posted on 2011-02-07, 10:03authored byTimothy J. Barnett
It is widely accepted that engineering research, design, development and manufacturing
processes are highly reliant upon the valuable knowledge, experiences and skills stored
within the company's systems, processes, documents and employees. If these key
knowledge resources can be identified, maintained and efficiently controlled, prior
successes and failures can be capitalised upon, best practices can be captured and
transferred and new solutions can be developed with minimal duplication of efforts and
without unnecessary replication of prior work.
Away from manufacturing and engineering organisations, in the broader business world,
exists an array of solutions, tools and techniques developed specifically to facilitate the
management of knowledge and experience these are collectively labelled as Knowledge
Management (KM) tools and solutions. Such solutions, tools and techniques have
achieved widespread recognition for their capabilities and consequent importance in
enhancing processes across a variety of business applications and contexts. However
their relevancy, applicability and relative merits in particular manufacturing and
mechanical engineering (MME) contexts have generally not been identified or
investigated.
This thesis reviews and presents a large number of diverse KM solutions and
implementations across industries and organisations and creates a new and unique
single KM solutions space in which these solutions are characterised. The KM solution
space is subsequently utilised by a new KM methodology and support tool that
facilitates and demonstrates the enhancement of mechanical and manufacturing
engineering processes through analysis followed by selection and implementation of the
most appropriate existing KM solutions. The KM Tool is demonstrated via three
industrial case studies detailing the process concerns and associated improvements
identified and implemented.
The KM Solution Space developed during this research has shown that there is
significant opportunity to improve mechanical and manufacturing engineering processes
through the adoption of appropriate KM solutions from the broader business world. The
KM Tool developed via this research facilitates this identification and adoption of the
most appropriate KM solution. In addition to the MME processes covered by the scope
of this research there is additional scope to extend the use of the KM Tool and KM
Solution Space to other business areas that have not yet had extensive exposure to KM.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering