IC valuation and measurement: classifying the state of the art
Top Cited Papers
- 1 June 2004
- journal article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Journal of Intellectual Capital
- Vol. 5 (2) , 230-242
- https://doi.org/10.1108/14691930410533669
Abstract
The intellectual capital (IC) community has entered a phase of consolidation. This article contributes to this consolidation process by clarifying existing motives (why) and proposed methods (how) for valuing or measuring IC. In general, the field of IC performance measurement has paid little attention to organizational diagnosis and the “why” question. It is often unclear what the organizational problem is the methods intent to solve. Many methods for the valuation or measurement of Intellectual Capital can be characterized as “solutions in search of a cause”. Another area that requires clarification is the “how” question. There seems to be confusion about the distinction between valuation and measurement. The distinction is fundamental yet not recognized in the field. Based on a literature review this article presents a classification of motives and solutions and plots ten existing methods in a “why” by “how” matrix.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Why do firms measure their intellectual capital?Journal of Intellectual Capital, 2003
- Managing Organizational Knowledge by Diagnosing Intellectual Capital: Framing and Advancing the State of the FieldPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- Weightless wealth: four modifications to standard IC theoryJournal of Intellectual Capital, 2001
- ICBS – intellectual capital benchmarking systemJournal of Intellectual Capital, 2001
- Assessing knowledge assets: a review of the models used to measure intellectual capitalInternational Journal of Management Reviews, 2001
- Intellectual capital literature reviewJournal of Intellectual Capital, 2000
- Towards improved information disclosure on intellectual capitalInternational Journal of Technology Management, 2000
- The knowledge toolbox:European Management Journal, 1999
- The Balanced ScorecardTechnometrics, 1998
- EVA™: FAST AND FANTASYJournal of Applied Corporate Finance, 1994