BEYOND DIGITIZATION: A THEORETICAL ESSAY ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PEOPLE, KNOWLEDGE, AND ORGANIZATIONAL TRANSFORMATION
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v12i5.26157Keywords:
Digital Transformation. People Management. Knowledge Management. Organizational Innovation. Conceptual model.Abstract
This theoretical essay investigates the relationships between digital transformation, people management, and knowledge management, highlighting their interaction in fostering organizational innovation and resilience. The research problem arises from the observation that digital transformation initiatives often fail for reasons that the literature still treats in a fragmented way, isolating the technological, human, and cognitive pillars rather than articulating them systemically. Digital transformation transcends technology adoption and demands changes in processes, culture, and strategy. People Management aligns human competencies with technological demands, while Knowledge Management converts data into strategic insights that drive innovation. Through a critical review of recent literature, this essay proposes the Digital-Organizational Integration Cycle model (CIDO, from the Portuguese acronym), structured around four interdependent pillars: Digital Transformation, People Management, Knowledge Management, and Organizational Innovation, articulated in an iterative cycle with explicit feedback from innovation to digital transformation. The CIDO model argues that the failure of digital transformation initiatives stems less from technological limitations than from the rupture between people management and knowledge management, and that this human-cognitive cycle, rather than technology itself, constitutes the real engine of sustainable organizational innovation.
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Atribuição CC BY