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Mitigate Key IT Employee Knowledge Loss

Transfer IT knowledge before it’s gone.

Seventy-four percent of organizations do not have a formal process for capturing and retaining knowledge - which, when lost, results in decreased productivity, increased risk, and money out the door.

Our Advice

Critical Insight

  • Seventy-four percent of organizations do not have a formal process for capturing and retaining knowledge – which, when lost, results in decreased productivity, increased risk, and money out the door. It’s estimated that Fortune 500 companies lose approximately $31.5 billion each year by failing to share knowledge.
  • Don’t follow a one-size-fits-all approach to knowledge transfer strategy! Right-size your approach based on your business goals.
  • Prioritize knowledge transfer candidates based on their likelihood of departure and the impact of losing that knowledge.
  • Select knowledge transfer tactics based on the type of knowledge that needs to be captured – explicit or tacit.

Impact and Result

Successful completion of the IT knowledge transfer project will result in the following outcomes:

  1. Approval for IT knowledge transfer project obtained.
  2. Knowledge and stakeholder risks identified.
  3. Effective knowledge transfer plans built.
  4. Knowledge transfer roadmap built.
  5. Knowledge transfer roadmap communicated and approval obtained.

Mitigate Key IT Employee Knowledge Loss Research & Tools

1. Mitigate Key IT Employee Knowledge Loss Deck – A step-by-step document that walks you through how to transfer knowledge on your team to mitigate risks from employees leaving the organization.

Minimize risk and IT costs resulting from attrition through effective knowledge transfer.

This blueprint will help you identify your knowledge risks and build a plan to transfer that knowledge before it’s gone.

2. Project Stakeholder Register Template – A template to help you identify and document project management stakeholders.

Use this template to document the knowledge transfer stakeholder power map by identifying the stakeholder’s name and role, and identifying their position on the power map.

3. IT Knowledge Transfer Project Charter Template – Define your project and lay the foundation for subsequent knowledge transfer project planning

Use this template to communicate the value and rationale for knowledge transfer to key stakeholders.

4. IT Knowledge Transfer Risk Assessment Tool – Identify the risk profile of knowledge sources and the knowledge they have

Use this tool to identify and assess the knowledge and individual risk of key knowledge holders.

5. IT Knowledge Transfer Plan Template – A template to help you determine the most effective knowledge transfer tactics to be used for each knowledge source by listing knowledge sources and their knowledge, identifying type of knowledge to be transferred and choosing tactics that are appropriate for the knowledge type

Use this template to track knowledge activities, intended recipients of knowledge, and appropriate transfer tactics for each knowledge source.

6. IT Knowledge Identification Interview Guide Template – A template that provides a framework to conduct interviews with knowledge sources, including comprehensive questions that cover what type of knowledge a knowledge source has and how unique the knowledge is

Use this template as a starting point for managers to interview knowledge sources to extract information about the type of knowledge the source has.

7. IT Knowledge Transfer Roadmap Presentation Template – A presentation template that provides a vehicle used to communicate IT knowledge transfer recommendations to stakeholders to gain buy-in

Use this template as a starting point to build your proposed IT knowledge transfer roadmap presentation to management to obtain formal sign-off and initiate the next steps in the process.


Member Testimonials

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Bill is fantastic, we have had him as our instructor twice now, and both times he's been exceptional to work with. Having a well-built plan in hand... Read More

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Amanda provided high level guidelines, with some concreate suggestions.


Knowledge Management

66 million Baby Boomers are set to retire and they're taking 50+ years of knowledge with them.
This course makes up part of the People & Resources Certificate.

Now Playing:
Academy: Knowledge Management | Executive Brief

An active membership is required to access Info-Tech Academy
  • Course Modules: 5
  • Estimated Completion Time: 2-2.5 hours
  • Featured Analysts:
  • Carlene McCubbin, Sr. Research Manager, CIO Practice
  • James Alexander, SVP of Research and Advisory, CIO Practice

Workshop: Mitigate Key IT Employee Knowledge Loss

Workshops offer an easy way to accelerate your project. If you are unable to do the project yourself, and a Guided Implementation isn't enough, we offer low-cost delivery of our project workshops. We take you through every phase of your project and ensure that you have a roadmap in place to complete your project successfully.


