ISSN 1479-4411

First published
in 2003


Electronic Journal of Knowledge Management

   

Papers in Current Issue
   

Home Papers in Current Issue Previous Issues Site Map

    .

Home
About the Journal
Scope
Editorial Board
Submission Guidelines
Call for Papers

 

For information on the European Conference on Knowledge Management, click here

For information on the International Conference on Intellectual Capital, Knowledge Management and Organisational Learning, click here

Downloadable documents on this site require Adobe Acrobat Reader (free download here)

EJKM
Volume 8 Issue 1
Special Issue ECKM 2010

Virtual Communities of Practice: Investigating Motivations and Constraints in the Processes of Knowledge Creation and Transfer
Ana Maria Ramalho Correia1, 3 Alice Paulos2, and Anabela Mesquita2, 3
1Inst. Nacional de Eng., Tec. e Inovação, I. P., Lisboa, Portugal
2Instituto Superior de Economia e Gestão, Lisboa, Portugal
3Dr. Jaime Lopes de Amorim and Universidade do Minho (Centro Algoritmi), Portugal

With accelerated market volatility, faster response times and increased globalization, business environments are going through a major transformation and firms have intensified their search for strategies which can give them competitive advantage. This requires that companies continuously innovate, to think of new ideas that can be transformed into products, processes or services, generating value for the firm. Innovative solutions and processes are usually developed by a group of people, working together. A grouping of people that share and create new knowledge can be considered as a Community of Practice (CoP). CoPs are places which provide a sound basis for organizational learning and encourage knowledge creation and acquisition. Virtual Communities of Practice (VCoPs) can perform a central role in promoting communication and collaboration between members who are dispersed in both time and space. Nevertheless, it is known that not all CoPs and VCoPs share the same levels of performance or produce the same results. This means that there are factors that enable or constrain the process of knowledge creation. With this in mind, we developed a case study in order to identify both the motivations and the constraints that members of an organization experience when taking part in the knowledge creating processes of VCoPs. Results show that organizational culture and professional and personal development play important roles in these processes. No interviewee mentioned direct financial reward as a motivation factor for participation in VCoPs. Most identified the difficulty in aligning objectives, established by the management, with justification of the time spent in the VCoP. The interviewees also said that technology is not a constraint.

Keywords: CoP, knowledge creation, knowledge transfer, innovation

Download FULL PAPER

Back to Contents

Home Up Previous Issues Site Map

EJKM is published by Academic Conferences International Limited
Curtis Farm, Kidmore End, Nr Reading RG4 9AY, England
Tel: +44 (0)1189 724148, Fax: +44 (0)1189 724691, Email: info@ejkm.com

Send mail to info@academic-conferences.org with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2003-2006 Electronic Journal of Knowledge Management
Last modified: November 1, 2008
ISSN 1479-4411