All Thinkers

Ikujiro Nonaka

Ikujiro Nonaka (born 1935) is a Japanese organisational theorist whose work on knowledge creation in organisations has made him one of the most influential management thinkers of the knowledge economy era. He was born in Tokyo in 1935 and grew up through the hardships of wartime and postwar Japan. He graduated from Waseda University with a degree in political science in 1958 and worked for nine years at Fuji Electric, where he saw first-hand how Japanese companies developed new products and managed learning across the organisation. In 1967 he left for California to pursue graduate study, earning an MBA and then a PhD from Berkeley's Haas School of Business in 1972. He joined the faculty of the Nanzan University in Nagoya, then moved to Hitotsubashi University in Tokyo, where he spent most of his academic career and is now Professor Emeritus. He has also held positions at Berkeley, Harvard Business School, and the University of British Columbia. His most influential work is The Knowledge-Creating Company (1995), co-authored with Hirotaka Takeuchi, which introduced the SECI model of knowledge creation and drew extensively on cases from Japanese companies including Honda, Canon, and Matsushita. The book was one of the first major works to treat knowledge creation as a central strategic activity rather than as a by-product of operations. It drew on Japanese philosophical traditions as well as Western organisational theory, producing a synthesis that was distinctively grounded in its cultural context while addressing universal questions. Nonaka has continued publishing on knowledge management, leadership, and organisational learning, including The Wise Leader (with Takeuchi, 2011) and work on phronesis (practical wisdom) as a leadership capacity. He received the Chevalier in the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres from France in 2001 and was the first Japanese inductee into the Thinkers50 Management Hall of Fame in 2017. He has been instrumental in making Japanese organisational thinking accessible to global management thought.

Origin
Japan
Lifespan
b. 1935
Era
Late 20th-21st century
Subjects
Management Knowledge Creation Organisational Learning Innovation Japanese Philosophy
Why They Matter

Nonaka matters because he produced the most influential framework for understanding how knowledge is created in organisations — a question that had been neglected by mainstream management theory but that turned out to be central to competitive success in the knowledge economy. Earlier management thought had focused on how to manage the production of goods and services, how to structure organisations, how to motivate employees. Knowledge itself was treated as something that either existed (people knew things) or did not, and that could be transmitted through training, documents, and education. Nonaka argued that organisations continuously create new knowledge through specific processes — processes that could be identified, studied, and deliberately cultivated. His SECI model of knowledge creation (socialisation, externalisation, combination, internalisation) described how tacit and explicit knowledge interact in a continuous spiral to generate new organisational capabilities. The model drew on the philosopher Michael Polanyi's distinction between tacit knowledge (what we know but cannot fully articulate) and explicit knowledge (what can be formally stated) and extended it to show how organisations convert between the two through specific social processes. The framework was tested against detailed cases from Japanese companies and proved empirically productive. It has been applied in innumerable contexts since, from corporate training to software development to scientific research. Beyond the specific model, Nonaka's broader contribution was to establish knowledge creation as a central management responsibility — something executives should actively cultivate rather than assume. His later work on phronesis and wise leadership has extended this into questions of judgement, values, and practical wisdom, bringing classical philosophical concerns into contemporary management thought. His synthesis of Eastern and Western intellectual traditions, and his attention to aspects of organisational life that more technical approaches missed, have made him one of the most significant non-Western voices in global management thinking.

