Subject: | [WI] CfP: ECIS 2020 - Track "Rethinking IS Strategy and Governance in the Digital Age" |
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Date: | Thu, 10 Oct 2019 10:10:59 +0200 |
From: | Nils Urbach <nils.urbach@uni-bayreuth.de> |
Reply-To: | Nils Urbach <nils.urbach@uni-bayreuth.de> |
To: | aisworld@lists.aisnet.org, wi@lists.uni-karlsruhe.de |
CC: | mwiener@bentley.edu, ulrich.remus@uibk.ac.at |
(Apologies for
cross-postings of this announcement.)
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CALL FOR PAPERS
28th European Conference
on Information Systems (ECIS 2020)
Track: Rethinking IS
Strategy and Governance in the Digital Age
June 15-17, 2020,
Marrakech, Morocco (https://ecis2020.ma/ecis-2020-tracks/)
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TRACK CHAIRS
Martin Wiener, Bentley
University, USA, mwiener@bentley.edu (corresponding track
chair)
Nils Urbach, University
of Bayreuth, Germany, nils.urbach@uni-bayreuth.de
Ulrich Remus, University
of Innsbruck, Austria, ulrich.remus@uibk.ac.at
DESCRIPTION
In the digital age,
innovative technologies influence and change established
work processes, products, services, and business models by
connecting individuals, organizations, machines, and other
‘things’ in new ways, as well as by enabling novel working,
collaboration, and automation models (Fitzgerald et al.
2014). To succeed in this highly competitive and dynamic
environment, organizations must unfold the potential of
advanced digital technologies in their business strategies,
transform their work routines, processes and structures,
rethink their business models, as well as manage and govern
IT infrastructures that are central to their value
propositions (Legner et al. 2017). In short, pervasive
digitalization has increased the importance of information
technology (IT) and transformed the demands placed on
organizations’ IT functions. Besides ensuring regular IT
operations, IT functions are increasingly required to
proactively identify technological innovations and to
rapidly transfer them into marketable solutions – and with
that to directly contribute to their organization’s value
proposition (Urbach et al. 2017).
In this context, IS
strategizing and governance represent key activities for the
effective deployment of IT resources and ultimately for
value creation through IT. The emergence of new digital
technologies (e.g., artificial intelligence [AI], big-data
analytics, blockchain, cloud computing) and infrastructures
(e.g., digital platforms and ecosystems), novel
value-creation processes and work practices (e.g., IT
consumerization, human-robot collaboration, resource
sharing) along with the availability of unprecedented data
volumes challenge existing conceptualizations and theories
related to IS strategy and governance (Markus 2017; Newell
& Marabelli 2015). For instance, while cloud services
may make the IT artefact seemingly disappear, the challenge
of governing the design and use of such services and
associated IT resources has become even more acute
(Schneider & Sunyaev 2016). Digital business models and
gig economy platforms that revolve around resource sharing
and/or complex product-service offerings not only challenge
organizational boundaries, but also established ideas about
ownership of resources, tasks, and outputs (Schor 2014).
Similarly, while AI-based algorithms can automate business
processes, they also highlight the need for data and process
governance (Tarafdar et al. 2017). At the same time, in
organizations where more ‘traditional’ technologies and work
arrangements are still dominant, IS strategy and governance
challenges remain highly complex and important (Wiener et
al. 2016).
The objectives of the
proposed track are two-fold. First, from a scholarly
research perspective, the objective is to foster and promote
novel concepts and theories on IS strategy and governance,
with a particular focus on the manifold opportunities and
challenges associated with the pervasive digitalization of
business and society. Second, the track aims at offering
insights that enable IS practitioners to leverage emerging
digital technologies, to respond to digitalization
challenges, and ultimately, to make effective use of
available IT resources.
The track is open to all
types of contributions — including research in progress —
studying IS strategy and governance topics from different
stakeholder perspectives, in different contexts and settings
(e.g., for-profits and non-profits), at different levels of
analysis (e.g., individual, project, program, corporate,
network, ecosystem, and societal level), and with different
theoretical perspectives and methodological approaches
(e.g., conceptual and empirical studies). We particularly
welcome studies that address the conference theme “Liberty,
Equality, and Fraternity in a Digitizing World” by relating
IS strategy and governance topics to social challenges and
opportunities emerging from the digital era.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
Topics of interest
include, but are not limited to:
• Digital strategizing
and strategy implementation (e.g., link to overall business
strategy, development of digital capabilities,
sustainability of digital strategies, translation of
strategic objectives into governance practices and
structures)
• Strategic impact of
emerging digital technologies (e.g., artificial
intelligence, blockchain, big-data analytics, cloud
computing) on business models, governance structures, and
processes, etc.
