填空题
· Read this text taken from an article about the importance to companies of
not losing their employees' knowledge.
· Choose the best sentence from the
opposite page to fill each of the gaps.
· For each gap (9-14), mark one
letter (A-H) on your Answer Sheet.
· Do not use any letter more than
once.
{{B}}
Protecting the corporate memory{{/B}}
{{I}} Many companies
risk losing expertise through job cuts. But by analysing how staff interact,
they may be able to minimise the damage. {{/I}}
Many staff have
knowledge which is essential to their company. So what can businesses do to
avoid losing that expertise when staff leave, and to dissuade employees from
keeping their knowledge to themselves in the face of possible job
cuts?
First, they need to recognise the problem. A downturn in
the economy exposes many companies' lack of commitment to understanding and
using their people's knowledge. When companies feel they're in a crisis, it is
one of the things that goes by the board. Unless, that is, they've made it a
routine or suffered because of losing knowledge in the past.
Next, any attempt to stop knowledge walking out of the door must be
handled sensitively. {{U}}(9) {{/U}} Employees would be extremely
cynical and see it as an attempt to extract their unique knowledge, which they
believe gives them job security.
Strong incentives are needed to
coax people into divulging their expertise when being dismissed. {{U}}(10)
{{/U}} At first sight, this might seem excessive, but the disadvantages
should be weighed against the benefits.
Of course, not all
knowledge can be captured by the organisation and turned into a process.
{{U}}(11) {{/U}} To find out who these 'knowledge hotspots' are,
companies need to question their staff and analyse their social networks.
Companies shouldn't ask employees what they know, but who they would ask if they
wanted to know about different subjects. {{U}}(12) {{/U}} And, more
importantly, the process reveals the others who always know somebody who
knows.
The latter can be high on the list for redundancy because
managers are unsure what they do, or because they appear to be weak performers.
{{U}}(13) {{/U}} People like this are often not ambitious but they can
hold a company together. The most valuable knowledge is often not possessed by
the people who seem to be star performers.
If those at the
centre of knowledge networks come to be seen as the most valuable people, those
who keep their knowledge to themselves will look vulnerable when downsizing is
deemed necessary. {{U}}(14) {{/U}} In such companies, the incentive to
share knowledge should be even greater when jobs are under threat.
For some companies, it may be too late to salvage important knowledge.
Building a culture where knowledge is understood, valued and shared can take a
long time. Now may be the time to prepare for the next downturn.
A.
Organisations that reward people for sharing knowledge will know who falls into
each of these two opposing categories.
B. This approach enables them to
identify those with a limited number of network relationships.
C. Launching a
knowledge-sharing initiative at a time when people are expecting redundancies
would not be a good idea.
D. This provides evidence of the risk that such a
policy will meet resistance. Because of the difficulty of achieving this, it is
far better not to lose the valuable sources of knowledge at all. But a
'knowledge mapping' exercise might reveal that they play a critical role as
mentors to the rest of the team.
G. The price may be an increase in their
redundancy package, provision of career counselling, or an agreement to hire
them back as consultants.
H. When companies feel they're in a crisis, it is
one of the things that goes by the board.