Mitigate Key IT Employee Knowledge Loss

Transfer IT knowledge before it’s gone.

EXECUTIVE BRIEF

Executive Summary

Your Challenge

Common Obstacles

Info-Tech’s Approach

Seventy-four percent of organizations do not have a formal process for capturing and retaining knowledge1 which, when lost, results in decreased productivity, increased risk, and money out the door. You need to:

  • Build a strategic roadmap to retain and share knowledge.
  • Build a knowledge transfer strategy based on your organization’s business goals.
  • Increase departmental efficiencies through increased collaboration.
  • Retain key IT knowledge
  • Improve junior employee engagement by creating development opportunities.
  • Don’t follow a one-size fits all approach. Right-size your approach based on your organizational goals.
  • Prioritize knowledge transfer candidates based on their likelihood of departure and the impact of losing that knowledge.
  • What you’re transferring impacts how you should transfer it. Select knowledge transfer tactics based on the type of knowledge that needs to be captured – explicit or tacit.

Our client-tested methodology and project steps allow you to tailor your knowledge transfer plan to any size of organization, across industries. Successful completion of the IT knowledge transfer project will result in the following outcomes:

  • Approval for IT knowledge transfer project obtained.
  • Knowledge and stakeholder risks identified.
  • Effective knowledge transfer plans built.
  • Knowledge transfer roadmap built.
  • Knowledge transfer roadmap communicated.

Info-Tech Insight

Seventy-four percent of organizations do not have a formal process for capturing and retaining knowledge which, when lost, results in decreased productivity, increased risk, and money out the door.1

1 McLean & Company, 2016, N=120

Stop your knowledge from walking out the door

Today, the value of an organization has less to do with its fixed assets and more to do with its intangible assets. Intangible assets include patents, research and development, business processes and software, employee training, and employee knowledge and capability.

People (and their knowledge and capabilities) are an organization’s competitive advantage and with the baby boomer retirement looming, organizations need to invest in capturing employee knowledge before the employees leave. Losing employees in key roles without adequate preparation for their departure has a direct impact on the bottom line in terms of disrupted productivity, severed relationships, and missed opportunities.

Knowledge Transfer (KT) is the process and tactics by which intangible assets – expertise, knowledge, and capabilities – are transferred from one stakeholder to another. A well-devised knowledge transfer plan will mitigate the risk of knowledge loss, yet as many as 74%2 of organizations have no formal approach to KT – and it’s costing them money, reputation, and time.

84%of all enterprise value on the S&P 500 is intangibles.3

$31.5 billion lost annually by Fortune 500 companies failing to share knowledge. 1

74% of organizations have no formal process for facilitating knowledge transfer. 2

1 Shedding Light on Knowledge Management, 2004, p. 46

2 McLean & Company, 2016, N=120

3 Visual Capitalists, 2020

Losing knowledge will undermine your organization’s strategy in four ways

In a worst-case scenario, key employees leaving will result in the loss of valuable knowledge, core business relationships, and profits.

1

Inefficiency due to “reinvention of the wheel.” When older workers leave and don’t effectively transfer their knowledge, younger generations duplicate effort to solve problems and find solutions.

2

Loss of competitive advantage. What and who you know is a tremendous source of competitive edge. Losing knowledge and/or established client relationships hurts your asset base and stifles growth, especially in terms of proprietary or unique knowledge.

3

Reduced capacity to innovate. Older workers know what works and what doesn’t, as well as what’s new and what’s not. They can identify the status quo faster, to make way for novel thinking.

4

Increased vulnerability. One thing that comes with knowledge is a deeper understanding of risk. Losing knowledge can impede your organizational ability to identify, understand, and mitigate risks. You’ll have to learn through experience all over again.

Are you part of the 74% of organizations with no knowledge transfer planning in place? Can you afford not to have it?

