IC concepts are so new that sometimes the meaning of all the work we do can get lost in the deluge of new ideas. In some
research we did on early IC adopters in late 2008, we found that
even management teams that had undertaken an IC assessment project struggled with the connection between IC and financial results.This
finding has haunted me over the last year. Because to me, the connection is absolutely clear. Knowledge intangibles drive the performance of every company today. But I know that most people don’t have a frame of reference to understand the implications of that statement.
So here’s
what we have been doing to help management teams “see” the connection in their own organizations. We start with the question:
How do you get paid by your clients? What are you doing for them?
Then ask:
What are the intangibles that enable you to get paid: Processes (structural capital), IP (also
structural capital), Competencies (human capital), Relationships (relationship capital)
This list is really the foundation of the intangibles management information set. And since it is designed to cover the core revenue/value creation activities of the organization, there is less doubt about the link with the financials.
Does this make sense to you? How do you see the relationship between IC and the financials? What are some of the other models that work in practice?
Tags: IC, capital, financial, intangible, intangibles, intellectual, results
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