Knowledge work productivity
Encyclopedia
Knowledge work productivity is the measure of the efficiency and effectiveness of the output generated by workers who mainly rely on knowledge
, rather than labor
, during the production
process. With companies shifting revenue generating activities from processes that traditionally used to be driven by manual work to those that are currently being driven by knowledge work, the ratio of knowledge worker
s has drastically increased to constitute almost 75 percent of the workforce in industrialized countries. While there is currently no standard measurement
of knowledge work productivity, a taxonomy
of research spanning back to the 1940s reveals that knowledge work productivity has mainly been analyzed - in descending order of advocacy - along the dimensions of: quantity, cost, quality, timeliness, autonomy, project success, customer satisfaction, creativity, responsibility level, perception, and absenteeism, in addition to assessments based on efficiency and effectiveness.
Knowledge work can ultimately be judged on whether or not three things occur :
1) when something successful that never existed previously, is now up and running;
2) when something successful that existed previously has been improved or expanded; or
3) when something unsuccessful that existed previously has been stopped.
The productivity for achieving one of these things, he argued, could be judged based on the speed with which it is accomplished, and the cost required to finish the job.
identified better knowledge work productivity as our most important economic need. He went so far as to warn that our long term prosperity and even our economic survival depends upon it. Better productivity generates the economic surpluses that pay wages, produce profits, and generate the tax revenues that support our social structures. For example, if wages stay the same and productivity goes down, even flat wages will not be affordable for long. At the same time, if productivity were to go up 100%, wages could go up dramatically and continue to be very affordable. To be sustainable, Enterprises need to generate surpluses for workers as well as for the firms themselves. This requires a systematic approach, and from a design perspective needs to factor in that bad systems encourage bad behaviors, good systems create good behaviors, and similar systems produce the same behaviors.
Drucker’s core idea on the subject of knowledge work was that the world used to run on manual work, and that this work was made much more productive due to the work of Frederick Winslow Taylor
in the early 1900s – related to Scientific Management
. Now, knowledge workers make up the majority of the workers in developed economies. The problem to be solved is that knowledge work needs to be made more productive for our workers, companies and societies to maintain and improve their prosperity. Unfortunately, Scientific Management methods have not been as effective in managing knowledge work, making a new system and new principles needed to improve the special nature of this type of work.
Business thinkers have acknowledged for decades that Enterprises had not made enough progress with their knowledge work productivity. Drucker's work reveals that knowledge work productivity has been constrained by the scientific methods that made manual work more productive for much of the 20th Century – requiring our need to improve knowledge work productivity systematically and sustainably. It is argued that the best way to improve the prosperity of our Enterprises is to change the structure that drives its performance – from a Scientific to a Cybernetic management approach.
needs to be driven by knowledge work productivity—requiring that managers simultaneously make their present Enterprise more effective, identify and realize its potential, and create a different Enterprise for a different future. In so doing he suggested that business leaders needed to continually shift resources from less productive to more productive areas through better knowledge work productivity and innovation.
Manual work is visible, specialized, and stable, whereas knowledge work is invisible, holistic, and ever changing. Unlike manual workers, knowledge workers use their situational knowledge to get things done in a dynamic environment. They are almost always formally educated and are called upon to run and change their functions and organizations simultaneously.
Knowledge workers acquire knowledge—through a combination of education, experience, and personal interaction—and then use that knowledge to holistically achieve organizational goals in changing environments. This work is generally much more project oriented than manual work, and Enterprise productivity improves faster when one area of knowledge can be rapidly transferred to another.
One reason that knowledge work has been difficult to manage is because of its nature to expand to fill the available time. It is also commonly stymied by organizational disconnects within and across hierarchies. To manage the invisible and elastic nature of knowledge work better, Drucker suggested that we think about it more systematically. He advised that Enterprises strive to remove unproductive work, and restructure work as part of an overall system to create a satisfied customer. In this light he suggested that knowledge be organized through teams – with clarity around who is in charge at what time, for what reason, and for how long.
To create a working system to manage knowledge work more productively it’s useful to compare and contrast Taylor’s thinking on manual work with Drucker’s on knowledge work:
Source: Reinvent Your Enterprise, by Jack Bergstrand
While manual work and knowledge work productivity both try to generate surpluses. Manual work and knowledge work productivity need to be managed differently due to the nature of the work. The knowledge work productivity system suggested in his work is based on the social sciences and cybernetics – integrating the sociological paradigm work of Gibson Burrell and Gareth Morgan, the action theory work of Talcott Parsons
, and cybernetic insights from mathematician Norbert Wiener
.
Source: Reinvent Your Enterprise, by Jack Bergstrand
Drucker described workers who were both knowledge workers and manual workers as technologists and correctly predicted that these workers would be the fastest growing part of the workforce. The knowledge work productivity management system therefore also needs to accommodate and capitalize on this – at the individual, functional, and organizational levels. This knowledge work productivity instrument has been turned into a survey-based instrument with Strategic Profiling
.