Consider this:

55-60

67%

78%

$14k / minute

the average age of mainframe workers – making close to 50% of workers over 60.2

of Fortune 100 companies still use mainframes3 requiring. specialized skills and knowledge

of CIOs report mainframe applications will remain a key asset in the next decade.1

is the cost of mainframe outages for an average enterprise.1

A system failure to a mainframe could be disastrous for organizations that haven’t effectively transferred key knowledge. Now think past the mainframe to key processes, customer/vendor relationships, legal requirements, home grown solutions etc. in your organization.

What would knowledge loss cost you in terms of financial and reputational loss?

Source: 1 Big Tech Problem as Mainframes Outlast Workforce

Source: 2 IT's most wanted: Mainframe programmers

Source: 3The State of the Mainframe, 2022

Case Study

Insurance organization fails to mitigate risk of employee departure and incurs costly consequences – in the millions

INDUSTRY: Insurance

SOURCE: ITRG Member

Challenge

Solution

Results

  • A rapidly growing organization's key Senior System Architect unexpectedly fell ill and needed to leave the organization.
  • This individual had been with the organization for more than 25 years and was the primary person in IT responsible for several mission-critical systems.
  • Following this individual’s departure, one of the systems unexpectedly went down.
  • As this individual had always been the go-to person for the system, and issues were few and far between, no one had thought to document key system elements and no knowledge transfer had taken place.
  • The failed system cost the organization more than a million dollars in lost revenue.
  • The organization needed to hire a forensic development team to reverse engineer the system.
  • This cost the organization another $200k in consulting fees plus the additional cost of training existing employees on a system which they had originally been hoping to upgrade.

Forward thinking organizations use knowledge transfer not only to avoid risks, but to drive IT innovation

IT knowledge transfer is a process that, at its most basic level, ensures that essential IT knowledge and capabilities don’t leave the organization – and at its most sophisticated level, drives innovation and customer service by leveraging knowledge assets.

Knowledge Transfer Risks:

Knowledge Transfer Opportunities:

✗ Increased training and development costs when key stakeholders leave the organization.

✗ Decreased efficiency through long development cycles.

✗ Late projects that tie up IT resources longer than planned, and cost overruns that come out of the IT budget.

✗ Lost relationships with key stakeholders within and outside the organization.

✗ Inconsistent project/task execution, leading to inconsistent outcomes.

✗ IT losing its credibility due to system or project failure from lost information.

✗ Customer dissatisfaction from inconsistent service.

✓ Mitigated risks and costs from talent leaving the organization.

✓ Business continuity through redundancies preventing service interruptions and project delays.

✓ Operational efficiency through increased productivity by never having to start projects from scratch.

✓ Increased engagement from junior staff through development planning.

✓ Innovation by capitalizing on collective knowledge.

✓ Increased ability to adapt to change and save time-to-market.

✓ IT teams that drive process improvement and improved execution.

Common obstacles

In building your knowledge transfer roadmap, the size of your organization can present unique challenges

How you build your knowledge transfer roadmap will not change drastically based on the size of your organization; however, the scope of your initiative, tactics you employ, and your communication plan for knowledge transfer may change.


How knowledge transfer projects vary by organization size:

Small Organization

Medium Organization

Large Organization

Project Opportunities

✓ Project scope is much more manageable.

✓ Communication and planning can be more manageable.

✓ Fewer knowledge sources and receivers can clarify prioritization needs.

✓ Project scope is more manageable.

✓ Moderate budget for knowledge transfer activities.

✓ Communication and enforcement is easier.

✓ Budget available to knowledge transfer initiatives.

✓ In-house expertise may be available.

Project Risks

✗ Limited resources for the project.

✗ In-house expertise is unlikely.

✗ Knowledge transfer may be informal and not documented.

✗ Limited overlap in responsibilities, resulting in fewer redundancies.

✗ Limited staff with knowledge transfer experience for the project.

✗ Knowledge assets are less likely to be documented.

✗ Knowledge transfer may be a lower priority and difficult to generate buy-in.

✗ More staff to manage knowledge transfer for, and much larger scope for the project.

✗ Impact of poor knowledge transfer can result in much higher costs.

✗Geographically dispersed business units make collaboration and communication difficult.

✗ Vast amounts of historical knowledge to capture.

