Flex Basics
May 16, 2024

4 Strategies for Fostering Effective Knowledge Sharing in a Distributed Workplace

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Dr. Tatiana Andreeva
Associate Professor
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Introduction

With the rapid rise of hybrid and remote work models, fostering effective knowledge sharing across distributed teams has become vital for driving innovation and operational efficiency in organizations. While debates around employee productivity and company performance take center stage, the underlying mechanisms that enable these outcomes — such as knowledge sharing — often go unnoticed.

When employees aren't co-located, maintaining open knowledge flows requires proactively addressing potential obstacles to key drivers like motivation, trusting relationships, and opportunities for sharing. Failure to do so can hinder the combination of diverse expertise, lead to redundant efforts, and limit an organization's innovative potential.

In this article, I outline four strategic ways to promote effective knowledge-sharing practices in flexible work environments. These ways empower organizations to fully harness the power of their collective knowledge assets regardless of workforce distribution.

4 Strategies to Enable Knowledge Sharing in a Hybrid or Remote Work Environment

1. Balance Individual Performance Metrics with Stimuli to Help Others

While evaluating individual outputs is sensible for managing remote workers, an excessive focus on this can inadvertently undermine employees' motivation to share knowledge. They may view assisting others as a drain on their productive time. You've likely heard hybrid employees lament in-office days as "wasted" on mere socialization. Employees may also hesitate to seek help via email, fearing it leaves a documented trail exposing knowledge gaps.

To counteract this, avoid a myopic fixation on individual metrics that discourages helping behaviors. Remember, you reinforce what you incentivize. Consider incorporating peer mentoring, knowledge base contributions, internal training/workshops, and cross-team collaboration into performance evaluations. Or include team and organization-level goals fostering a culture of shared expertise. Simple acts like nominating "teammate of the month" for exceptional support can signal that you value these critical citizenship behaviors.

2. Create Extra Opportunities for Building Relationships and Trust

Remote work can strain the informal rapport and trust-building vital for fluid knowledge sharing. Virtual settings often limit opportunities for the casual "watercooler" conversations that spark serendipitous insights and nurture relationships. Tightly agenda-driven video calls leave little room for the off-script banter building familiarity and psychological safety. Booking a meeting just to chat feels overly formal compared to the casual desk pop-in.

To foster these spontaneous relationship-building moments, intentionally bake in "slack" time during virtual gatherings. One team carved out 15 extra minutes in their once hyper-efficient daily standups, creating a relaxed space for casual connecting and bonding. Another instituted "fun fact" sharing in weekly meetings, where teammates reveal something novel about themselves. Such simple adjustments can help reproduce the informal social ties foundational for open knowledge exchange when employees are distributed.

3. Make the “Knowledge Map” of Your Team Visible

With reduced face-to-face interactions, it becomes harder for distributed teammates to maintain a clear "who knows what" map of each other's expertise domains. This knowledge opacity hampers efficiently leveraging and developing organizational skill sets.

Counteract this by proactively creating visibility into interests and capabilities. The rapport-building activities mentioned earlier can help but consider also implementing a shared skills inventory. Some forward-thinking companies build internal networking platforms akin to a company-specific LinkedIn meets Facebook. Employees indicate current expertise areas as well as domains they aim to develop, all tagged and searchable. This democratizes awareness of available organizational knowledge assets.

You can still crowdsource a team skills catalog if no formal system exists. Facilitate a "what I know" sharing session, documenting the outputs in a team-accessible record. While scrappier, this approach still illuminates the unseen elements of your group's collective knowledge portfolio.

4. Mitigate Bias in Diverse Work Arrangements

The challenges around maintaining knowledge sharing can become even more pronounced in truly hybrid workplaces where employees have vastly different on-site schedules. This Balkanized arrangement risks creating haves and have-nots when it comes to access to organizational expertise.

Some may face amplified obstacles to the drivers of knowledge exchange. There are reports of teams running hybrid meetings exclusively for those co-located that day, unintentionally shutting out remote colleagues from developmental opportunities and insight into who knows what. Relationships between those with radically divergent work patterns may fray more easily than bonds between those "in the same boat." This fertile ground for insular subgroups arises, with knowledge hoarded within silos rather than transcending them.

To level this playing field, first audit for emergent inequities enabled by your hybrid model. The previous recommendations around enabling informal relationship-building and increasing skills visibility can help indirectly. But you must also explicitly identify any particularly at-risk individuals and enact targeted interventions ensuring their connectivity to organizational knowledge flows remains unobstructed. An ounce of foresight prevents a bushel of debilitating expertise gaps.

Conclusion

While hybrid and remote models can create obstacles to smooth knowledge sharing, a wholesale return to office-based work is not the solution. Physical co-location alone does not ensure expertise flows freely. The key is proactively identifying and dismantling barriers to open knowledge exchange, no matter the workplace setup.

Organizations can fuel innovation and efficiency under any model by nurturing a culture of collaboration, trust, and inclusivity that maximizes knowledge sharing. However, this requires an upfront commitment to enablement strategies tailored to their unique needs and constraints. With foresight and dedication, companies can fully unlock the competitive advantages of their collective intellectual capital regardless of where employees log on.

An ounce of prevention around sustaining knowledge sharing equals pounds of enhanced productivity, creativity, and organizational learning in our new world of work. Thoughtfully architecting these critical expertise pipelines allows teams to outperform rather than just muddle through. The path forward is clear for those willing to adapt.

About the Author

Dr. Tatiana Andreeva
Associate Professor in Management and Organizational Behavior

Dr. Tatiana Andreeva is an Associate Professor in Management and Organizational Behavior at the School of Business, Maynooth University, Ireland. Her research addresses the challenges of managing knowledge in organizations. For example, Tatiana explores why people share or hide knowledge and what (HR) managers can do to facilitate (or prevent) these behaviors. Her ongoing research examines the effects of the shift to hybrid work on knowledge sharing and collaboration in organizations and gender aspects of knowledge behaviors. Tatiana’s work has been published in the leading journals such as Human Resource Management Journal, Human Resource Management, Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology and Academy of Management Learning and Education.

You can find Tatiana on LinkedIn and Twitter.

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