Where Did That Community Go? - Communities of Practice that "Disappear"
C. Gongla. Knowledge Networks: Innovation through Communities of Practice, chapter 24, IGI Global, Hershey, PA, (2004)
Abstract
Experience has been gained and a body of literature is building about how Communities of Practice within organizations are formed. We are learning about the progression of communities over time, how they evolve and mature, and about the factors that contribute to their sustainability. However, communities, being "living systems", do not live forever, or even very long. That said, exactly why and how does any particular Community of Practice disappear? This chapter will discuss the factors related to the ending of individual communities. Specifically, it will address three basic questions:
1. In what ways do Communities of Practice disappear; what are the different paths and patterns?
2. Why do communities disappear?
3. What are ways to help a community transition?
The material for this chapter is drawn primarily from observations of and experiences with the Communities of Practice within IBM Global Services. A number of these communities over the past six years have "disappeared", but they have not all "disappeared" in the same way. The authors will discuss patterns and variations that have emerged as these communities vanished from the organizational scene. In working with these communities, they have also developed a general guide to aid in the communities' transitioning. The authors will very briefly describe the steps in this guide.
%0 Book Section
%1 KNICOP_24
%A Gongla, Christine R. Rizzuto Patricia
%B Knowledge Networks: Innovation through Communities of Practice
%C Hershey, PA
%D 2004
%E Hildreth, Paul
%E Kimble, Chris
%I IGI Global
%K CoP Community_Life_Cycle Community_of_Practice Core_Team Decision_Making Identity Knowledge_Preservation Knowledge_Utilization Leadership Management_Issues Organizational_Dynamics Organizational_Knowledge Set_of_Guidelines
%P 295--307
%T Where Did That Community Go? - Communities of Practice that "Disappear"
%U http://www.chris-kimble.com/KNICOP/Chapters/Chapter_24.html
%X Experience has been gained and a body of literature is building about how Communities of Practice within organizations are formed. We are learning about the progression of communities over time, how they evolve and mature, and about the factors that contribute to their sustainability. However, communities, being "living systems", do not live forever, or even very long. That said, exactly why and how does any particular Community of Practice disappear? This chapter will discuss the factors related to the ending of individual communities. Specifically, it will address three basic questions:
1. In what ways do Communities of Practice disappear; what are the different paths and patterns?
2. Why do communities disappear?
3. What are ways to help a community transition?
The material for this chapter is drawn primarily from observations of and experiences with the Communities of Practice within IBM Global Services. A number of these communities over the past six years have "disappeared", but they have not all "disappeared" in the same way. The authors will discuss patterns and variations that have emerged as these communities vanished from the organizational scene. In working with these communities, they have also developed a general guide to aid in the communities' transitioning. The authors will very briefly describe the steps in this guide.
%& 24
@incollection{KNICOP_24,
abstract = {Experience has been gained and a body of literature is building about how Communities of Practice within organizations are formed. We are learning about the progression of communities over time, how they evolve and mature, and about the factors that contribute to their sustainability. However, communities, being "living systems", do not live forever, or even very long. That said, exactly why and how does any particular Community of Practice disappear? This chapter will discuss the factors related to the ending of individual communities. Specifically, it will address three basic questions:
1. In what ways do Communities of Practice disappear; what are the different paths and patterns?
2. Why do communities disappear?
3. What are ways to help a community transition?
The material for this chapter is drawn primarily from observations of and experiences with the Communities of Practice within IBM Global Services. A number of these communities over the past six years have "disappeared", but they have not all "disappeared" in the same way. The authors will discuss patterns and variations that have emerged as these communities vanished from the organizational scene. In working with these communities, they have also developed a general guide to aid in the communities' transitioning. The authors will very briefly describe the steps in this guide.},
added-at = {2008-04-13T15:33:20.000+0200},
address = {Hershey, PA},
author = {Gongla, Christine R. Rizzuto Patricia},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/298feb93b1bf3661e7c8fd309faacf86a/xckuk},
booktitle = {Knowledge Networks: Innovation through Communities of Practice},
chapter = 24,
description = {KNICOP},
editor = {Hildreth, Paul and Kimble, Chris},
interhash = {c2a9de7af894e8cc82683796eb3d2d0d},
intrahash = {98feb93b1bf3661e7c8fd309faacf86a},
keywords = {CoP Community_Life_Cycle Community_of_Practice Core_Team Decision_Making Identity Knowledge_Preservation Knowledge_Utilization Leadership Management_Issues Organizational_Dynamics Organizational_Knowledge Set_of_Guidelines},
pages = {295--307},
publisher = {IGI Global},
timestamp = {2008-04-13T15:33:27.000+0200},
title = {Where Did That Community Go? - Communities of Practice that "Disappear"},
url = {http://www.chris-kimble.com/KNICOP/Chapters/Chapter_24.html},
year = 2004
}