Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this study was to discover growing, stable and declining knowledge management (KM) research trends. Design/methodology/approach – Citations to 100 KM citation classics as identified by Serenko and Dumay (2015) were collected and analyzed for growing, stable and declining research trends. Findings – This research has two findings that were not theoretically expected. First, a majority of KM citation classics exhibit a bimodal citation distribution peak. Second, there are a growing number of citations for all research topics. These unexpected findings warranted further theoretical elaboration and empirical investigation. The analysis of erroneous citations and a five-year citation trend (2009 – 2013) reveals that the continuously growing volume of citations may result from what the authors call the Google Scholar Effect. Research limitations/implications – The results from this study open up two significant research opportunities. First, more research is needed to understand the impact Google Scholar is having on domains beyond KM. Second, more comprehensive research on the impact of erroneous citations is required because these have the most potential for damaging academic discourse and reputation. Practical implications – Researchers need to be aware of how technology is changing their profession and their citation behavior because of the pressure from the contemporary “publish or perish” environment, which prevents research from being state-of-the-art. Similarly, KM reviewers and editors need to be more aware of the pressure and prevalence of mis-citations and take action to raise awareness and to prevent mis-citations. Originality/value – This study is important from a scientometric research perspective as part of a growing research field using Google Scholar to measure the impact and power it has in influencing what gets cited and by whom.

Highlights

  • This study’s purpose is to extend Serenko and Dumay’s (2015) research into Knowledge Management (KM) citation classics

  • A common attribute of the citation classic articles is that scholars noticed and began immediately citing the articles with 53 per cent receiving their first citation in the publication year, 45 per cent in the year, and only 2 per cent in year two

  • Implication # 2: There are only growing trends in KM research This study showed that the overall volume of citations to the identified citation classics has been steadily increasing

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Summary

Introduction

This study’s purpose is to extend Serenko and Dumay’s (2015) research into Knowledge Management (KM) citation classics. In their previous study, Serenko and Dumay 401) identify the 100 most cited KM articles “to analyze the key attributes and characteristics of the selected articles to understand the development of the KM discipline”. They conclude that “the KM discipline is at the pre-science stage because of the influence of normative studies espousing KM practice” and that “KM is progressing toward normal science and academic maturity”. Those articles considered KM citation classics – defined as works within a discipline that have

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