In a recent interview with Martha Heller, Mike Wright, the Global CIO at McKinsey & Company, shared some insights on how they manage information and knowledge of its people to bring the best of McKinsey to every client.
M ike asserts that the greatest asset of McKinsey is the knowledge of its people. While this is true for any organization, given the fact that McKinsey has been able to do this consistently over several decades and has managed to scale knowledge management processes to 17,000 consultants spread across 66 countries, there are several best practices that we can learn from this interview.
Use technology to augment the power of human curation
At Contify, we interact with different kinds of companies who are interested in understanding what an AI-enabled market intelligence platform can do for them. Every once in a while, we come across customers who harbor the notion that AI will somehow magically reveal some game-changing insight that no one thought about.
Thatβs because, even before this COVID-19 pandemic, we have been living in an βAI misinformation epidemicβ with widespread media coverage fuelling debate over its potential impact on business and society at large. We also tend to focus more on the βnext big thingβ that will revolutionize the world as we know it, rather than appreciating the incremental improvements that have brought us here in the first place.
Mike says that at McKinsey, βwe use AI and machine learning technology to bolster our cognitive capabilities.β The objective is to provide users with βbetter curation and searchβ.
According to Mike, we should use artificial intelligence, machine learning, and other tools to augment the power of human curation. This is one of our founding principles at Contify. This article elaborates on how Contify leverages artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning technologies to drive market intelligence solution for our customers.
Tag information for search and retrieval
Mike said that in McKinseyβs knowledge repository, data is held in relational and graph databases with very good tagging and semantic search capabilities. βWhen you donβt get the answers you need, it is because we have not properly codified or tagged the data,β adds Mike.
In our experience of building and implementing Contify, we found that most organizations, after painstakingly collecting information from both external and internal sources, cannot find the right information, when they need it the most.
Thatβs because this information is not organized properly. It is scattered across the internet on different websites and in various folders across the organization.
To organize information for our customers and to make sure that it is retrievable when needed, at Contify, we implement customized business taxonomies. We have described this at great lengths in a series of ten articles titled βThe Art and Science of Taxonomy Development.β
Use APIs to connect different data sources for specific capabilities
McKinsey has moved away from the traditional βhigh-riseβ architecture where everything is centralized in massive ERP systems in favor of a βlow-riseβ architecture with APIs and add-ins to connect different data sources and third-party apps to build specific capabilities. As Mike puts it, βThe more we can pre-populate that information from other sources, the easier we can make it for people to refine it.β That is, make it easier for users to curate and enrich information.
Right from its inception, Contify has offered a human-curated market and competitive intelligence as APIs for companies to integrate into their internal knowledge systems such as ERPs, CRMs, or even their customer-facing applications. Read our announcement on how apps can integrate intelligence on companies using Contify’s News APIs. Very recently, we helped a predictive analytics solutions provider leverage Contifyβs News APIs to enrich itβs bid management software suite with updates on new business opportunities.
In this interview, Mike also shared several other insights on how McKinsey is managing the cultural changes required in IT to support a truly data-driven organization. He presents six specific pieces of advice to drive this change. Read the full interview here.