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Design Principles for Competence
Management Systems: A Synthesis of an Action Research Study
Rikard Lindgren, Ola
Henfridsson, and Ulrike Schultze
Special Issue on Action Research
Volume 28, Number 3
Abstract
Even though the literature on competence in
organizations recognizes the need to align organization level core
competence with individual level job competence, it does not consider
the role of information technology in managing competence across the
macro and micro levels. To address this shortcoming, we embarked
on an action research study that develops and tests design principles
for competence management systems. This research develops an
integrative model of competence that not only outlines the interaction
between organizational and individual level competence and the role of
technology in this process, but also incorporates a typology of
competence (competence-in-stock, competence-in-use, and
competence-in-the-making). Six Swedish organizations participated
in our research project, which took 30 months and consisted of two
action research cycles involving numerous data collection strategies
and interventions such as prototypes. In addition to developing a
set of design principles and considering their implications for both
research and practice, this article also includes a self-assessment of
the study by evaluating it according to the criteria for canonical
action research.
Keywords: Canonical action research, competence
management systems, core competence, design principles, HR management,
prototypes, skill-based approach
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