Key Ideas
1
Tacit and explicit knowledge
Nonaka built on the philosopher Michael Polanyi's distinction between two kinds of knowledge. Explicit knowledge is what can be formally stated — written in documents, taught in classrooms, coded in procedures. It is easy to share but limited in what it captures. Tacit knowledge is what we know but cannot fully articulate — the skill of the craftsman, the judgement of the experienced doctor, the intuition of the expert negotiator. It is difficult to share because it cannot easily be put into words. Organisations typically hold vastly more tacit than explicit knowledge. Much of what makes a company effective lives in the tacit knowledge of its experienced employees. Understanding the distinction matters because most attempts to manage knowledge treat only the explicit kind, missing the larger and often more valuable tacit component.
2
The SECI model of knowledge creation
Nonaka's SECI model describes how tacit and explicit knowledge interact through four modes of conversion. Socialisation converts tacit knowledge into new tacit knowledge through shared experience — apprentices learning from masters, colleagues learning from working side by side. Externalisation converts tacit knowledge into explicit knowledge through articulation — writing down what was previously unspoken, using metaphors and analogies to express what resists direct description. Combination converts explicit knowledge into new explicit knowledge by combining existing explicit elements — synthesising documents, integrating data, producing new reports. Internalisation converts explicit knowledge into new tacit knowledge through practice and experience — reading a manual and then doing the work until the skill becomes automatic. Knowledge creation proceeds through a spiral of these four modes, each generating new knowledge that feeds into the others.
3
Ba as shared context
Nonaka introduced the Japanese concept of ba — roughly translated as place or shared context — to describe the conditions in which knowledge creation occurs. Ba is not simply physical space, though physical space matters. It includes the shared time, relationships, intentions, and atmosphere that support genuine exchange of knowledge. A meeting room with trusting colleagues working on a shared problem is a ba. A strained videoconference where participants have not built rapport is not. A ba can exist in a coffee shop or on a factory floor; it cannot be forced by rules or incentives but must be cultivated through attention to the conditions that support it. The concept was distinctive in making explicit what many management theories had treated as background — that knowledge creation requires specific kinds of contexts that leaders must deliberately create and sustain.
Key Quotations
"The knowledge-creating company is as much about ideas as it is about ideals."
— The Knowledge-Creating Company, 1995 (with Hirotaka Takeuchi)
Nonaka and Takeuchi are making a specific claim about what drives knowledge creation in organisations. Technical ideas are not enough; ideals — visions of what the organisation should become, what its products should achieve, what purposes it should serve — are equally important. Ideals provide the direction that ideas serve; ideas provide the specific content that moves toward the ideals. A company with many technical ideas but no ideals produces incoherent innovation that does not add up to strategic success. A company with strong ideals but no technical ideas produces inspiration without implementation. Both are needed. The framing is distinctive for its willingness to treat ideals as legitimate content of management thought rather than as vague inspirational talk.
"An organization is not a machine but a living organism."
— The Knowledge-Creating Company, 1995
Nonaka is making a specific metaphorical claim that has consequences for how organisations should be managed. The machine metaphor — popular since Taylor — suggests that organisations can be engineered, optimised, and controlled through detailed specification and measurement. The organism metaphor suggests that organisations grow, adapt, and maintain themselves through processes that cannot be fully engineered or controlled. Organisms must be cultivated, fed, and allowed to develop in response to their environments. The metaphor changes what counts as good management. For machines it is precision; for organisms it is care and sensitivity to context. The Japanese companies Nonaka studied showed how the organism metaphor supported distinctive approaches to innovation that the machine metaphor could not have produced.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When examining different kinds of knowledge
How to introduce
Ask students: what do you know how to do that you cannot fully explain to someone else? Riding a bike, reading someone's mood, recognising a familiar voice, knowing when something tastes wrong. Introduce Nonaka's distinction between tacit knowledge (what we know but cannot fully articulate) and explicit knowledge (what can be written down or taught directly). Discuss how much of what we actually know is tacit. Much of what makes someone skilled at their work — a craftsman, a teacher, a nurse — is tacit knowledge built up through experience. Consider what this means for how we learn. Reading a book can transmit explicit knowledge; tacit knowledge usually requires practice and apprenticeship. Connect to experiences students have had learning complex skills.
Creative Expression When examining the role of metaphor in thinking
How to introduce
Introduce Nonaka's attention to metaphor as a way of capturing ideas that resist direct description. Tell students about the Tall Boy metaphor that guided the design of the Honda City — a vehicle that would maximise interior space at the expense of traditional form. The metaphor did work that specifications could not have done; it pointed designers in a direction without prescribing exactly what the car would look like. Ask students: when have metaphors helped them understand something? Consider how metaphors work in literature, science, and ordinary speech. They compress complex meanings into vivid images that can be grasped quickly. Discuss when metaphors are valuable and when they can mislead. Connect to broader skills of creative thinking and communication.
Further Reading

For a short introduction: Nonaka's 1991 Harvard Business Review article The Knowledge-Creating Company is a compact statement of his core ideas and remains accessible. The 1995 book of the same title, with Hirotaka Takeuchi, is the comprehensive primary source and surprisingly readable. The Harvard Business Review articles on ba and on wise leadership provide brief entries to his later work.