• Governance of digital
transformation and innovation processes (e.g., new
governance models for complex organizations, such as
companies operating with coexisting 'brick and mortar' and
digital business models)
• Changing role of CIO
function & New role of CDO function (e.g., ‘digital
race’ between CIO and CDO, structure and nature of
business-IT relationships)
• Data-driven leadership
and control approaches (e.g., algorithmic management of work
processes, technology-mediated control)
• Governance of digital
value-creation processes and networks (e.g., digital
platforms and ecosystems, Industry 4.0 and cyber-physical
systems, IT consumerization, IT-enabled product-service
systems, resource sharing, etc.)
• Governance of novel
work practices (e.g., agile software development,
human-robot interaction and collaboration) and sourcing
models (e.g., crowdsourcing, multi-sourcing, open-sourcing,
and back-sourcing)
• Information security
governance (e.g., cybersecurity frameworks, standards, and
policies for critical infrastructures)
• Dark side of digital
strategies/governance, including ethical issues as well as
undesired ecological, economic, and socio-emotional
side-effects (e.g., technostress)
• Critical reflections
on IS strategy and governance in the digital age (e.g.,
truly ‘new’ features and challenges of digitalization, links
to traditional research streams)
• Novel theoretical
perspectives and research approaches that broaden, or
challenge, our understanding of IS strategy and governance
in the digital age
REFERENCES
• Fitzgerald, M.,
Kruschwitz, N., Bonnet, D., & Welch, M. (2014)
“Embracing Digital Technology: A New Strategic Imperative,”
MIT Sloan Management Review, 55(2), 1-12.
• Legner, C., Eymann,
T., Hess, T., Matt, C., Böhmann, T., Drews, P., Maedche, A.,
Urbach, N., & Ahlemann F. (2017) “Digitalization:
Opportunity and Challenge for the Business and Information
Systems Engineering Community,” Business & Information
Systems Engineering, 59(4), 301-308.
• Markus, M. L. (2017)
“Datification, Organizational Strategy, and IS Research:
What’s the Score?” Journal of Strategic Information Systems,
26(3), 233-241.
• Newell, S., &
Marabelli, M. (2015) "Strategic Opportunities (and
Challenges) of Algorithmic Decision-Making: A Call for
Action on the Long-Term Societal Effects of ‘Datification’,”
Journal of Strategic Information Systems, 24(1), 3-14.
• Schneider, S., &
Sunyaev, A. (2016) “Determinant Factors of Cloud-Sourcing
Decisions: Reflecting on the IT Outsourcing Literature in
the Era of Cloud Computing,” Journal of Information
Technology, 31(1), 1-31.
• Schor, J. (2014)
“Debating the Sharing Economy,” Journal of Self-Governance
and Management Economics, 4(3), 1-13.
• Tarafdar, M., Beath,
C., & Ross, J. (2017) “Enterprise Cognitive Computing
Applications: Opportunities and Challenges,” IT
Professional, 19(4), 2-8.
• Urbach, N., Drews, P.,
& Ross, J. (2017) “Digital Business Transformation and
the Changing Role of the IT Function,” MIS Quarterly
Executive, 16(2), ii-iv.
• Wiener, M., Mähring,
M., Remus, U., & Saunders, C. (2016) “Control
Configuration and Control Enactment in Information Systems
Projects: Review and Expanded Theoretical Framework,” MIS
Quarterly, 40(3), 741-774.
PUBLISHING OPPORTUNITIES
Authors of excellent
papers will be invited to submit a revised/extended version
of their paper to the Information Systems Journal (ISJ). For
further information on the ISJ, please go to:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/13652575. Track
chairs would be happy to work with the authors to guide them
for ISJ submission.
IMPORTANT DATES
Paper Submission
Deadline: November 29, 2019
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Frederik Ahlemann,
University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany
Daniel Beimborn,
University of Bamberg, Germany
Edward W. N. Bernroider,
Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria
Arne Buchwald, EBS
Business School, Germany
Bendik Bygstad,
University of Oslo, Norway
Suranjan Chakraborty,
Towson University, USA
Alec W. Cram, Bentley
University, USA
Andreas Drechsler,
Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Paul Drews, University
of Lüneburg, Germany
Robert Gregory,
University of Virginia, USA
Stefan Henningsson,
Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
Thomas Huber, ESSEC
Business School, France
Robert Keller,
University of Bayreuth, Germany
Oliver Krancher, IT
University of Copenhagen, Germany
Thomas Kude, ESSEC
Business School, France
Christine Legner,
University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Magnus Mähring,
Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden
Marco Marabelli, Bentley
University, USA
Jeffrey Proudfoot,
Bentley University, USA
Christoph Rosenkranz,
University of Cologne, Germany
Harminder Singh,
Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand
Susanne Strahringer, TU Dresden, Germany
Till Winkler, Copenhagen
Business School, Denmark
Ruilin Zhu, Lancaster
University, UK
Angelika Zimmermann,
Loughborough University, UK
Thank you for your
interest in rethinking IS strategy and governance in the
digital age. We are looking forward to your contributions
and seeing you in Marrakech!