DocumentCode :
570713
Title :
Institutionalisation of technology in contemporary business organizations
Author :
Pishdad, Azadeh ; Haider, Abrar ; Koronios, Andy
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Comput. & Inf. Sci., Univ. of South Australia, Mawson Lakes, SA, Australia
fYear :
2012
fDate :
July 29 2012-Aug. 2 2012
Firstpage :
1591
Lastpage :
1600
Abstract :
In contemporary business paradigm, organizations compete for political power, institutional legitimacy, and social and economic fitness. Business organizations are shaped by the interactions of the environment that they operate in, rules and norms imposed on them, behaviours of their internal systems, and cognitive patterns of their stockholders. An organization as an institution, thus, evolves through the mutual interactions of various organizational sub-institutions. Technology works as the binding factor that shapes organizations and gives them their existing form and legitimacy by integrating together these sub-institutions. The form and legitimacy define how organizations evolve their structures, culture, and systems. Implementation of technology, therefore, is not one off endorsement of technology or/ and isolated incident of technology implementation; instead it should engage in the process of technology institutionalisation to maintain its legitimacy, power, and social and economic fitness on an ongoing basis. This paper reviews literature on how technology institutionalisation occurs in organizations, and more precisely how institutional logics relating to technology implementation are diffused within organizations through three isomorphic processes i.e., coercive, mimetic and normative. The paper concludes that technology lifecycle management is characterized and shaped by continuous interfacing of technology with organizational, social, cultural, environmental, political, and other institutional factors. The degree of interaction between these factors defines technology implementation, institutionalisation, deinstitutionalisation and re-institutionalisation in the organization.
Keywords :
organisational aspects; technology management; coercive; cognitive patterns; contemporary business organizations; contemporary business paradigm; cultural factors; deinstitutionalisation; economic fitness; environmental factors; institutional factors; institutional legitimacy; internal systems; isomorphic processes; mimetic; normative; organizational factors; organizational subinstitutions; political factors; political power; re-institutionalisation; shapes organizations; social factors; social fitness; stockholders; technology endorsement; technology implementation; technology institutionalisation; technology institutionalisation process; technology lifecycle management; Context; Cultural differences; Humans; Organizations; Standards organizations; Technological innovation; Technology management;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Technology Management for Emerging Technologies (PICMET), 2012 Proceedings of PICMET '12:
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2853-1
Type :
conf
Filename :
6304176
Link To Document :
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