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Information Technology and Globalization Bob Galliers, Provost, Bentley. 1 st International Conference on Information Systems and Technology Management S ão Paulo, Brazil 21-23 June 2004.
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Information Technology and Globalization Bob Galliers, Provost, Bentley 1st International Conference on Information Systems and Technology Management São Paulo, Brazil 21-23 June 2004
Information Technology and Globalization:the need for trans-disciplinary and cross-cultural approaches in the field of Information SystemsBob Galliers, Provost, Bentley 1st International Conference on Information Systems and Technology Management São Paulo, Brazil 21-23 June 2004
Bentley – the US’s first business university Bentley is a business university. We do for students interested in business and related professions what the leading technological universities do for students of science and engineering.
Today’s agenda • To surface issues facing the IS academy in the context of globalization • IS in multi-national companies • Focusing on: • cross-cultural issues • trans-disciplinary approaches • Three case vignettes
Three vignettes • Case company A: • Corporate intranet for knowledge sharing • Case company B: • Socio-technical approach to knowledge sharing • Case company C: • Software development ‘sans frontiers’
Case Company A: background • Global bank • HQ on the continent of Europe • 70,000 employees • 70 countries • Formed following merger of two banks • 5th highest spender on IT in Europe • Highly decentralized
A crisis looms large … • Key account lost … why? • Inability to adopt similar procedures and provide similar services in different countries • “Exasperated” with inability to present a “common face” worldwide • Business goes to a rival bank
The response? • “The Networked Bank” • Pilot intranet project – sharing knowledge across functions and geographically dispersed sites • Common adoption of defined ‘best practices’ • Integration of procedures and services
The outcome? • During the 18 month life of the pilot … • 150+ known intranets in individual departments in different countries!
The outcome? • During the 18 month life of the pilot … • 150+ known intranets in individual departments in different countries! • Existing boundaries between functions and dispersed business units reinforced
The response? • A strategic workshop
The response? • A strategic workshop • Bankers and IT executives • 2 days @ company HQ
The response? • A strategic workshop • Bankers and IT executives • 2 days @ company HQ • 2 problems: • Bankers “too busy” to attend both days
The response? • A strategic workshop • Bankers and IT executives • 2 days @ company HQ • 2 problems: • Bankers “too busy” to attend both days • IT execs focused entirely on a technological ‘solution’ on the second day … a corporate portal
The outcome? • Within 10 days, the bank was the ‘proud owner’ of “six or seven” ‘corporate’ portals • Each with its own characteristics and idiosyncrasies
The outcome? • Within 10 days, the bank was the ‘proud owner’ of “six or seven” ‘corporate’ portals • Each with its own characteristics and idiosyncrasies … • … with more on the way!
Post-hoc analysis • Vision of ‘global bank’ in stark contrast to existing culture and structure • History of growth through M&A • Each bank left to own devices • No previous attempt to standardize • Culture of decentralization • Intranet concept adopted by each unit, for its own purposes
Case Company B: background • Multinational chemical corporation • Serving several industry sectors • 102 different countries • 1000+ different chemical products • Importance of knowledge sharing across company long recognized … • … but traditional methods used (globe-trotting experts; postal services)
The chairman responds … • Design and implementation of a global intranet forum • Industry-specific directories • Open access to all • Initial response very positive
The chairman responds … • Design and implementation of a global intranet forum • Industry-specific directories • Open access to all • Initial response very positive … • … but cultural and linguistic problems soon surfaced
Where to from here? • Four independent regional forums serving specific geographical region • Similar internal structures but … • … different languages
Where to from here? • Four independent regional forums serving specific geographical region • Similar internal structures but … • … different languages • Replicated solutions in different regional forums • Considerable overlap and differing interpretations
Back to the drawing board … • Further discussions across the whole company • Importance of addressing industry diversity surfaced • Forums reorganized: global/industry-based • Knowledge sharing stimulated by new role of intranet facilitator
Intranet facilitator role • Experts in given area • Responsible for ensuring that knowledge generated was useful and accurate • Queries addressed promptly • Volunteer section leaders followed
Reflections • The intranet generated knowledge sharing, but only after: • 1) boundaries had been created …“Good fences make good neighbors” * • 2)human experts facilitated electronic communications * Robert Frost, Mending a Wall
