Intellectual capital is defined as the valuable knowledge held as a shared asset among employees or the expertise of individual employees. Knowledge management recognizes the value of knowledge and intellectual capital approaches attempt to give it value. The measurement of intellectual capital focuses on the intangible assets of an enterprise there are many approaches for measuring intellectual capital.
Perhaps the most widely recognized and easily understood indicator of intellectual capital is the difference between the market value and the book value of a company. You have probably seen examples of how great a difference there is for firms like Microsoft where the market value of the company is much higher than its actual book value. Another example is IBM’s purchase of Lotus for which they paid $3.5 billion dollars where the book worth of Lotus was $500 million. This difference is a measure of intellectual capital called market to book value. It is simple to calculate and it gives a better idea of the true worth of a company than the traditional balance sheet and it is also easy to communicate.
There are many published approaches for measuring intellectual capital which is the most important intangible asset an organization can have. As measuring these assets gets more attention, professionals are doing even more work and sharing their findings. Classifying this range of measures is difficult. However, after an analysis of different approaches for measuring intangible assets, Karl-Erik Sveiby developed an apology that is found extremely useful. This topology comes from a paper "Measuring models for intangible assets and intellectual capital" and it was published on Sveiby‘s website in the library section. In the paper, he includes a chart of different approaches, provides a classification scheme, and list the advantages and disadvantages of each approach. If you intend to measure intellectual capital, it is suggested that you read that article to learn more about these approaches. No one approach fits every situation. As always you will have to choose which is best for your organization.
The typology includes four types of measures:
I will admit to a bias for scorecard methods, as I think they provide better knowledge and more information in context for an actionable understanding. However, the fact that they are contextual is a disadvantage, as it makes them difficult to compare across organizations. They also have to be developed for each organization, although some measures are applicable across a range of organizations. One last drawback is that they can produce mountains of data, hampering the analysis of producing total analysis paralysis. However, they still get my vote.
Article ID: 260
Created: December 12, 2020
Last Updated: December 12, 2020
Author: Ajay Chadha [support@phpkb.com]
Online URL: https://www.phpkb.com/kb/article/how-to-measure-intellectual-capital-of-an-organization-260.html