-------- Weitergeleitete Nachricht -------- Betreff: [AISWorld] CFP: AMCIS 2015 Minitrack:: Consumerization of IT - BYOD and Beyond Datum: Sat, 3 Jan 2015 16:30:00 +0000 Von: Robert C Nickerson rnick@sfsu.edu An: aisworld@lists.aisnet.org aisworld@lists.aisnet.org
*CALL FOR PAPERS - AMCIS 2015 *
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*Minitrack: Consumerization of IT - BYOD and Beyond*
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Americas Conference on Information Systems (AMCIS)
Puerto Rico, August 13-15, 2015 _ _Conference website: http://amcis2015.aisnet.org/
Manuscript submission website: https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/amcis2015
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*IMPORTANT DATES:*
January 5, 2015 - Manuscript submissions open
February 25, 2015 - Manuscript submission deadline
April 21, 2015 Author notification
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*Description*
Organizations are facing an expanding challenge in managing enterprise information technology: the consumerization of IT. The arrival of consumer-oriented devices and applications into the workplace is re-defining how corporate IT is adopted, delivered, and consumed. Personal devices such as smartphones and tablets may be brought to the workplace by employees (called BYOD) or provided by employers for use by the workforce to help employees in their jobs. Consumer-oriented applications, often in the cloud (such as Dropbox, Skype, Yammer LinkedIn, and GoogleDocs), may be used by employees for work-related activities with or without company sanction. While there is no single, universally accepted definition of IT consumerization, it can loosely be defined as the enterprise use of technologies that were originally designed for the consumer market.
End-users have mastered new digital technologies enough to begin to assert their independence from the constraints that the IT department has previously put in place to ensure the compliance, security, and stability of the corporate IT platform. Although the IT department has confronted rogue or shadow IT efforts in the past and dealt with End User Computing in the 1980s and 1990s, the recent technological advancements and the expanding level of IT literacy are changing the nature of how corporate IT and users of IT are managed.
While there are numerous industry-oriented articles on the consumerization of IT, little academic research has appeared. This dearth of research publications highlights the need for theoretical and empirical investigation into this topic. The purpose of this minitrack is to provide a forum for presenting research in this new and important area.
Suggested Topics
Topics for this minitrack include, but are not limited to, the following:
· Managing BYOD and CYOD in the enterprise
· Organizational impact of consumer-oriented devices and applications
· New organizational structures for corporate IT (vs. private IT)
· Competitive advantages enabled by IT consumerization
· Organizational design impacts as private and business boundaries increasingly blur
· Digital co-creation as end-users have access to increasingly sophisticated consumer tools
· Behavioral impacts of IT consumerization, for example, impacts on employee morale and job motivation
· Issues pertaining to inter- and intra-organizational ecosystems (e.g., implementing a digital innovation platform with internal and/or external partners)
· Managing the imbalance between IT supply and demand (e.g., frustrated users who believe the IT department cannot deliver quickly enough)
· Challenges to security brought on by employees using their own devices at work
· IT support and IT governance issues brought on by the consumerization of IT
· Legal issues pertaining to data ownership and terms-of-service liability
*MINITRACK CO-CHAIRS*
Rob Nickerson
San Francisco State University
RNick@sfsu.edu mailto:RNick@sfsu.edu
Iris Junglas
Florida State University
ijunglas@fsu.edu mailto:ijunglas@fsu.edu
Sebastian Köffer
University of Münster
sebastian.koeffer@ercis.uni-muenster.de mailto:sebastian.koeffer@ercis.uni-muenster.de