Key Ideas
1
Middle-up-down management
In contrast to purely top-down management (where decisions flow from senior executives to workers) and purely bottom-up management (where decisions emerge from workers upward), Nonaka argued that knowledge-creating companies typically practise middle-up-down management. Senior executives articulate broad visions; front-line workers bring direct experience and tacit knowledge; middle managers do the crucial work of synthesising the two — translating strategic visions into practical initiatives and surfacing ground-level knowledge into strategic conversations. The middle is where knowledge creation happens most intensively because it is where the different kinds of knowledge must be integrated. The framework corrected a common neglect of middle management in strategic thinking and gave middle managers a substantive role beyond simply transmitting instructions. It has influenced how many organisations think about their management structures.
2
The knowledge-creating company
Nonaka's 1995 book with Hirotaka Takeuchi developed a comprehensive argument that Japanese companies' success in the 1970s and 1980s came partly from their superior capacity for knowledge creation. The book examined cases from Honda, Canon, Matsushita, NEC, and others, showing how each had developed specific practices for cultivating the SECI spiral. Products like the Honda City urban car and the Canon mini-copier were analysed as cases of deliberate knowledge creation, not just clever engineering. The book was widely influential in drawing attention to knowledge creation as a central management capacity. It also corrected a tendency to explain Japanese success through culture alone — Nonaka and Takeuchi showed that specific management practices mattered, practices that could in principle be adopted in other cultural contexts even if adaptation was required.
3
Metaphors and analogies in innovation
Nonaka paid particular attention to the role of metaphors and analogies in the externalisation of tacit knowledge. When something resists direct description, metaphor can capture it. The Honda designers working on the City used the metaphor of Tall Boy — a vehicle that would maximise interior space at the expense of traditional aerodynamic form. The metaphor guided design decisions in ways that engineering specifications could not have done. Nonaka argued that cultivating metaphorical thinking was a specific management skill worth developing, because it was the main way tacit intuitions about new products or approaches could be shared across a team. The emphasis distinguished his approach from more formalistic theories of innovation and connected to Japanese poetic traditions of metaphor and indirect expression.
Key Quotations
"Knowledge, unlike information, is about beliefs and commitment."
— The Knowledge-Creating Company, 1995
Nonaka is drawing a distinction that has practical implications. Information is data that can be transmitted — facts, numbers, documents. Knowledge goes further: it involves beliefs about what the information means, commitments about how to act on it, contexts in which it makes sense. The same information can become different knowledge for different people depending on what they already believe and commit to. This explains why information systems alone cannot create knowledge — the information must be understood, believed, and integrated into practice. It also explains why knowledge creation is inherently social and cannot be automated. Managing information and managing knowledge are different tasks requiring different approaches. Confusing them — which much corporate IT has done — produces expensive systems that do not actually improve organisational capability.
"Creating new knowledge is not simply a matter of mechanistically processing objective information."
— The Knowledge-Creating Company, 1995
Nonaka is pushing back against the dominant Western model of knowledge creation, which treated knowledge as objective information to be gathered, analysed, and processed. This model works for some kinds of knowledge — statistical analysis, scientific data — but misses much of what organisations actually do when they develop new products, services, or capabilities. Real knowledge creation involves tacit elements that cannot be fully objectified, subjective insights that resist formal analysis, emotional commitments that drive people to discover what they could not have derived mechanically. Nonaka's alternative model placed these elements at the centre rather than treating them as disturbances to a fundamentally rational process. The argument has influenced how innovation is studied and how knowledge-intensive work is organised.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When examining different intellectual traditions
How to introduce
Tell students that Nonaka's work combines Western management theory with Japanese philosophical traditions, particularly ideas from Nishida's Kyoto School and from Zen Buddhism. Ask: what might Japanese intellectual traditions contribute to organisational thought that Western traditions miss? Discuss specific examples. The concept of ba has no Western equivalent but captures something real about where knowledge creation happens. The tacit knowledge emphasis draws on experiential traditions that Western rationalism underplayed. Consider more generally how different cultural traditions see different things, and how serious intellectual work requires engagement with multiple traditions rather than relying on any single one. Connect to broader questions about whose knowledge counts and how knowledge from different sources can be integrated.
Problem Solving When examining how organisations learn
How to introduce
Present Nonaka's SECI model of knowledge creation — how tacit and explicit knowledge convert into each other through four modes. Ask students to consider their own school or a group they belong to. Where does socialisation happen (learning from shared experience)? Externalisation (putting knowledge into words)? Combination (synthesising different knowledge into new forms)? Internalisation (making explicit knowledge part of one's practice)? All four happen in healthy learning communities; the skill is noticing and cultivating each. Consider what conditions support each mode. Socialisation requires time together; externalisation requires safe spaces for articulation; combination requires access to diverse knowledge; internalisation requires practice. Connect to broader questions about how groups develop their collective capacity.
Ethical Thinking When examining what makes a leader wise
How to introduce
Introduce Nonaka's framework of phronetic leadership — leadership that combines technical capability with practical wisdom. Ask students: what makes a leader wise rather than merely competent? Discuss the six abilities Nonaka identified: judging goodness, grasping situations, creating shared contexts, telling stories, exercising power for common good, fostering phronesis in others. Consider examples from students' own experience. A wise teacher, coach, or family leader typically displays several of these. Compare with leaders who are technically competent but lack wisdom — good at specific tasks but poor at overall judgement. Connect to broader questions about what character qualities leadership requires, and how these can be developed.
Further Reading