Capture both explicit and tacit knowledge

Explicit

Tacit

  • “What knowledge” – knowledge can be articulated, codified, and easily communicated.
  • Easily explained and captured – documents, memos, speeches, books, manuals, process diagrams, facts, etc.
  • Learn through reading or being told.
  • “How knowledge” – intangible knowledge from an individual’s experience that is more from the process of learning, understanding, and applying information (insights, judgments, and intuition).
  • Hard to verbalize, and difficult to capture and quantify.
  • Learn through observation, imitation, and practice.

Types of explicit knowledge

Types of tacit knowledge

Information

  • Specialized technical knowledge.
  • Unique design capabilities/ methods/ models.
  • Legacy systems, details, passwords.
  • Special formulas/algorithms/ techniques/contacts.

Process

  • Specialized research and development processes.
  • Proprietary production processes.
  • Decision-making processes.
  • Legacy systems.
  • Variations from documented processes.

Skills

  • Techniques for executing on processes.
  • Relationship management.
  • Competencies built through deliberate practice enabling someone to act effectively.

Expertise

  • Company history and values.
  • Relationships with key stakeholders.
  • Tips and tricks.
  • Competitor history and differentiators.

Examples: reading music, building a bike, knowing the alphabet, watching a YouTube video on karate.

Examples: playing the piano, riding a bike, reading or speaking a language, earning a black belt in karate.

Knowledge transfer is not a one-size-fits-all project

The image contains a picture of Info-Tech's Knowledge Transfer Maturity Model. Level 0: Accidental, goal is not prioritized. Level 1: Stabilize, goal is risk mitigation. Level 2: Proactive, goal is operational efficiency. Level 3: Knowledge Culture, goal is innovation & customer service.

No formal knowledge transfer program exists; knowledge transfer is ad hoc, or may be conducted through an exit interview only.

74% of organizations are at level 0.1

At level one, knowledge transfer is focused around ensuring that high risk, explicit knowledge is covered for all high-risk stakeholders.

Organizations have knowledge transfer plans for all high-risk knowledge to ensure redundancies exist and leverage this to drive process improvements, effectiveness, and employee engagement.

Increase end-user satisfaction and create a knowledge value center by leveraging the collective knowledge to solve repeat customer issues and drive new product innovation.

1 Source: McLean & Company, 2016, N=120

Assess your fit for this blueprint by considering the following statements

I’m an IT Leader who…

Stabilize

…has witnessed that new employees have recently left or are preparing to leave the organization, and worries that we don’t have their knowledge captured anywhere.

…previously had to cut down our IT department, and as a result there is a lack of redundancy for tasks. If someone leaves, we don’t have the information we need to continue operating effectively.

…is worried that the IT department has no succession planning in place and that we’re opening ourselves up to risk.

Proactive

…feels like we are losing productivity because the same problems are being solved differently multiple times.

…worries that different employees have unique knowledge which is critical to performance and that they are the only ones who know about it.

…has noticed that the processes people are using are different from the ones that are written down.

…feels like the IT department is constantly starting projects from scratch, and employees aren’t leveraging each other’s information, which is causing inefficiencies.

…feels like new employees take too long to get up to speed.

…knows that we have undocumented systems and more are being built each day.

Knowledge Culture

…feels like we’re losing out on opportunities to innovate because we’re not sharing information, learning from others’ mistakes, or capitalizing on their successes.

…notices that staff don’t have a platform to share information on a regular basis, and believes if we brought that information together, we would be able to improve customer service and drive product innovation.

…wants to create a culture where employees are valued for their competencies and motivated to learn.

…values knowledge and the contributions of my team.

This blueprint can help you build a roadmap to resolve each of these pain points. However, not all organizations need to have a knowledge culture. In the next section, we will walk you through the steps of selecting your target maturity model based on your knowledge goals.

