1 / 23

Is IS Research Contributing? Implications for Process and ERP Research Some Data, Thoughts, Directions & Ideals

Is IS Research Contributing? Implications for Process and ERP Research Some Data, Thoughts, Directions & Ideals. Varun Grover William S. Lee (Duke Energy) Distinguished Professor of IS Department of Management College of Business & Behavioral Sciences. FRAMING CONTRIBUTION.

Gideon
Download Presentation

Is IS Research Contributing? Implications for Process and ERP Research Some Data, Thoughts, Directions & Ideals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Is IS Research Contributing? Implications for Process and ERP ResearchSome Data, Thoughts, Directions & Ideals Varun Grover William S. Lee (Duke Energy) Distinguished Professor of ISDepartment of Management College of Business & Behavioral Sciences

  2. FRAMING CONTRIBUTION We make a contribution if….. We believe in ourselves Others listen to what we say We create unique knowledge Our knowledge is useful

  3. Do We Believe in Ourselves? Research and pedagogy in Information Systems is primarily concerned with the understanding and advancement of “knowledge in the development, management and use of information technology to improve organizational performance” (Mission of the AIS). Organizational information system, its development (modeling), management and strategic use, and how it is tied data, processes, and decisions data and information systems, their development (modeling), management and strategy, and how they are related to organizations, processes, decisions and users

  4. Co-Citation Analysis of 70 authors and Clusters in their Research

  5. The Good • There is consistency between what we say we are and what we do • IT as the catalyst – does change the issues we research – but our innate core remains the same • We are a fragmented adhocracy – working within our definitional boundaries with integrators at work • The Bad • IS is a weak paradigm field We disagree on importance of phenomena, methods, theories…even philosophical assumptions Adverse Consequences

  6. We Make a Contribution if….. We Believe in Ourselves • Possible Directions • Multi-theoretical Perspectives (think Supra-additive) • Positive Affective Tone • (negativity breeds negativity) • Celebrate Success • (Institutional Responsibility) • Provide Solutions • (Community Responsibility) • Act as a Steward • (Individual Responsibility)

  7. Do Others Listen to What We Say? Does IS Listen? Citations in IS Journals Trend: p<0.05

  8. Sociometric Analysis Of Work Points and Reference Points Do Others Listen? quantitative analysis of over 72,600 citations spread across 1406 IS articles in 16 journals over the period 1990-2004 Top IS Journals compare well to top business journals in “Impact Factor” Ratings

  9. The Good • IS is beginning to contribute back to Disciplines (OS, MS, CS) • Impact Factor Compares Well • IS research is expanding – building its cumulative tradition • The Bad • IS has a long way to go for more established disciplines like MKG and ECN • IS still lacks the clout of established disciplines in institutional structures

  10. We Make a Contribution if….. Others Listen to What We Say Possible Directions • Cross Disciplinary Journal Alliances • (What makes an article at the IS Workpoint be Cited at other Workpoints) • Value Created in IS = • f (extent of relevance X • extent of theory reconstitution X • cumulative tradition within a nomological network)

  11. Do We Create Unique Knowledge? IS Density: Ratio of IS Constructs to Total No of Constructs Nomological Density: Ratio of IS-IS relationships to Total No of Relationships

  12. The Good • IS is gaining some uniqueness in its constructs • The Bad • No real indigenous theory in IS • Theory on a pedestal (difficult to define)

  13. We Make a Contribution if….. We Create Unique Knowledge • Nurture More Innovative Theory Building • Open Sea Theorizing (rather than only closed loop from reference disciplines or theoretical games) • Value Without Theory • Theory as a Means Not an End • (Results Can Precede Theory; We need theorists and empiricists)

  14. Is Our Knowledge is Useful? Relevance: Comparison of topics in academic research to comparison of topics found in practitioner literature Results: Very few significant correlations between practitioner ranking of topics in a year with academic ranking of research incidence – even after accounting for lag effects.

