MISQ Archivist
Making Sense of Technology
Trends in the Information Technology Landscape: A Design
Science Approach
Gediminas Adomavicius, Jesse C. Bockstedt, Alok
Gupta, and Robert J. Kauffman
Abstract
A major problem for firms making information technology investment
decisions is predicting and understanding the effects of future
technological developments on the value of present technologies.
Failure to adequately address this problem can result in wasted
organization resources in acquiring, developing, managing, and
training employees in the use of technologies that are short-lived
and fail to produce adequate return on investment. The sheer number
of available technologies and the complex set of relationships among
them make IT landscape analysis extremely challenging. Most
IT-consuming firms rely on third parties and suppliers for strategic
recommendations on IT investments, which can lead to biased and
generic advice. We address this problem by defining a new set of
constructs and methodologies upon which we develop an
IT ecosystem model. The objective of these artifacts is
to provide a formal problem representation structure for the
analysis of information technology development trends and to reduce
the complexity of the IT landscape for practitioners making IT
investment decisions. We adopt a process theory perspective
and use a combination of visual mapping and quantification
strategies to develop our artifacts and a state diagram-based
technique to represent evolutionary transitions over time. We
illustrate our approach using two exemplars: digital music
technologies and wireless networking technologies. We evaluate the
utility of our approach by conducting in-depth interviews with IT
industry experts and demonstrate the contribution of our approach
relative to existing techniques for technology forecasting.
Keywords:
Design science, IT ecosystem model, IT landscape
analysis, management of technology, technology evolution, IT
investment