The Knowledge-Creating Company (1995, Oxford University Press) remains the foundational work. Enabling Knowledge Creation (2000, with Georg von Krogh and Kazuo Ichijo) extends the framework with more practical guidance. Managing Industrial Knowledge (2001, edited with David J. Teece) collects important extensions. For the phronetic leadership work: The Wise Leader (2011, with Takeuchi) provides the primary statement.

Key Ideas
1
Phronesis and wise leadership
In his later work, particularly The Wise Leader (2011) with Hirotaka Takeuchi, Nonaka drew on the Aristotelian concept of phronesis — practical wisdom — to describe the kind of judgement that leaders need. Phronesis is not theoretical knowledge (epistēmē) or technical skill (technē); it is the capacity to judge well in specific situations, considering both ends and means, weighing competing goods, and acting with appropriate timing and proportion. Nonaka identified six abilities of the phronetic leader: the ability to judge goodness, to grasp the essence of a situation, to create ba, to tell stories that communicate essence, to exercise political power in service of the common good, and to foster phronesis in others. The framework brought classical ethical thought into contemporary management in a way that was both intellectually serious and practically relevant.
2
Knowledge creation and Japanese philosophical traditions
Nonaka's work drew explicitly on Japanese philosophical traditions — particularly the thought of Nishida Kitaro, founder of the Kyoto School, whose concept of basho (place of nothingness) influenced Nonaka's ba. Zen Buddhist traditions of experiential knowledge, in which understanding cannot be fully separated from practice, shaped his attention to tacit knowledge. The Confucian emphasis on cultivation and moral development informed his later work on phronesis. Rather than presenting these influences as exotic, Nonaka treated them as genuinely useful intellectual resources for understanding universal organisational phenomena. His synthesis of Japanese philosophical tradition with Western management theory and scientific research methodology produced something genuinely new. It also offered a model of how non-Western intellectual traditions could contribute to ostensibly universal fields rather than being confined to area studies.
3
Critiques and extensions of the SECI model
The SECI model has been both widely applied and substantially critiqued. Some scholars have argued that the sharp tacit-explicit distinction oversimplifies — that knowledge exists on a continuum and cannot always be neatly sorted into two categories. Others have questioned whether the four SECI modes are exhaustive or whether the spiral metaphor captures how knowledge creation actually proceeds. Empirical tests of the model have produced mixed results — in some contexts it describes observed patterns well, in others less well. Nonaka has responded to some of these critiques by refining the model. The debates illustrate the normal development of any influential framework: initial enthusiasm, application in many contexts, accumulation of anomalies, refinement through critique. The SECI model remains useful as long as its limits are understood and as long as it is not applied mechanically to situations where other frameworks might fit better.
Key Quotations
"The wise leader is able to see what is good for the organisation and the society at the same time."
— The Wise Leader, 2011 (with Hirotaka Takeuchi)
Nonaka is articulating his framework of phronetic leadership. Wisdom in leadership, in his account, is not primarily analytical capacity or strategic vision; it is the ability to perceive what is good — for the organisation and for the society in which it operates — and to hold these two together. The claim is that these are not typically in conflict; the truly wise leader sees how they align. This draws on classical Aristotelian ethics but applies it to contemporary business. The framing stands against views that treat business interests as necessarily separate from or opposed to social interests. For Nonaka and Takeuchi, this separation is itself a failure of perception that the wise leader overcomes. Whether they are right in general is a debate, but the framing is useful for thinking about what the highest forms of leadership actually require.
"Ba is a shared space that serves as a foundation for knowledge creation."
— Various articles, particularly The Concept of Ba, 1998
Nonaka is introducing the Japanese concept that has no exact English equivalent. Ba is shared space — but space understood broadly to include shared time, relationships, intention, and atmosphere as well as physical place. A ba is where people come together in ways that allow genuine exchange of tacit knowledge; it requires trust, common purpose, and attention to each other. Ba cannot be forced by rules or created by memo; it must be cultivated through practices that build the conditions it depends on. The concept captures something real about where knowledge creation actually happens — in specific contexts and relationships rather than in generic office settings. Leaders who understand ba work to create it; leaders who do not wonder why their knowledge management initiatives produce so little.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When examining the role of place and context in learning
How to introduce
Introduce Nonaka's concept of ba — shared place or context that supports knowledge creation. Ask students: where do they actually learn best? The answer is usually not generic classrooms but specific combinations of place, relationships, and purpose that they have come to trust. Discuss what makes a space good for learning. Not only physical features but also who else is there, what they are doing, what atmosphere has been established, what norms are at work. Consider how ba can be intentionally cultivated. A teacher, a coach, a mentor who creates the right conditions enables learning that otherwise would not happen. Connect to broader questions about how environments shape what is possible within them.
Critical Thinking When examining how non-Western thought contributes to ostensibly universal fields
How to introduce
Tell students that Nonaka's work has helped establish management as a field in which non-Western traditions can contribute substantively rather than being confined to area studies. Ask: what does this pattern suggest? Discuss how fields that claim universality often start with specific cultural assumptions they do not recognise as cultural. When thinkers from different traditions enter, they often reveal these assumptions and expand the field. The expansion is not merely addition; it can transform what the field considered central. Consider examples from other fields — philosophy, economics, medicine — where non-Western contributions have similarly reshaped understanding. Connect to broader questions about whose knowledge shapes supposedly universal disciplines and what is gained when the range of voices expands.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Tacit knowledge can be fully captured in documents if we try hard enough.