Case Company C: background • Founded in 1946 • Headquartered in Boston, MA • The largest mutual fund company in the United States • More than $880 billion under management as of June 30, 2003 • More than 19 million customers company wide • Products include mutual funds, brokerage, insurance
Globally distributed software development • Information services in financial markets • A profit center – competing for company business with third parties • USA, Ireland, India • India – a threat to Ireland, and esp. USA • Low cost imperative • Standardized technology, software, methodology imposed top-down
Summary of Preliminary Findings 1.The importance and challenge of building team cohesion among distributed personnel • Recognizing the role of team cohesion as an important variable in team productivity • Installing project initiation techniques that increase cohesiveness of the team
Summary of Preliminary Findings 2. The need to develop integrative and collaborative work among distributed teams • Providing the social networks to develop rapport, relationships, and trust among team members • Balancing formal and informal communications among team members • Building and creating in-company understanding to ‘circumvent’ cultural differences
Summary of Preliminary Findings 3. Over-reliance on standardized processes, ‘best practices’, methodologies, standards, ICT • While work standardization can aide in improved understanding and increased productivity among distributed teams … • Negative effects, e.g., lowering innovation, hurting morale, limiting application of skills • Needs balance between imposing a global work culture and allowing one to emerge
Summaryof Preliminary Findings 4. Evolution of roles versus planned assignment of roles • Emergent sense of anxiety and uncertainty over changing roles • Importance of articulating - preferably negotiating - shared common vision of roles and responsibilities of different centers
Moving from “Knowledge Management” to “Relationship Management” Through Processes • Standardized methodologies • Best practices • Technological pipelines Through Technologies
Moving from “Knowledge Management” to “Relationship Management” Through Processes • Standardized methodologies • Best practices • Technological pipelines Through Technologies Through Face-to-Face
Summary lessons • Case A: • Focusing on IT an IT “solution”, or rather … • an organisational problem • Case B: • Boundaryless corporations – a myth • “Good boundaries (and a socio-technical approach) make for good solutions” • Case C: • Standardised IT/methodology: necessary but not sufficient • Team building; communication/understanding across cultures
The argument for disciplinary purity • Excluding the IT artifact “makes ambiguous the boundaries of IS scholarship, thus raising questions regarding its distinctiveness - and hence its legitimacy - with respect to related scholarly disciplines.” Benbasat & Zmud, 2003; 189
The argument for disciplinary purity • Excluding the IT artifact “makes ambiguous the boundaries of IS scholarship, thus raising questions regarding its distinctiveness - and hence its legitimacy - with respect to related scholarly disciplines.” • “If IS research is no different from that undertaken in more entrenched scholarly disciplines (e.g., marketing, operations management, organizational behavior), why should institutions in the organizational field continue to invest in this new intellectual capability.” Benbasat & Zmud, 2003; 189
My counter argument … • Thomas Kuhn’s concept of paradigm • Ashby’s law of requisite variety • Gibbons’ et al. ‘Mode 2’ thinking • Charles Handy
Kuhn and the concept of paradigm • A monastic vision of science • “… members of a scientific community … know precisely the relevant research topics … the appropriate research methods and the proper interpretation of results.” Banville & Landry, 1989; 49
Ashby’s Law of Requisite Variety • “Only variety can absorb variety” W R Ashby, An Introduction to Cybernetics, 1956
Ashby’s Law of Requisite Variety • “Only variety can absorb variety” • The more complex the problem situation, the greater the range of variables/approaches that need to be introduced. • A counter to Descartes’ reductionist philosophy • “Variety’s the very spice of life” W R Ashby, An Introduction to Cybernetics, 1956 William Cowper (1731-1800) The Task, Book II; 606
Knowledge production • ‘Mode 1’ • Within a single discipline • ‘Mode 2’ • Trans-disciplinary Gibbons et al. The new production of knowledge, 1995
“God, it has to be said, did not see fit to divide up the world to accord with the faculties of universities.” Charles Handy, Understanding Organisations (1992)
Organisational Behaviour • A “more entrenched scholarly discipline?
Organisational Behaviour • A “more entrenched scholarly discipline”? • Hardly! • “ … the related theory and scientific study are extremely broad-based. It is an eclectic theory … comprised of … parts of sociology, psychology, anthropology, economics, political science, philosophy, and mathematics.” (Kast & Rosenzweig, 1974)
DisciplinarityOrganizationITInwardNarrowOB, Comp Sci, etc.DefinedA threat Trans-disciplinaritySocietyPeople/InformationOutwardBroadIS +EmergentAn opportunity Contrasting views of Information Systems Boundary Artifact Focus Scope Ref. disc. Properties Inter-disc.