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Paperback The Wealth of Knowledge: Intellectual Capital and the Twenty-First Century Organization Book

ISBN: 0385500726

ISBN13: 9780385500722

The Wealth of Knowledge: Intellectual Capital and the Twenty-First Century Organization

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Book Overview

In Thomas A. Stewart's bestselling first book, Intellectual Capital, he redefined the priorities of businesses around the world, demonstrating that the most important assets companies own today are often not tangible goods, equipment, financial capital, or market share, but the intangibles: patents, the knowledge of workers, and the information about customers and channels and past experience that a company has in its institutional memory...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

One of three best books on creating value in the InfoAge

EDIT of 20 Dec 07 to add links. Too many people will miss the core message of this book, which is about paying attention to truth and seeking out truth in the context of networks of trust, rather than about managing the process of internal knowledge. When the author says "It's time to gather the grain and torch the chaff," his book over-all tells me he is talking about brain-power and a culture of thinking (the grain) and counterproductive information technology and irrelevant financial audits (the chaff). This is one of those rare books that is not easily summarized and really needs to be read in its entirely. A few items that jumped out at me: 1) Training is a priority and has both return on investment and retention of employee benefits that have been under-estimated. 2) All major organizations (he focused on business, I would certainly add government bureaucracies) have "legal underpinnings, ..systems of governance, ..management disciplines, ..accounting (that) are based on a model of the corporation that has become irrelevant." 3) Although one reviewer objected to his comments on taxation, the author has a deeper point--the government is failing to steer the knowledge economy because it is still taxing as if we had an industrial economy--this has very severe negative effects. 4) As I read the author's discussion of four trends he credits to John Hagel of I2, it was clear that "intelligence" needs to be applied not only to single organizations, but to entire industries. In my view, this author is quite brilliant and needs to be carefully cultivated by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, all of the industry associations, and by governments. There are some extremely powerful "macro" opportunities here that his ideas could make very profitable for a group acting in the aggregate. 5) This is one book that should have had footnotes instead of end-notes, for while the author is careful to credit all ideas borrowed from others, it is difficult in the text to follow his thinking in isolation. One idea that is very pertinent to national intelligence and counterintelligence as well as corporate knowledge management is that of the reversal of the value chain--"first sell, then make," i.e. stop pushing pre-conceived products out the door and get into the business of just enough, just in time knowledge or product creation that is precisely tailored to the real time needs of the client. 6) The author excells at blasting those corporations (and implicitly, major government bureaucracies such as the spy agencies that spend over $30 billion a year of taxpayer funds) that assume that if they only apply more dollars to the problem, they can solve any challenge. "Too often 'dumb power' produces a higher-level stalemate." One could add: and at greater cost! 7) The bottom line of this truly inspired and original book comes in the concluding chapters when the author very ably discusses how it is not knowledge per se that creates the value, but rather the leaders

It's About the Money

A compelling and eminently practical book. Packed with examples and case studies, The Wealth of Knowledge builds a bridge between the abstract world of Intellectual Capital theory and the tough realities of business in the 21st century. With a fast paced and "in-your-face" style, veteran Fortune writer Tom Stewart reminds us of what the Knowledge Economy is all about: money. How to get it, keep it and make it grow. Anyone who thinks the phrase "New Economy" was just passing techno-hype and dot-com reverie should read this book. It may just save your business. David H. Brett, CEO and Founder, Knexa.com

Hats Off.

You know, with all the talk over the past several years about the fact that we live in a knowledge economy, its never been clear to me how one uses that information to reshape the way one does business, and gain a competitive edge. How does one apply the notion of "intellectual capital" --which I competely agree with -- to running a company? As it turns out, that is exactly what Tom Stewart does in The Wealth of Knowledge. At last, I say. In essence, its a book that looks at some of the "best practices" of companies that are doing exactly that, informed by Stewart's unique ability to connect the dots, and make sense of what is surprisingly fuzzy in the existing literature. I've followed Stewart's column, The Leading Edge, on and off again for years in Fortune, as he first began to chart these waters. I'm hardly surprised that he's the one to help tell us how to put the petal to the metal, and show how to use the knowledge that most businesses are really built upon. Hats off to you, sir.

brilliant ideas - and the man can write!

Tom Stewart is the world's foremost authority on intellectual capital, which is no small recommendation in itself. But here's an equally important consideration for anyone thinking about buying this book: he won't bore you to death! If you've read much in this general area, you know that such a fatal end often awaits the unwary reader. In sharp contrast, this guy knows how to tell a story, and The Wealth of Knowledge is packed with them -- hugely engaging anecdotes drawn both from his own broad journalistic experience and from spirited conversations with an amazing array of business leaders. None of which is to imply that the theoretical foundations are glossed over. Stewart clearly has a wealth of knowledge himself in these matters. He imparts what he's learned in a way that not only enlightens, but also makes you want to keep reading. Solid, grounded and profoundly useful insights. Highly entertaining. Highly recommended.- Chris Locke, author of Gonzo Marketing: Winning Through Worst Practices, and co-author of The Cluetrain Manifesto.

How to Suceed in Busines without Really Trying

Joseph Heller is a great writer. His most famous work involves young Yossarian exploring the wily chambers of an insane McNamarian bureaucracy that is the inner workings of the WWII military campaign in Europe. Milo Minderbinder counterparts Yossarian's character by exploring capitalism gone wild. Heller deliciously wraps the whole thing up such that every chapter, every page, every paragraph and in some cases every sentence begins and ends with a catch-22. Tom Peters is a sharp tack. Back when the US had more seriousbusiness problems to attend to including 10% inflation, 20% primeinterest rates, 10% unemployment, and Japanese Kereitsu's managing circles around America's best and brightest Drukerarians, Peters and his McKinsey side-office cohort Bob Waterman fired the firstshot in the new economy by exploring the bureaucracy and socialorganization of what makes excellent companies.Thomas Stewart is the best of both authors. His new book has flagged an inflection point in the evolution of high tech management. He bookends every chapter, every page, every paragraph with fresh managerial insight and survey that would make Peters proud and a anecdotal familiarismwhich stems from knowing every major C-level executive at all the thoughtleading companies doing "cool work." "The Wealth of Knowledge" weavesthe do's and don'ts of corporate lore into a terrific read that only Heller can rival in fiction exploring the catch-22 of tangible accounting and measuring, creating and managing a corporation's intangible assets--namely Intellectual Capital.
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