What to teach instead

Nonaka's central point, following Polanyi, is that tacit knowledge cannot be fully captured in explicit form. Some elements can be articulated through metaphor, analogy, and structured externalisation, but much tacit knowledge is inseparable from the bodily practice and contextual experience in which it is acquired. Attempts to document everything have often produced long documents that still miss what matters. The practical implication is that organisations need processes for tacit-to-tacit knowledge transfer (apprenticeship, shared experience) as well as for explicit documentation. Over-reliance on documentation is a common failure mode of knowledge management initiatives. Recognising the irreducibility of some tacit knowledge leads to better organisational design than attempting to overcome it through more thorough recording.

Common misconception

The SECI model is a precise algorithm for managing knowledge.

What to teach instead

SECI is a conceptual framework for understanding how knowledge creation happens, not a step-by-step process that can be applied mechanically. Real knowledge creation often proceeds through the four modes in irregular orders, with many modes happening simultaneously and with the boundaries between them blurring. The model helps leaders notice the different modes and think about whether each is being supported; it does not prescribe a specific procedure. Organisations that have tried to implement SECI as a formal process — with stages and deliverables for each mode — have usually found that the attempt to formalise has undermined the creative processes the model was meant to support. The honest use treats it as a diagnostic vocabulary, not an operational manual.

Common misconception

Nonaka's framework only applies to Japanese companies.

What to teach instead

Nonaka's cases drew heavily on Japanese companies because that was where his direct experience was, but he and his collaborators have always argued that the underlying phenomena are universal. Knowledge creation involves the same basic dynamics across cultures, even if specific practices need adaptation. Companies in many different countries have applied the framework productively. The distinctive Japanese elements — ba, the influence of Japanese philosophy — are cultural in origin but point to universal phenomena. Reading the framework as culturally bounded misses its general claims; reading it as culturally neutral misses its specific origins. The honest reading recognises that it is rooted in Japanese intellectual soil and still applicable elsewhere when the translation work is done.

Common misconception

Knowledge management is primarily about building IT systems.

