From Belief to Knowledge: Achieving and Sustaining an Adaptive Culture in Organizations by Neil Douglas, Terry Wykowski

From Belief to Knowledge: Achieving and Sustaining an Adaptive Culture in Organizations



Download From Belief to Knowledge: Achieving and Sustaining an Adaptive Culture in Organizations




From Belief to Knowledge: Achieving and Sustaining an Adaptive Culture in Organizations Neil Douglas, Terry Wykowski
Language: English
Page: 256
Format: pdf
ISBN: 1439837341, 9781439837344
Publisher: CRC Press

Review

From Belief to Knowledge is a timely contribution to a key debate within the organizational studies literature – what is the role of knowledge in change processes within modern and complex organizations? Whilst leaders proceed in their leadership of organizations in the belief that they have a body of knowledge that they draw upon as they lead, it is often the case that their knowledge is essentially a series of assumptions or beliefs and these determine the decisions they make and the actions they pursue.

... This book puts forward the proposition that how we form the beliefs we hold significantly influences what we believe and is the key process in shaping our personal anchors in knowledge that informs our action. This well written, thoughtful and thought provoking book will challenge leaders to consider the fundamental differences between belief and knowledge. It provides a novel contribution in its integrative analysis of the issue of learning and change in organizations. It offers leaders and scholars of change a considered opportunity to explore the transitions along the continuum from belief to knowledge that can lead to sustainable change.
   -- Sue Dopson, PhD, Rhodes Trust Professor of Organisational Behaviour, Director of Research Degrees, Said Business School, University of Oxford 

Organizational learning has been defined in various ways. Soe of these definitions and designs for implementation have been elegant; some of them have been simplistic, yet none seem to have had a lasting impact. Douglas and Wykowski in From Belief to Knowledge address organizational learning as an integrated system, where knowledge provides the linkage to adapt to changing environments all the while delivering improved performance. They answer the question that lingers in the minds of many managers – what does organizational learning mean and how does it influence ongoing organizational success? I expect this book to be highly influential.
-- Lee Newick, General Manager – Contracting and Procurement, Global Manufacturing/Shell Downstream

From Belief to Knowledge represents a paradigm shift in understanding knowledge and has added significantly to critical thinking. The book has the potential to shift thinking from firmly held assumptions and beliefs to real knowledge when the reader has the courage and motivation to confront their beliefs in the search for truth. Douglas and Wykowski challenge us to become conscious of our own beliefs and how we form them, which affect all our actions. Although this book is geared to organizational change, it has the potential to change all areas of human endeavor. My understanding of culture and culture change has been greatly enhanced by this thorough scholarship and practical application to knowledge.
   -- David Julian Hodges, PhD, Professor of Anthropology, Hunter College of the City University of New York

If you accept, as I do, that in a knowledge economy, the successful organizations are those that continuously invest in their knowledge producing capability, then this book provides valuable insights for thought and action. Uniquely, they make the case for the growth of knowledge as a defining characteristic of culture in contrast to the treatment of knowledge as one asset among many. Douglas and Wykowski drill down into theories of knowledge and, importantly, of knowing, to argue that multiple approaches to knowledge capability-building are required. They seek to translate these arguments into practice and then address what sort of leadership and human interaction are required.
   -- Michael Earl, Emeritus Professor of Information Management, University of Oxford

About the Author

Neil Douglas and Terry S. Wykowski are Principals of the Oxford Consulting Group in Houston Texas. The Group’s focus is to blend expertise in outcomes oriented management with psychology and organizational behavior.

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