Digital Leadership – Essential for KM Success
Ron Aspe
What is your Digital Quotient?
In the podcast, Jay used the term DQ, or Digital Quotient. Although it is mostly applied to companies, I think the concept is equally applicable to individuals. Digital leaders differentiate themselves in three key areas:
- They have a “strategy and digital initiatives that they’re pursuing”
- They have the ability to create an “agile culture”
- They know how to get the “talent, people, processes, structure and systems” to really make a difference
If I’m not a digital leader, what can I do to get there?
Jay and his colleague Paul Willmott, McKinsey Digital global leader, propose that companies and leaders ask three questions:
1) “Who are my competitors in the new world?”
For special librarians and knowledge managers, gatekeeping is a dead strategy. Just ask taxi companies (Uber, anyone?). However, when you leverage your reputation as an established and trusted resource, your content delivery strategy can be every bit as valued – and valuable – as Apple’s music store.
2) “How fast do I need to act?”
That depends on the culture in your organization. Take the temperature of all of your constituents – not just the powerful few, who may be happy with the status quo. The last thing you want is for fast track new hires to consider your KM strategy irrelevant.
3) “Where exactly is the value from digital?”
In the KM world, it’s all about relevance and convenience. “Build on your strengths, develop repeatable, high quality experiences.” Turn the search-for-knowledge paradigm upside down. Find a way for your organization’s knowledge to “find” the people who would benefit from it.
There are a few things digital leaders don’t do:
Jay Scanlan sums this up quite nicely for us. “The first thing they do not do is repurpose huge swaths of people from their existing organization…,” and the “second thing they don’t do is …outsource radically. Instead they actually seem to build the capabilities within themselves…, particularly the strategic ones that are going to differentiate them…”
I definitely recommend this thought provoking podcast; it’s full of ideas that are extremely relevant to today’s library and km leaders. For now, I’ll leave the last word with Lang Davison, McKinsey’s executive editor, “Not doing anything [about digital leadership] may be the riskiest move all.”
Ron Aspe
Stan writes regularly for Lucidea’s Think Clearly blog. Subscribe to ensure you never miss a post with engaging information for KM practitioners and special librarians! Learn about Lucidea’s Presto, SydneyDigital, and GeniePlus software with unrivaled KM capabilities that enable successful knowledge curation and sharing.
Similar Posts
Only You Can Prevent Knowledge Loss: How to Practice “Knowledge Archaeology”
An overview of ways in which knowledge is lost, with examples of how to perform knowledge archaeology to recover and restore it.
Ready to Read: Profiles in Knowledge: 120 Thought Leaders in Knowledge Management
We are pleased to announce that Stan Garfield’s new book, Profiles in Knowledge: 120 Thought Leaders in Knowledge Management, is now available from Lucidea Press.
Lucidea’s Lens: Knowledge Management Thought Leaders Part 92 – Jay Liebowitz
Jay Liebowitz is a professor, consultant, author, and editor. His research interests include knowledge management, data analytics, intelligent systems, intuition-based decision making, IT management, expert systems, and artificial intelligence.
Lucidea’s Lens: Knowledge Management Thought Leaders Part 91 – Frank Leistner
The late Frank Leistner was the former Chief Knowledge Officer for SAS Global Professional Services, where he founded the knowledge management program and led a wide range of knowledge management initiatives up until 2012.