What to teach instead

Much of the knowledge management industry of the 1990s and 2000s treated the field as mainly about information technology — building databases, portals, search systems, collaboration tools. Nonaka consistently argued that this was a distortion. Technology can support knowledge creation but does not produce it; what produces it is people working together in appropriate social contexts. Many expensive knowledge management technology implementations have failed because they addressed information rather than knowledge, and because they neglected the social and cultural conditions that actually support knowledge creation. Reading Nonaka as advocating better knowledge systems in the IT sense misses the fundamental point of his framework, which is about social and intellectual practices rather than about software.

Intellectual Connections
Complements
Taiichi Ohno
Nonaka and Ohno both developed distinctively Japanese approaches to management that treated workers as holders of valuable knowledge and that emphasised continuous learning in specific contexts. Ohno's Toyota Production System included what Nonaka would later theorise — workers externalising their tacit knowledge about how work could be improved, socialisation through working together, combination through formalised improvement processes. Nonaka's framework provides the theoretical vocabulary for much of what Toyota was doing in practice. Reading them together shows how Japanese industrial innovation and Japanese management theory reinforced each other, with practice producing phenomena that theory then articulated.
Develops
Herbert Simon
Simon's framework of bounded rationality and organisational decision-making provided part of the context in which Nonaka developed his knowledge creation theory. Simon had shown how organisations handle decisions under cognitive limits; Nonaka showed how organisations also create new knowledge that expands what they can do. The frameworks are complementary — Simon analysing how existing knowledge is deployed in decisions, Nonaka analysing how new knowledge is generated. Reading them together provides a fuller picture of organisational cognition than either alone, with Simon on the structures of decision and Nonaka on the dynamics of learning.
In Dialogue With
Peter Drucker
Drucker identified the knowledge worker as the defining figure of modern economies but wrote less about how knowledge itself is created in organisations. Nonaka's work picks up where Drucker left off, analysing the specific processes by which knowledge workers create new knowledge. The two thinkers were broadly aligned in their view of modern organisations as knowledge-intensive rather than labour-intensive, and both treated management as requiring serious intellectual discipline. Reading them together shows how twentieth-century management thought developed toward increasingly sophisticated understandings of the knowledge economy, with Drucker naming the transformation and Nonaka analysing how it works.
Complements
Akio Morita
Morita's leadership at Sony exemplified many of the knowledge-creation practices Nonaka would later theorise. Sony's engineer-driven product development, its willingness to launch products that existing market research could not validate, its integration of tacit engineering knowledge with explicit customer understanding — all illustrate the SECI spiral in action. Nonaka drew on Japanese companies like Sony for examples in his work. Reading them together shows how practice and theory reinforced each other in postwar Japanese business, with leading executives demonstrating what theorists would later articulate and theorists providing frameworks that later executives could use deliberately.
Anticipates
Elinor Ostrom
Ostrom's emphasis on how communities build rules and practices through accumulated local knowledge has resonances with Nonaka's framework of knowledge creation. Both treat the knowledge held by people working within specific contexts as genuinely valuable rather than as informal supplement to official expertise. Both reject purely top-down models of how good practices develop. The domains are different — Ostrom on commons management, Nonaka on corporate innovation — but the underlying respect for situated knowledge is common to both. Reading them together shows how serious thinking about collective intelligence has emerged across disciplines with convergent insights.
Complements
Mary Parker Follett
Follett's early twentieth-century attention to integration — the creative combination of different perspectives into genuinely new solutions — anticipated aspects of Nonaka's knowledge creation framework. Both saw that new capabilities emerge from the interaction of different knowledge, not from the dominance of one over others. Both emphasised the social and relational dimensions of organisational thinking. The intellectual lineage is not direct — Nonaka drew more on Japanese traditions and on Polanyi than on Follett — but the convergence of insights across such different contexts is worth noting. Reading them together shows a continuous twentieth-century tradition of thought about collaborative knowledge creation that has gradually become more central to management thinking.
Further Reading

For scholarly depth

The journal Organization Science has published extensive engagement with and critique of the SECI model. Georg von Krogh's writings provide careful theoretical extensions. The Hitotsubashi University School of International Corporate Strategy holds archives of Nonaka's work and hosts ongoing research on knowledge creation.

For critical perspectives

Haridimos Tsoukas's work provides substantive philosophical engagement with the tacit-explicit distinction.