Beyond Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge Hiding and Hoarding at Work
This chapter discusses why employees keep their knowledge to themselves. Despite managers' best efforts, many employees tend to hoard knowledge or are reluctant to share their expertise with coworkers or managers. Although many firms have introduced specialized initiatives to encourage a broade...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-22372010-09-23T06:24:04Z Beyond Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge Hiding and Hoarding at Work Webster, J. BROWN, Graham Zweig, D Connelly, C Brodt, S Sitkin, S This chapter discusses why employees keep their knowledge to themselves. Despite managers' best efforts, many employees tend to hoard knowledge or are reluctant to share their expertise with coworkers or managers. Although many firms have introduced specialized initiatives to encourage a broader dissemination of ideas and knowledge among organizational members, these initiatives often fail. This chapter provides reasons as to why this is so. Instead of focusing on why individuals might share their knowledge, however, we explain why individuals keep their knowledge to themselves. Multiple perspectives are offered, including social exchange, norms of secrecy, and territorial behaviors. 2008-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/1238 info:doi/10.1016/s0742-7301(08)27001-5 https://doi.org/10.1016/s0742-7301(08)27001-5 Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Human Resources Management |
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Human Resources Management Webster, J. BROWN, Graham Zweig, D Connelly, C Brodt, S Sitkin, S Beyond Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge Hiding and Hoarding at Work |
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This chapter discusses why employees keep their knowledge to themselves. Despite managers' best efforts, many employees tend to hoard knowledge or are reluctant to share their expertise with coworkers or managers. Although many firms have introduced specialized initiatives to encourage a broader dissemination of ideas and knowledge among organizational members, these initiatives often fail. This chapter provides reasons as to why this is so. Instead of focusing on why individuals might share their knowledge, however, we explain why individuals keep their knowledge to themselves. Multiple perspectives are offered, including social exchange, norms of secrecy, and territorial behaviors. |
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Webster, J. BROWN, Graham Zweig, D Connelly, C Brodt, S Sitkin, S |
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Webster, J. BROWN, Graham Zweig, D Connelly, C Brodt, S Sitkin, S |
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Webster, J. |
title |
Beyond Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge Hiding and Hoarding at Work |
title_short |
Beyond Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge Hiding and Hoarding at Work |
title_full |
Beyond Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge Hiding and Hoarding at Work |
title_fullStr |
Beyond Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge Hiding and Hoarding at Work |
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Beyond Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge Hiding and Hoarding at Work |
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beyond knowledge sharing: knowledge hiding and hoarding at work |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2008 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/1238 https://doi.org/10.1016/s0742-7301(08)27001-5 |
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