Print 

EFFECT OF KNOWLEDGE ACCUMULATION AND UTILIZATION ON ORGANIZATION PERFORMANCE IN SELECTED STATE CORPORATIONS IN KENYA

Susan Ndinda Mullei - Master of Arts (Corporate Management), KCA University, Kenya

Dr. Nyaribo Misuko - Lecturer, KCA University, Kenya


ABSTRACT

Knowledge management is known to optimize organizational productivity and performance. As organizations sought to improve their performance and try to achieve organizational performance, gaining knowledge was seen as a key component. The main objective of this research was to determine the effect of knowledge accumulation and utilization on organization performance in selected state corporations in Kenya. The study adopted descriptive research design to obtain data from the target population of 179 State corporations in Kenya. The findings show that coefficient of correlation R was 0.866, an indication of a strong correlation between the variables. The coefficient of adjusted determination R2 was 0.740 which translates to 74.0%, this shows changes in organizational performance can largely be explained by the four independent variables. The study concludes that knowledge accumulation has a significant influence on organizational performance this is due to States Corporation’s engagement in research to generate new knowledge. Knowledge utilization has a significant influence on organizational performance of State Corporations. The study recommends that State Corporations ought to refine their internal processes in line with the strengths of the staff, conduct internal experiments to improve service delivery to customers, collect customer feedback to inform future decisions and use customer feedback to improve their processes. State corporations ought to utilize its knowledge to departmentalize its operations, reuse its knowledge to strengthen its operations, use its knowledge to influence the kind of culture it wants to prevail and collaborate with other stakeholders in ensuring competitiveness.


Full Length Research (PDF Format)