When can it be said, “you are what you know”?: a multilevel analysis of expertise, identity, and knowledge sharing in teams

Individually held knowledge is one of an organization’s most valuable assets. The extent to which an organization can leverage that asset depends on its members’ not only applying knowledge in their work, but also exchanging and transferring knowledge with others in the organization. We still know v...

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Main Author: Herndon, Benjamin David
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/6678
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-66782015-09-20T16:53:26ZWhen can it be said, “you are what you know”?: a multilevel analysis of expertise, identity, and knowledge sharing in teamsHerndon, Benjamin DavidKnowledge sharingKnowledge workersExpertise identityLearning outcomesPersonal identityExpertiseOrganizational environmentIndividually held knowledge is one of an organization’s most valuable assets. The extent to which an organization can leverage that asset depends on its members’ not only applying knowledge in their work, but also exchanging and transferring knowledge with others in the organization. We still know very little, however, about why some knowledge workers are more or less willing to share their specialized knowledge with others. I argue that a robust explanation can be found in the risks or opportunities that knowledge sharing poses to personal identity. Specifically, knowledge workers’ willingness to share knowledge with others can be explained by the importance they place on that component of personal identity associated with expertise (i.e., their expertise identity). I systematically explore contingency factors that might influence the effect of knowledge workers’ expertise identity on their willingness to share knowledge, including other aspects of the self, dyadic social relationships, team identification, and the organizational environment. Finally, I argue that the effects of people’s knowledge sharing will be evidenced in the learning outcomes realized by those around them. I conducted a cross-sectional survey study at a national engineering firm. The final sample included 221 members of 40 continuing teams (55% response rate). In addition to self-report data, surveys captured respondents’ round-robin peer ratings of fellow team members on multiple constructs, including a measure of individuals’ willingness to share their specialized expertise with others in terms of sharing the full range of personal techniques, reasoning, and experience that form the basis of their own mastery. I conducted analyses using multilevel modeling and social relations modeling techniques. Results supported 4 of 6 hypotheses. An individual’s willingness to share knowledge with others was higher when expertise identity was high and dyadic trust, receiver expertise, and team identification were also high. Further, people with high expertise identity were less willing to share knowledge than people with low expertise identity when dyadic trust, receiver expertise, and team identification were low. Implications of these results, limitations of the study, and directions for future research are discussed.text2009-11-05T20:35:49Z2009-11-05T20:35:49Z2009-082009-11-05T20:35:49Zelectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/6678engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Knowledge sharing
Knowledge workers
Expertise identity
Learning outcomes
Personal identity
Expertise
Organizational environment
spellingShingle Knowledge sharing
Knowledge workers
Expertise identity
Learning outcomes
Personal identity
Expertise
Organizational environment
Herndon, Benjamin David
When can it be said, “you are what you know”?: a multilevel analysis of expertise, identity, and knowledge sharing in teams
description Individually held knowledge is one of an organization’s most valuable assets. The extent to which an organization can leverage that asset depends on its members’ not only applying knowledge in their work, but also exchanging and transferring knowledge with others in the organization. We still know very little, however, about why some knowledge workers are more or less willing to share their specialized knowledge with others. I argue that a robust explanation can be found in the risks or opportunities that knowledge sharing poses to personal identity. Specifically, knowledge workers’ willingness to share knowledge with others can be explained by the importance they place on that component of personal identity associated with expertise (i.e., their expertise identity). I systematically explore contingency factors that might influence the effect of knowledge workers’ expertise identity on their willingness to share knowledge, including other aspects of the self, dyadic social relationships, team identification, and the organizational environment. Finally, I argue that the effects of people’s knowledge sharing will be evidenced in the learning outcomes realized by those around them. I conducted a cross-sectional survey study at a national engineering firm. The final sample included 221 members of 40 continuing teams (55% response rate). In addition to self-report data, surveys captured respondents’ round-robin peer ratings of fellow team members on multiple constructs, including a measure of individuals’ willingness to share their specialized expertise with others in terms of sharing the full range of personal techniques, reasoning, and experience that form the basis of their own mastery. I conducted analyses using multilevel modeling and social relations modeling techniques. Results supported 4 of 6 hypotheses. An individual’s willingness to share knowledge with others was higher when expertise identity was high and dyadic trust, receiver expertise, and team identification were also high. Further, people with high expertise identity were less willing to share knowledge than people with low expertise identity when dyadic trust, receiver expertise, and team identification were low. Implications of these results, limitations of the study, and directions for future research are discussed. === text
author Herndon, Benjamin David
author_facet Herndon, Benjamin David
author_sort Herndon, Benjamin David
title When can it be said, “you are what you know”?: a multilevel analysis of expertise, identity, and knowledge sharing in teams
title_short When can it be said, “you are what you know”?: a multilevel analysis of expertise, identity, and knowledge sharing in teams
title_full When can it be said, “you are what you know”?: a multilevel analysis of expertise, identity, and knowledge sharing in teams
title_fullStr When can it be said, “you are what you know”?: a multilevel analysis of expertise, identity, and knowledge sharing in teams
title_full_unstemmed When can it be said, “you are what you know”?: a multilevel analysis of expertise, identity, and knowledge sharing in teams
title_sort when can it be said, “you are what you know”?: a multilevel analysis of expertise, identity, and knowledge sharing in teams
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/6678
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