thirds and three-quarters of the total utility that would
be gained by each group had their own ―ideal‖ plan of
action been adopted. Arguably, without VKM
substantial joint project gains and/or resource savings
might be forfeited.
In conclusion, the importance of knowledge about
individual and group values, as well as the
management of such knowledge, should be an
increasingly important domain of study within the
KM field. This is especially true where the
development of lateral relations and knowledge
sharing across professional subgroups is of
organizational interest (Rangachari, 2009; van der
Spek, Kruizinga, & Kleijsen, 2009). The present case
illustrates one approach to VKM and demonstrates
how the articulation of group judgment policies, the
development of a shared resource allocation model,
and the application of analytical mediation make a
substantial contribution to organizational problem
solving or opportunity seeking. The further
development of VKM and the possibility of more
frequent VKM applications should follow.
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i
Reductions in project costs are considered in the next
section.
ii
In cases where teams disagree on cost projections,
additional meetings to achieve consensus may be
required. The use of ―sensitivity analyses‖ can support
such meetings by identifying which differences have
little or no consequence on outcomes.
iii
For HRM, the ideal would be levels 5, 5, 3, 1, and 5,
respectively, at a cost of $385,000. For B&F, the ideal
would be levels 2, 1, 2, 1, and 1, respectively, at a cost
of $134,000. For NPC, the ideal would be levels 5, 4, 4,
3, and 5, respectively, at a cost of $395,000. These
levels can be identified directly from Figure 2 as the
maximum points on each group’s set of function forms.
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