Source: Strategic Profiling
The knowledge work productivity system—linked to Burrell, Morgan, Parsons, and Wiener—introduces both a shared framework and an explicit process. First, a shared framework (i.e. a shared mental model linked to Burrell and Morgan’s sociological paradigm work and Parson’s action theory) is needed to get everyone on the same page. Then, in conjunction with this shared framework, a standard process (linked to Weiner’s cybernetics and Parson’s cybernetic hierarchy) to help people manage their knowledge work more productively and in a more sustainable way.
Knowledge
Knowledge is a familiarity with someone or something unknown, which can include information, facts, descriptions, or skills acquired through experience or education. It can refer to the theoretical or practical understanding of a subject...
, rather than labor
Manual labour
Manual labour , manual or manual work is physical work done by people, most especially in contrast to that done by machines, and also to that done by working animals...
, during the production
Production, costs, and pricing
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to industrial organization:Industrial organization – describes the behavior of firms in the marketplace with regard to production, pricing, employment and other decisions...
process. With companies shifting revenue generating activities from processes that traditionally used to be driven by manual work to those that are currently being driven by knowledge work, the ratio of knowledge worker
Knowledge worker
Knowledge workers in today's workforce are individuals who are valued for their ability to act and communicate with knowledge within a specific subject area. They will often advance the overall understanding of that subject through focused analysis, design and/or development. They use research...
s has drastically increased to constitute almost 75 percent of the workforce in industrialized countries. While there is currently no standard measurement
Measurement
Measurement is the process or the result of determining the ratio of a physical quantity, such as a length, time, temperature etc., to a unit of measurement, such as the metre, second or degree Celsius...
of knowledge work productivity, a taxonomy
Taxonomy
Taxonomy is the science of identifying and naming species, and arranging them into a classification. The field of taxonomy, sometimes referred to as "biological taxonomy", revolves around the description and use of taxonomic units, known as taxa...
of research spanning back to the 1940s reveals that knowledge work productivity has mainly been analyzed - in descending order of advocacy - along the dimensions of: quantity, cost, quality, timeliness, autonomy, project success, customer satisfaction, creativity, responsibility level, perception, and absenteeism, in addition to assessments based on efficiency and effectiveness.
Knowledge work can ultimately be judged on whether or not three things occur :
1) when something successful that never existed previously, is now up and running;
2) when something successful that existed previously has been improved or expanded; or
3) when something unsuccessful that existed previously has been stopped.
The productivity for achieving one of these things, he argued, could be judged based on the speed with which it is accomplished, and the cost required to finish the job.
Significance
Peter F. DruckerPeter Drucker
Peter Ferdinand Drucker was an influential writer, management consultant, and self-described “social ecologist.”-Introduction:...
identified better knowledge work productivity as our most important economic need. He went so far as to warn that our long term prosperity and even our economic survival depends upon it. Better productivity generates the economic surpluses that pay wages, produce profits, and generate the tax revenues that support our social structures. For example, if wages stay the same and productivity goes down, even flat wages will not be affordable for long. At the same time, if productivity were to go up 100%, wages could go up dramatically and continue to be very affordable. To be sustainable, Enterprises need to generate surpluses for workers as well as for the firms themselves. This requires a systematic approach, and from a design perspective needs to factor in that bad systems encourage bad behaviors, good systems create good behaviors, and similar systems produce the same behaviors.
Drucker’s core idea on the subject of knowledge work was that the world used to run on manual work, and that this work was made much more productive due to the work of Frederick Winslow Taylor
Frederick Winslow Taylor
Frederick Winslow Taylor was an American mechanical engineer who sought to improve industrial efficiency. He is regarded as the father of scientific management and was one of the first management consultants...
in the early 1900s – related to Scientific Management
Scientific management
Scientific management, also called Taylorism, was a theory of management that analyzed and synthesized workflows. Its main objective was improving economic efficiency, especially labor productivity. It was one of the earliest attempts to apply science to the engineering of processes and to management...
. Now, knowledge workers make up the majority of the workers in developed economies. The problem to be solved is that knowledge work needs to be made more productive for our workers, companies and societies to maintain and improve their prosperity. Unfortunately, Scientific Management methods have not been as effective in managing knowledge work, making a new system and new principles needed to improve the special nature of this type of work.
Business thinkers have acknowledged for decades that Enterprises had not made enough progress with their knowledge work productivity. Drucker's work reveals that knowledge work productivity has been constrained by the scientific methods that made manual work more productive for much of the 20th Century – requiring our need to improve knowledge work productivity systematically and sustainably. It is argued that the best way to improve the prosperity of our Enterprises is to change the structure that drives its performance – from a Scientific to a Cybernetic management approach.
