participant’s posting I particularly liked asked the following awkward questions (the original poster, Winfried Deijmann, is Dutch and his English is quoted verbatim below):
Allow me to add my one cent thoughts on the issue.
Can organizations think?
Do organizations have a will?
Can organizations feel?
Can they act and look around?We human beings need our physical body to interact with each other and be aware of ourselves. We need our brains to think, our eyes to see, our senses to be aware and to feel. Without our body we are……. nowhere? Do we have a non physical existance beside our vissible existance? Has any of you ever seen a dead body learn something?
Without access to my nerves and senses, without a proper rythmical working blood- and breathing system, without my limbs and metabolism system I cann’t learn. If one of these three systems fail I die! Who came up with this ridiculous concept that learning and remebering is solely an activity of the brains and the senses? Where does the expression ‘learning by heart’ in that case come from? Just a metaphor, or is there a lot of forgotten ancient wisdom hidden in it?
And to take something to heart, you do have to have one. Stephen Billing was right – these aren’t easy questions, are they?
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2 June 2009 at 11:31 pm
[...] As mentioned in my last post, this is a critical part of knowledge sharing. Be aware, though, that this realisation is not enough: simply being smarter isn’t the whole story. Clever people still do stupid things, often on a [...]
5 June 2009 at 1:43 pm
Hi Naysan, I find myself in agreement with Winfried, and I think the thoughts are well expressed, so kudos for doing so well in English as a second language. I am in agreement that we need a physical body to be able to learn. In other words, the mind is not something located in your head that carries on existing outside of the body.
Mind, I think, is a process of silent conversation with oneself, between the I as the subject and the me as the object – drawing on George Herbert Mead.
Anyway, an organisation does not have a body, cannot think for itself and cannot learn. Nor does it have a heart so forget about shared values as the heart of the organisation.
Regards, Stephen
11 June 2009 at 2:36 pm
Stephen, thank you for your comments.
Today I find myself sat at a desk next to colleagues who operated very differently just 6 months ago. The collective knowledge, understanding and varied interpretations of the stimulus we get from the ‘outside world’ has altered our activities. The organisation (ASK) has changed its focus, not by some edict from above but -representative of a common purpose – by the passions and motivations of the individuals.
The values at the heart of the organisation enable a degree of consistency, but that isn’t necessarily how it learns – indeed, it’s not how I learn. So much is unconscious and autonomic that even the human body operates in blissful ignorance of how or why – yet I adapt and learn from my environment.
I fear that if the organisation of which I form part does not learn we will surely go the way of the Western Black Rhino of West Africa (extinct since 2006). Part of the question we’re exploring may be as simple as terminology – is what I’m describing best classified as ‘learning’ or ‘adapting’? Or just simply ‘changing’? (And, given how unconsciously learning can take place, can we consider adapting to be a parallel or even a synonym to learning?)
And how do we adapt at organisational, rather than individual, level? In as much as an organisations’ actions are a result of the actions, dialogues and behaviours of the individuals within it, is a ‘learning organisation’ one where the behaviours of – and relationships between – its staff are the most self-aware and the most committed to acting as wisely and productively as possible. Can we even extend that to say that relationships are the behavioural equivalent of the practices that enable organisations to share knowledge: that we haven’t developed software systems for ‘Behavioural Management’ because its a ‘wetware’ issue – the behaviours actually are us, rather than merely an attribute of us?
6 June 2009 at 5:41 pm
[...] As mentioned in my last post, this is a critical part of knowledge sharing. Be aware, though, that this realisation is not enough: simply being smarter isn’t the whole story. Clever people still do stupid things, often on a [...]
18 June 2009 at 8:53 pm
[...] that face organisations? Rightly, in linking to an earlier post of mine, Naysan Firoozmand at the Don’t Compromise blog suggested that there was a risk of vagueness in my suggestion (channelling David Weinberger) that KM might be [...]
27 August 2009 at 12:20 pm
It is always surprising and nice to find one’s own writings quoted somewhehere else. Of course I still stand with my idea’s and questions . In fact I sharpened my pencil in the mean time and wrote a more or less direct attack targeted at the Knowledge Management community. The article in question can be found through this link:
http://www.deijmann-dialogue.eu/transknowledge.htm
They were not amused – so to speak.
The article contains some answers I found to the questions in my quote.
Winfried Deijmann
‘An educated mind is useless without a focused will and dangerous without a loving heart.’ (wd)