  15. We Make a Contribution if….. Our Knowledge is (Perceived) as Useful The Problem Practitioner Purists IMPACT RESEARCH Rigor Gap Academic Purists R E L E V A N C E Bridge BOTH Relevance and Rigor Gaps Relevance Gap Moderation: The Best Policy? No Credibility (Practitioner Investment) RIGOR (Academic Investment)

  16. OVERALL SUMMARY: We make a contribution if….. We believe in ourselves Good consistency, innate core & integrators at work BUT weak paradigm NEED supra-additive theories and positive affective tone Others listen to what we say We are establishing a cumulative tradition, contributing back to some disciplines, and having an impact factor BUT we only take from other disciplines and we lack institutional clout NEED cross disciplinary journal alliances and a clear research value proposition We create unique knowledge We are increasing uniqueness of our constructs BUT we don’t have our own theories and we practice closed theoreticalloops NEED moreinnovative theory & strong results Our knowledge is useful We do not seem to contribute toward practice despite the emphasis on researching practical issues NEED to bridge both the relevance AND rigor gap

  17. Creating Contributions (unique and useful knowledge) in Process/ERP Research ERP/Process Research is Fundamental to IS IS Implementation IS Project Management IT Value IT Adoption, Use & Impact Technical Issues (enterprise modeling, software configuration, system integration) ….and more It deals with….. …..and is evolving with new exciting questions …it is a growing area of inquiry – with tremendous opportunities for research at all levels (individual, organizational, inter-organizational, national, global, etc.) using a diversity of methods and theories. • A Travelogue • Some Directions

  18. My Travelogue of IT-Process Research Learning Point: BPR requires an organization wide integrated approach where strategy, IT, and an innovative environment need to be aligned. Acceptance and continuous assessment of process change is nurtured through an innovative environment. • Strategy • IT • innovative environment • management of process change • (inductive) Learning Point: Cross-functional and cross-organizational projects benefit from an alignment of business strategy with IT. Low cost oriented businesses streamline cross functional processes and, alignment of IT strategy with the cost orientation helps. What kind of strategy? (empirical) Learning Point: IT can reduce physical coupling and increase information coupling in processes. These parallel-collaborative processes have implications for structure, management and people in progressive process oriented enterprises. What kind of IT? Learning Point: Business reengineering will only be successful if accompanied with the management of change, people and the project. IT competency is not instrumental for success; however, success requires concurrent changes in a breadth of environmental and managerial facilitators. What kind of change, process & technology management? (conceptual, empirical – survey, case) Learning Point: Use of consultant based methodologies to document existing processes does not yield commensurate results. Technology management must be part of a broader change program in order to have an effect. Learning Point: Organic structures that facilitate innovation and recognition of the broader strategic role of IS are important for both readiness for reengineering and its successful implementation. What kind of innovative environment? (conceptual, empirical)

  19. Increasing Contribution of IT-Process Research • Some Directions: • IT-Process Management Research • Gap between process management and IT • (What makes a process oriented enterprise?) • Linking process and IT governance • Process metrics and information architecture • IT-Process Fit (structuration)

  20. Some Directions: IT-Process Value Research • Processes that build and transfer digital capabilities • (Business driven performance-capabilities – • agility, exploration, exploitation, absorptive capacity)

  21. Some Directions: IT-Process Implementation Research • Management factors (commitment, top mgmt support, change mgmt, education, champion, team selection) • Process Factors (documentation, BPR, alignment) • Technology Factors (hardware, software, data structures, integration) • People Factors (training, skills) • Project Factors (project management, project phasing, project governance) • Knowledge Factors (knowledge management, consultants, knowledge transfer) • Richer treatment of performance • Stakeholder analysis • e.g., adaptation to ERP at the user level • (sociological), vendor dependencies • Emergent process models (e.g., upgrades)

  22. Broad Closing Comments on IS Research For the IS discipline to make a contribution we need to believe in who we are and what we do; leverage our diversity – by searching for ways to appreciate the richness of our phenomena from diverse perspectives; be open to fresh, unfettered theorizing without empirics and strong empirics without theory; appreciate that our usefulness also lies in communicating the value of our rigor; and recognize that our challenges are no greater than other field – if we can handle them constructively and with optimism

  23. Thank You!

More Related