The Definition
Tacit knowledge is knowledge that a person holds but cannot fully articulate. It is built from experience — from years of encountering situations, solving problems, making judgments, and developing intuitions about how things work. It is expressed not through words but through action: the way an expert handles a situation that a less experienced person would handle differently.
The concept was introduced by philosopher Michael Polanyi in the 1950s. His formulation remains the clearest: "We know more than we can tell."
Tacit vs. Explicit Knowledge
Every knowledge management challenge involves both forms.
Explicit knowledge is what can be written down, codified, and transferred. Processes, procedures, specifications, case notes, training materials — these are all explicit knowledge. They can be stored in a document and retrieved by someone who was never present when they were created.
Tacit knowledge is what cannot be fully codified. It is the judgment the engineer applies when the procedure says one thing but experience suggests another. It is the instinct the project manager has that something is wrong before the numbers reflect it. It is the client relationship intelligence a key account manager carries that explains why a particular approach works with a particular client.
Most knowledge management systems are good at capturing explicit knowledge. The tacit layer — which is where most of the value is — escapes them entirely.
Why Tacit Knowledge Is the Real Risk
Explicit knowledge is replaceable. If a procedure document is lost, it can be reconstructed. If a process manual becomes outdated, it can be rewritten.
Tacit knowledge is not replaceable on any reasonable timescale. The pattern recognition an experienced engineer has developed over 25 years cannot be transferred in a handover meeting. The client relationship intelligence a key account manager has built cannot be captured in a CRM note. When someone with significant tacit expertise leaves, the organisation loses something that took decades to build and cannot be recovered quickly.
This is why senior departures — retirement in particular — are the highest-risk knowledge events most organisations face.
How askSOPia Captures Tacit Knowledge
The fundamental challenge is that you cannot ask someone to write down what they know tacitly — they cannot fully articulate it. But they can express it in context: in meetings, in conversations, in the way they describe their decisions when asked about them in structured sessions.
askSOPia captures tacit knowledge from these contextual moments. When an expert explains their reasoning in a meeting, that explanation is captured and structured. When a decision is made and the logic behind it is articulated, that logic becomes part of the knowledge base. The knowledge is surfaced from how people already work, not from documentation effort.
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