LITERATURE REVIEW
Electronic Communities of Practice (CoPs)
Wenger (1998) described the community of practice (CoP) as an evolutionary process of learning within
groups. A CoP is a collaborative team or group of professionals who know one other, work together, and engage in
shared practice by interacting on an ongoing basis, thereby enhances the formation of strong inter-personal ties and
creates norms of direct reciprocity within a small community (Lave & Wenger, 1991). Communities of practice
develop a context of work within which members collectively construct shared identities and the social context that
helps those identities to be shared. Such communities develop into significant “sticky” repositories for the
development, storage and dissemination of useful knowledge (von Hippel, 1994). Recent advances in information
technology have also shifted CoPs into an online environment where even more geographically distributed group of
individuals can be accommodated. The formation of these virtual communities is often mediated by third parties
such as professional associations or governmental agencies, although members in this network do not necessarily
meet or know one another personally (Dubé, Bourhis & Jacob, 2005). Based upon generic discussions of CoPs
(Brown & Duguid, 2001; Wasko & Faraj, 2005), this study adopted definition of CoPs as self-organizing and open
activity systems focused on shared practice that exists primarily through computer mediated communications
(Wasko & Faraj, 2005, p. 37).
Computer mediated communities of practice have been recognized as valuable assets to organizations.
While the conventional wisdom suggests that participating in such communities generates value at individual level,
it is increasingly recognized that even organizations can extract tremendous value from the knowledge created by
those individuals. In today’s fast-paced knowledge-based economy, these communities allow organizations to tackle
unstructured problems and share knowledge outside the traditional structural boundaries. In addition, these
communities provide means to develop and maintain organizational memory. These mechanisms result in efficient
forms of knowledge transfer and ultimately facilitate learning and applications at both individual and organizational
levels. According to Lesser and Storck (2001), such communities provide both organizations and individuals with
multiple advantages: decreased the learning curve, increased customer responsiveness, reduced rework and prevent
reinvention, and increased innovation.
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