The Role of Tacit Knowledge in Group Innovation
- 1 April 1998
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by SAGE Publications in California Management Review
- Vol. 40 (3) , 112-132
- https://doi.org/10.2307/41165946
Abstract
The complexity of skills and processes needed in the development of today's products and services requires that managers attend to the role of tacit knowledge during innovation. Knowledge held in people's bodies and heads, our unarticulated knowledge, is the very basis of creativity and is not easily captured nor codified. The process of innovation is both an exploration and synthesis. This article examines ways in which managers can begin to deal with tacit knowledge; how to create an environment for a divergent process that includes a wide and healthy proliferation of ideas and a successful convergent process in which options are narrowed and a solution is decided upon and implemented.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Culture and Organizational LearningJournal of Management Inquiry, 2011
- Managing Innovation: When Less is MoreCalifornia Management Review, 1997
- Brainstorming Groups in Context: Effectiveness in a Product Design FirmAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1996
- Minority influence and argument generationBritish Journal of Social Psychology, 1996
- External technology acquisition in large multi‐technology corporationsR&D Management, 1992
- "Going Monoclonal": Art, Science, and Magic in the Day-to-Day Use of Hybridoma TechnologySocial Problems, 1988
- Nursing IntuitionNursing2021, 1987
- The interaction of design hierarchies and market concepts in technological evolutionResearch Policy, 1985
- Creative problem solving as a result of majority vs minority influenceEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, 1983
- Blind variation and selective retentions in creative thought as in other knowledge processes.Psychological Review, 1960