CORPORATE UNIVERSITIES AS KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT TOOL FOR COMPANIES: THE CASE OF ITALY

被引:0
|
作者
Dormio, Alberto Ivo [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Parma, Dept Engn & Architecture, Parma, Italy
来源
11TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF EDUCATION, RESEARCH AND INNOVATION (ICERI2018) | 2018年
关键词
knowledge management; corporate education; corporate university;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
In companies there are capacities that do not materialize in plants, buildings and products, but which are intangible. For example, the knowledge acquired on the market and on consumers, technological knowledge, relationships with suppliers and the distribution system, management skills, the diffusion of corporate culture and relational capital. Today, the weight that these resources have on the total assets of the company has changed: in fact, knowledge and skills have a heavy impact not only on production methods, but also on the strategies of companies and on the relations of competition and cooperation between them. Therefore, intangible resources and intellectual capital are increasingly the foundation of the competitive power of companies. However, in the current context, it is absolutely necessary not only to develop distinctive skills and abilities, such as "knowledge" and "know-how", but also to make them visible, making them explicit in the social-economic system of belonging. The term "knowledge" therefore refers not only to its more abstract dimension (a set of notions), but also to the capacity to use and the enhancement, by the organizations, of all the resources available. In particular, referring to the economic dimension, knowledge is the fundamental element for the creation of value. The concept of value and that of knowledge are intrinsically linked to the point that they, although different in epistemological and factual terms, are almost indistinguishable from the economic point of view. This strong synergy and the continuous and growing interdependence between economics and knowledge necessarily lead us to consider the latter as a key factor to explain the differences between companies, between regions and between countries; the flywheel that every year feeds the growth of the product and productivity, proposing new techniques, new solutions and new needs. If knowledge is ultimately an intangible "asset", how is it managed by a company? And further: in the current globalized and highly competitive market, troubled by the crisis of recent years, why should companies invest in "human resource"? In essence, the "knowledge" within the company context would mean a long-term training of personnel, a long-term investment in human resources. Knowledge passes through training and therefore through communication, the exchange of ideas, of thought, of culture, the passage of contents and skills. Consequently, if this concept becomes essential "raw material", it needs a structure or at least of an environment that values it, protects it, discloses it, invests on it in order to derive maximum benefit from it. Basically, the know-how of a company, understood as an intangible asset, represents a decisive strategic factor in order to achieve and maintain a competitive advantage. The corporate universities are therefore the organizational tool for the implementation and management of investments in "human capital". They represent the competitive realities that companies have in order to maximize the incremental value of their human capital, which for the reasons mentioned above is a strategic element. After an introduction on knowledge management, the paper will discuss the concept of corporate universities referring to Italy. Further, in the last part an interesting case will be presented: an Italian company quoted at stock exchange, that offers a wide range of gas systems for converting vehicles to LPG and natural gas.
引用
收藏
页码:3480 / 3486
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Framework on Corporate Culture in Knowledge Management
    Zhang, L.
    Mei, X. H.
    Wang, D.
    2008 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MANAGEMENT OF INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY, VOLS 1-3, 2008, : 1450 - +
  • [32] Developing a corporate knowledge management strategy
    Oluikpe, Paul
    JOURNAL OF KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT, 2012, 16 (06) : 862 - 878
  • [33] Drivers of knowledge management in the corporate environment
    du Plessis, M
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INFORMATION MANAGEMENT, 2005, 25 (03) : 193 - 202
  • [34] KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND THE CORPORATE NATURE OF LOCAL GOVERNANCE A Case Study from the Philippines
    Gimutao, Kaymart
    Flor, Benjamina Paula
    Dagli, Winifredo
    KMIS 2011: PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND INFORMATION SHARING, 2011, : 363 - 368
  • [35] Application of Knowledge Management in Corporate Culture
    Malak, Miroslav
    MANAGEMENT 2010: KNOWLEDGE AND MANAGEMENT IN TIMES OF CRISIS AND ENSUING DEVELOPMENT, PTS I AND II, 2010, : 772 - 779
  • [36] Knowledge Management and Impact on Governance of Romanian Universities
    Cucui, Ion
    Robescu, Valentina-Ofelia
    Stegaroiu, Ion
    Petrescu, Marius
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 11TH EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT, VOLS 1 AND 2, 2010, : 315 - 322
  • [37] Knowledge Management and Sustainability of Symbolic Heritage in Universities
    Fonseca Martinez, Allen
    Brull Gonzalez, Maribel
    Guerra Casanellas, Ana Maria
    ESTUDIOS DEL DESARROLLO SOCIAL-CUBA Y AMERICA LATINA, 2021, 9 (03): : 1 - 8
  • [38] Corporate memory management: a knowledge management process model
    Snyder, CA
    McManus, DJ
    Wilson, LT
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT, 2000, 20 (5-8) : 752 - 764
  • [39] Knowledge management in Nigerian universities: A conceptual model
    Ojo A.
    Interdisciplinary Journal of Information, Knowledge, and Management, 2016, 11 : 331 - 345
  • [40] Emergent approach to knowledge management by small companies: multiple case-study research
    Zieba, Malgorzata
    Bolisani, Ettore
    Scarso, Enrico
    JOURNAL OF KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT, 2016, 20 (02) : 292 - 307