Case Study

Siemens builds a knowledge culture to drive customer service improvements and increases sales by $122 million

INDUSTRY: Electronics Engineering

SOURCE: KM Best Practices

Challenge

Solution

Results

  • As a large electronics and engineering global company, Siemens was facing increased global competition.
  • There was an emphasized need for agility and specialized knowledge to remain competitive.
  • The new company strategy to address competitive forces focused on becoming a knowledge enterprise and improving knowledge-sharing processes.
  • New leadership roles were created to develop a knowledge management culture.
  • “Communities of practice” were created with the goal of “connecting people to people” by allowing them to share best practices and information across departments.
  • An internal information-sharing program was launched that combined chat, database, and search engine capabilities for 12,000 employees.
  • Employees were able to better focus on customer needs based on offering services and products with high knowledge content.
  • With the improved customer focus, sales increased by $122 million and there was a return of $10-$20 per dollar spent on investment in the communities of practice.

Info-Tech’s approach

Five steps to future-proof your IT team

The five steps are in a cycle. The five steps are: Obtain approval for IT knowledge transfer project, Identify your  knowledge and stakeholder risks, Build knowledge transfer plans, Build your knowledge transfer roadmap, Communicate your knowledge transfer roadmap to stakeholders.

The Info-Tech difference:

  1. Successfully build a knowledge transfer roadmap based on your goals, no matter what market segment or size of business.
  2. Increase departmental efficiencies through increased collaboration.
  3. Retain key IT knowledge.
  4. Improve junior employee engagement by creating development opportunities.

Use Info-Tech tools and templates

Project outcomes

1. Approval for IT knowledge transfer project obtained

2. Knowledge and stakeholder risks identified

3. Tactics for individuals’ knowledge transfer identified

4. Knowledge transfer roadmap built

5. Knowledge transfer roadmap approved

Info-Tech tools and templates to help you complete your project deliverables

Project Stakeholder Register Template

IT Knowledge Transfer Risk Assessment Tool

IT Knowledge Identification Interview Guide Template

Project Planning and Monitoring Tool

IT Knowledge Transfer Roadmap Presentation Template

IT Knowledge Transfer Project Charter Template

IT Knowledge Transfer Plan Template

Your completed project deliverables

IT Knowledge Transfer Plans

IT Knowledge Transfer Roadmap Presentation

IT Knowledge Transfer Roadmap

Info-Tech’s methodology to mitigate key IT employee knowledge loss

1. Initiate

2. Design

3. Implement

Phase Steps

  1. Obtain approval for IT knowledge transfer project.
  2. Identify your knowledge and stakeholder risks.
  1. Build knowledge transfer plans.
  2. Build your knowledge transfer roadmap.
  1. Communicate your knowledge transfer roadmap to stakeholders.

Phase Outcomes

  • Approval for IT knowledge transfer project obtained.
  • Knowledge and stakeholder risks identified.
  • IT knowledge transfer project charter created.
  • Tactics for individuals’ knowledge transfer identified.
  • Knowledge transfer roadmap built.
  • IT knowledge transfer plans established.
  • IT Knowledge transfer roadmap presented.
  • Knowledge transfer roadmap approved.

Blueprint deliverables

Each step of this blueprint is accompanied by supporting deliverables to help you accomplish your goals:

IT Knowledge Transfer Project Charter

Establish a clear project scope, decision rights, and executive sponsorship for the project.

The image contains a screenshot of the IT Knowledge Transfer Project Charter.

IT Knowledge Transfer Risk Assessment Tool

Identify and assess the knowledge and individual risk of key knowledge holders.

The image contains a screenshot of the IT Knowledge Transfer Risk Assessment Tool.

IT Knowledge Identification Interview Guide

Extract information about the type of knowledge sources have.

The image contains a screenshot of the IT Knowledge Identification Interview Guide.

IT Knowledge Transfer Roadmap Presentation

Communicate IT knowledge transfer recommendations to stakeholders to gain buy-in.

The image contains a screenshot of the IT Knowledge Transfer Roadmap Presentation.

Key deliverable:

IT Knowledge Transfer Plan

Track knowledge activities, intended recipients, and appropriate transfer tactics for each knowledge source.

The image contains a screenshot of the IT Knowledge Transfer Plan.

Blueprint benefits

IT Benefits

Business Benefits

  • Business continuity through redundancies preventing service interruptions and project delays.
  • Operational efficiency through increased productivity by never having to start projects from scratch.
  • Increased engagement from junior staff through development planning.
  • IT teams that drive process improvement and improved execution.
  • Mitigated risks and costs from talent leaving the organization.
  • Innovation by capitalizing on collective knowledge.
  • Increased ability to adapt to change and save time-to-market.

