DocumentCode
2853553
Title
Organizational transformation in the digital economy
Author
Ulieru, Mihaela ; Verdon, John
Author_Institution
Fac. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB, Canada
fYear
2009
fDate
23-26 June 2009
Firstpage
17
Lastpage
24
Abstract
This work sets the vision for organizational transformation that will secure competitive advantage in the digital economy, as the border between society-market-organization becomes more permeated to facilitate new types of assemblages of dasiameshworkspsila within and across organizational boundaries. We argue that network technologies are feeding the emergence of architectures of participation, protocols of collaboration and the development of new concepts of how work can be accomplished; notably responsible autonomy and peer-production. The concept of eNetworked ecosystem is used as metaphor for the need to embed responsible autonomy within the organizational structure via a new type of personnel platform and space for non-hierarchical (impersonal) exchange and collaboration which mirrors dasiathe invisible handpsila of Adam Smith. Assuming that the transparency of the digital environment will provide for dramatic and ubiquitous accountability of action we consider the parallel with the transparency of ldquogood enoughrdquo information carried by the price mechanism that allows people to respond to price through the dasiainvisible handpsila of the market. We show how the melting of traditional constraints (e.g. geographical, transactions costs, coordination, job as identity, knowledge scarcity, etc.) makes room to a revolution in all social and political institutional frameworks via the integration of responsible autonomy within a more complex organizational architecture. This new mode of production capitalizes on the transparency inherent in the digital environment to set the conditions for responsible autonomy as foundation for a broader and more equal market for many more people to exchange anything, with anyone, anytime thus generating a ubiquitous expectation that the right individual (customer, employee) can connect to the right situation (product, job) at the right time. We conclude that the simple capacity to do more enabled by the transparency of the trus- ted situational awareness that allows decentralized action to be incorporated with agility of response through more relaxed organizational policies will continue to be a force of change fuelled by the dasiaorganizational survivalpsila drive to adapt and thrive in the complex and turbulent operational environment of the 21st Century economic reality.
Keywords
Internet; computer architecture; electronic commerce; embedded systems; fault tolerant computing; organisational aspects; parallel programming; socio-economic effects; ubiquitous computing; Adam Smith; digital economy; eNetworked ecosystem; embedded responsible autonomy; nonhierarchical exchange and collaboration; organizational transformation; parallel information; peer production; personnel platform; ubiquitous accountability of action; Assembly; Collaborative work; Costs; Ecosystems; Employee rights; Environmental economics; Job production systems; Mirrors; Personnel; Protocols; architecture of participation; digital economy; eNetworked ecosystem; human capital; peer production; power law; responsible autonomy; social capital;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Industrial Informatics, 2009. INDIN 2009. 7th IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Cardiff, Wales
ISSN
1935-4576
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-3759-7
Electronic_ISBN
1935-4576
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/INDIN.2009.5195773
Filename
5195773
Link To Document