Knowledge Management’s Role in Change

This is the seventh post in a monthly series about change management.

Change is rarely easy. Whether it’s a new system rollout, a merger, or a shift in company strategy, employees often feel like they’re being asked to run a marathon without a map. That’s where knowledge management (KM) comes in—not as a dusty library of forgotten manuals, but as the compass that keeps teams aligned and confident during transition.

 

What is Knowledge Management?

At its core, KM is about capturing, organizing, and sharing an organization’s collective expertise so that employees can find what they need, when they need it. It’s the bridge between individual know-how and organizational success.

In earlier articles, we’ve talked about KM as a way to preserve institutional knowledge, onboard new employees faster, and keep distributed teams aligned. When applied to change management, those same principles become even more critical. Without accessible knowledge, change feels like chaos. With it, change becomes a guided process.

Multi-colored gears on a table, with hands making them fit together. Caption reads: “There’s a well-known proverb: ‘If you want to go vast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.’ This rings true when change management and knowledge management practitioners recognize their shared ground and work in partnership – not just co-existing in the same organization but aligning efforts for broader impact.” -Deonie Botha, Knowledge Management Architect, ASML

 

Key Principles of KM and How They Support Change

Several KM principles directly intersect with organizational change:

  • Accessibility: Employees need quick, intuitive access to information, especially when processes are shifting. If they can’t find answers, productivity stalls.
  • Collaboration: KM encourages knowledge-sharing across teams and roles. During change, this ensures no one is working in silos or duplicating effort.
  • Continuity: By documenting and preserving key insights, KM provides continuity, ensuring that important knowledge doesn’t disappear when people leave or roles evolve.
  • Adaptability: Effective KM systems aren’t static. They evolve with the organization, ensuring that resources stay relevant as strategies shift.

These principles just directly reduce confusion, lower resistance, and keep projects moving forward.

 

Capturing and Sharing Knowledge During Change

Change can quickly reveal gaps in an organization’s knowledge landscape. Old processes no longer apply, new systems aren’t fully understood, and “tribal knowledge” becomes a liability when employees are expected to work differently.

This is where intentional knowledge capture comes into play:

  • Document New Processes in Real Time: As teams adopt new systems or workflows, documenting steps, FAQs, and lessons learned prevents confusion and accelerates adoption.
  • Leverage Collaboration Tools: Platforms like wikis, project hubs, or chat-integrated knowledge bases make it easy for employees to contribute their insights and find answers quickly.
  • Create Shared Resource Libraries: From video walkthroughs to updated policy guides, having one central place for employees to access change-related content reduces miscommunication and stress.

In other words, KM ensures that no one is reinventing the wheel—or worse, guessing—when navigating change.

Hand on keyboard of a laptop computer that has one big document surrounded by several smaller folders on its monitor. Caption reads: “KM tools support content creation, version control, and information dissemination. A centralized KM portal ensures that everyone – from leadership to frontline staff – has access to the same, up-to-date information, FAQs and messaging.” -Ekta Sachania, Manager, Knowledge Management and Bid Support, Fujitsu Asia Pacific.

 

The Importance of Central Repositories and Shared Resources

Imagine trying to adapt to a major change with ten different email threads, six conflicting versions of a document, and a “helpful” spreadsheet saved to someone’s desktop. Central repositories solve this problem by becoming the single source of truth.

A well-structured knowledge repository offers:

  • Consistency: Everyone works from the same version of the truth.
  • Transparency: Employees can see updates as they happen.
  • Efficiency: Time isn’t wasted hunting for resources in multiple places.

Pair this with collaboration tools, and you create an environment where employees both consume knowledge and contribute to it, strengthening adoption and ownership of change initiatives.

Knowledge Retention Post-Change

The real test of KM in change management comes after the transition. Once the dust settles, organizations must ensure that the hard-won knowledge doesn’t vanish into obscurity.

Key strategies for knowledge retention include:

  • Maintaining a Living Repository: Regular updates prevent resources from becoming outdated.
  • Embedding KM into Daily Workflow: When employees naturally use and update knowledge systems, retention becomes part of the culture rather than a one-time effort.
  • Onboarding and Training Alignment: New employees benefit from accurate, change-informed resources that reflect how work is actually done today.

Sustainable knowledge retention ensures that the investment made during change continues to pay off long after the project wraps up.

 

Final Thoughts

Change doesn’t have to mean confusion and lost productivity. With strong KM practices, organizations can make transitions smoother, empower employees with the resources they need, and ensure that valuable expertise doesn’t get left behind.

 

Related Blogs

Resilience in the Workplace: How Knowledge Management Can Help Organizations Adapt to Uncertainty

How Technical Writing Drives Change Management Success

Change Management: Why We Can’t Just Wing It

 

References

Palmer, Helen. “Effecting Better Knowledge Management and Change Management Collaboration.” Change Management Review. Accessed 8/29/25. https://changemanagementreview.com/km-cm-collaboration 

Sachania, Ekta. “Why Change Management Needs Knowledge Management: A Strategic Partnership for Sustainable Transformation.” KMI. 4/7/25. Accessed 8/29/25. https://www.kminstitute.org/blog/why-change-management-needs-knowledge-management-a-strategic-partnership-for-sustainable-transformation 

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