DocumentCode
461078
Title
Do Learning Organizations have Strokes of Genius?
Author
Weber, Charles
Author_Institution
Dept. of Eng. & Technol. Manage., Portland State Univ., OR
Volume
3
fYear
2006
fDate
8-13 July 2006
Firstpage
1220
Lastpage
1235
Abstract
Do learning organizations have strokes of genius? An empirical study of 34 high technology R&D and manufacturing organizations suggests not. The roots of punctuated equilibrium in organizational learning can be traced to learning activities that occur within organizational subsystems, primarily during R&D. Continuous improvement at the subsystem level contributes significantly to a delayed, rapid surge in organizational performance. Managers coordinate subsystem-level activities to maximize organizational performance by trading off the revenues expected from timely learning against the expected costs. Knowledge accumulated within organizational subsystems can remain hidden from organization-level performance metrics for prolonged periods of time
Keywords
continuous improvement; knowledge management; organisational aspects; research and development; R&D; continuous improvement; managers; manufacturing organizations; organizational learning; organizational subsystems; Circuits; Continuous improvement; Continuous production; Costs; Delay; Manufacturing industries; Measurement; Research and development; Surges; Very large scale integration;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Technology Management for the Global Future, 2006. PICMET 2006
Conference_Location
Istanbul
Print_ISBN
1-890843-14-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PICMET.2006.296691
Filename
4077513
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