Managing Knowledge Work to Improve Productivity
Throughout Drucker’s life he emphasized that the next level of economic growthEconomic growth
In economics, economic growth is defined as the increasing capacity of the economy to satisfy the wants of goods and services of the members of society. Economic growth is enabled by increases in productivity, which lowers the inputs for a given amount of output. Lowered costs increase demand...
needs to be driven by knowledge work productivity—requiring that managers simultaneously make their present Enterprise more effective, identify and realize its potential, and create a different Enterprise for a different future. In so doing he suggested that business leaders needed to continually shift resources from less productive to more productive areas through better knowledge work productivity and innovation.
Manual work is visible, specialized, and stable, whereas knowledge work is invisible, holistic, and ever changing. Unlike manual workers, knowledge workers use their situational knowledge to get things done in a dynamic environment. They are almost always formally educated and are called upon to run and change their functions and organizations simultaneously.
Knowledge workers acquire knowledge—through a combination of education, experience, and personal interaction—and then use that knowledge to holistically achieve organizational goals in changing environments. This work is generally much more project oriented than manual work, and Enterprise productivity improves faster when one area of knowledge can be rapidly transferred to another.
One reason that knowledge work has been difficult to manage is because of its nature to expand to fill the available time. It is also commonly stymied by organizational disconnects within and across hierarchies. To manage the invisible and elastic nature of knowledge work better, Drucker suggested that we think about it more systematically. He advised that Enterprises strive to remove unproductive work, and restructure work as part of an overall system to create a satisfied customer. In this light he suggested that knowledge be organized through teams – with clarity around who is in charge at what time, for what reason, and for how long.
To create a working system to manage knowledge work more productively it’s useful to compare and contrast Taylor’s thinking on manual work with Drucker’s on knowledge work:
Frederick Taylor on Manual Work | Peter Drucker on Knowledge Work |
---|---|
Define the task | Understand the task |
Command and control | Give Autonomy |
Strict standards | Continuous innovation |
Focus on quantity | Focus on quality |
Measure performance to strict standard | Continuously learn and teach |
Minimize cost of workers for a task | Treat workers as an asset not a cost |
Source: Reinvent Your Enterprise, by Jack Bergstrand
Jack Bergstrand
Jack Bergstrand is an American business consultant, author of a book endorsed by The Drucker Institute on enterprise reinvention, and founder of Brand Velocity, Inc....
While manual work and knowledge work productivity both try to generate surpluses. Manual work and knowledge work productivity need to be managed differently due to the nature of the work. The knowledge work productivity system suggested in his work is based on the social sciences and cybernetics – integrating the sociological paradigm work of Gibson Burrell and Gareth Morgan, the action theory work of Talcott Parsons
Talcott Parsons
Talcott Parsons was an American sociologist who served on the faculty of Harvard University from 1927 to 1973....
, and cybernetic insights from mathematician Norbert Wiener
Norbert Wiener
Norbert Wiener was an American mathematician.A famous child prodigy, Wiener later became an early researcher in stochastic and noise processes, contributing work relevant to electronic engineering, electronic communication, and control systems.Wiener is regarded as the originator of cybernetics, a...
.
Manual Work Productivity | Knowledge Work Productivity |
---|---|
Work is visible | Work is invisible |
Work is specialized | Work is holistic |
Work is stable | Work is changing |
Emphasizes running things | Emphasizes changing things |
More structure with fewer decisions | Less structure with more decisions |
Focus on the right answers | Focus on the right questions |
Source: Reinvent Your Enterprise, by Jack Bergstrand
Jack Bergstrand
Jack Bergstrand is an American business consultant, author of a book endorsed by The Drucker Institute on enterprise reinvention, and founder of Brand Velocity, Inc....
Drucker described workers who were both knowledge workers and manual workers as technologists and correctly predicted that these workers would be the fastest growing part of the workforce. The knowledge work productivity management system therefore also needs to accommodate and capitalize on this – at the individual, functional, and organizational levels. This knowledge work productivity instrument has been turned into a survey-based instrument with Strategic Profiling
Strategic Profiling
Strategic Profiling is a knowledge work productivity and enterprise reinvention improvement tool, used in conjunction with the Action Planning workshop, and is a registered trademark of Brand Velocity, Inc. The survey-based tool was designed based on the work of Peter F...
.
Source: Strategic Profiling
Strategic Profiling
Strategic Profiling is a knowledge work productivity and enterprise reinvention improvement tool, used in conjunction with the Action Planning workshop, and is a registered trademark of Brand Velocity, Inc. The survey-based tool was designed based on the work of Peter F...
The knowledge work productivity system—linked to Burrell, Morgan, Parsons, and Wiener—introduces both a shared framework and an explicit process. First, a shared framework (i.e. a shared mental model linked to Burrell and Morgan’s sociological paradigm work and Parson’s action theory) is needed to get everyone on the same page. Then, in conjunction with this shared framework, a standard process (linked to Weiner’s cybernetics and Parson’s cybernetic hierarchy) to help people manage their knowledge work more productively and in a more sustainable way.