Info-Tech offers various levels of support to best suit your needs

DIY Toolkit

“ Our team has already made this critical project a priority, and we have the time and capability, but some guidance along the way would be helpful.”

Guided Implementation

“Our team knows that we need to fix a process, but we need assistance to determine where to focus. Some check-ins along the way would help keep us on track.”

Workshop

“We need to hit the ground running and get this project kicked off immediately. Our team has the ability to take this over once we get a framework and strategy in place.”

Consulting

“Our team does not have the time or the knowledge to take this project on. We need assistance through the entirety of this project.”

Diagnostics and consistent frameworks used throughout all four options

Guided Implementation

What does a typical GI on this topic look like?

Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3

Call #1: Structure the project. Discuss transfer maturity goal and metrics.

Call #2: Build knowledge transfer plans.

Call #3: Identify priorities & review risk assessment tool.

Call #4: Build knowledge transfer roadmap. Determine logistics of implementation.

Call #5: Determine logistics of implementation.

A Guided Implementation (GI) is a series of calls with an Info-Tech analyst to help implement our best practices in your organization. A typical GI is five to six calls.

Workshop Overview

Contact your account representative for more information.
workshops@infotech.com 1-888-670-8889

Day 1

Day 2

Day 3

Day 4

Day 5

Define the Current and Target State

Identify Knowledge Priorities

Build Knowledge Transfer Plans

Define the Knowledge Transfer Roadmap

Next Steps and
Wrap-Up (offsite)

Activities

1.1 Have knowledge transfer fireside chat.

1.2 Identify current and target maturity.

1.3 Identify knowledge transfer metrics

1.4 Identify knowledge transfer project stakeholders

2.1 Identify your knowledge sources.

2.2 Complete a knowledge risk assessment.

2.3 Identify knowledge sources’ level of knowledge risk.

3.1 Build an interview guide.

3.2 Interview knowledge holders.

4.1 Prioritize the sequence of initiatives.

4.2 Complete the project roadmap.

4.3 Prepare communication presentation.

5.1 Complete in-progress deliverables from previous four days.

5.2 Set up review time for workshop deliverables and to discuss next steps.

Deliverables

  1. Organizational benefits and current pain points of knowledge transfer.
  2. Identification of target state of maturity.
  3. Metrics for knowledge transfer.
  4. Project stakeholder register.
  1. List of high risk knowledge sources.
  2. Departure analysis.
  3. Knowledge risk analysis.
  1. Knowledge transfer interview guide.
  2. Itemized knowledge assets.
  1. Prioritized sequence based on target state maturity goals.
  2. Project roadmap.
  3. Communication deck.
Mitigate Key IT Employee Knowledge Loss preview picture

About Info-Tech

Info-Tech Research Group is the world’s fastest-growing information technology research and advisory company, proudly serving over 30,000 IT professionals.

We produce unbiased and highly relevant research to help CIOs and IT leaders make strategic, timely, and well-informed decisions. We partner closely with IT teams to provide everything they need, from actionable tools to analyst guidance, ensuring they deliver measurable results for their organizations.

MEMBER RATING

9.3/10
Overall Impact

$12,314
Average $ Saved

13
Average Days Saved

After each Info-Tech experience, we ask our members to quantify the real-time savings, monetary impact, and project improvements our research helped them achieve.

Read what our members are saying

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Guided Implementation 1: Initiate Your IT Knowledge Transfer Project
  • Call 1: Structure the project.

    Discuss transfer maturity goal and metrics.

Guided Implementation 2: Design Your Knowledge Transfer Plans
  • Call 1: Build knowledge transfer plans
  • Call 2: Identify priorities and review risk assessment tool.

Guided Implementation 3: Implement Your Knowledge Transfer Plans and Roadmap
  • Call 1: Build knowledge transfer roadmap
  • Call 2: Determine logistics of implementation

Authors

Carlene McCubbin

Rebecca Zhao

Contributors

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