Beazley promotes continuity management, a branch of knowledge management in which know-how is captured electronically so it can be transferred to a worker who replaces a departing employee. To make this system work, employees each day fill out templates tied to a database, creating a knowledge base that can be passed on.
Yet people might resist providing information that could lead to someone else doing their jobs. "There's a low level of trust and loyalty in the workplace for obvious reasons," says human-resources consultant Lynda Ford. "People approach this from the perspective of 'why are you asking me to do this?' If there's a perception of a low level of trust, they're not going to do it or do a lousy job doing it."
Says Creighton University economics professor Ernest Goss: "Knowledge gives people job security." Even with incentives to cooperate, he says, "workers will act in their own self-interest. They don't want to create an easy path to layoffs."
The economy was booming a few years back when Beazley began researching Continuity Management, as people zipped in and out of jobs. With each resignation, companies lost the departing employee's knowledge, a crucial asset. Today, fewer employees voluntarily leave jobs, but the need for continuity management persists because of layoffs. Companies need to transfer laid-off workers' knowledge to those who end up doing former colleagues' jobs--so-called ghost work--along with their own. While employees can't be replaced, portions of their knowledge can be, says Beazley, an ex-George Washington University organizational-behavior professor who heads the consulting firm Strategic Leadership Group.
Boeing seeking Software Engineer 5 in Anaheim, CA
KForce seeking Inside Sales Associate in San Diego, CA
Amalgamated Bank seeking Chief Information Officer in New York, NY
Apollo College seeking Medical Billing and Coding Instructors in Albuquerque, NM
Allstate seeking Exlusive Agent in Las Vegas, NV
For more great jobs, career-related news, features and services, please visit our Career Center.
SIFMA: Low Latency Finally Comes Into Its Own
Financial firms need their data faster than ever before, and this year consumers (not just vendors) have finally understood the importance of low latency technology, according to TowerGroup Senior Analyst Tom Price....

NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only.