| September
2003 Abstracts
MISQ
Abstracts
Order
an Article
MISQ Home
MISQ
Roadmap
MISQ
Archivist
MISQ
Discovery
|

The Disruptive Nature of Information
Technology Innovations:
The Case of Internet Computing in Systems Development Organizations
Kalle Lyytinen and Gregory
M. Rose
Volume 27, Number 4
Abstract
Information technology (IT) innovation can be defined as
the creation
and new organizational application of digital computer and
communication
technologies. The paper suggests that IT innovation theory needs to be
expanded to analyze IT innovations in kind that exhibit atypical
discontinuities
in IT innovation behaviors by studying two questions. First, can
a model of disruptive IT innovations be created to understand
qualitative
changes in IT development processes and their outcomes so that they can
be related to architectural discontinuities in computing
capability?
Second, to what extent can the observed turmoil among systems
development
organizations that has been spawned by Internet computing be understood
as a disruptive IT innovation?
To address the first question, a model of disruptive IT
innovation is
developed. The model defines a disruptive IT innovation as an
architectural
innovation originating in the information technology base that has
subsequent
pervasive and radical impacts on development processes and their
outcomes.
These base innovations establish necessary but not sufficient
conditions
for subsequent innovation behaviors. To address the second question,
the
impact of Internet computing on eight leading-edge systems development
organizations in the United States and Finland is investigated. The
study
shows that the adoption of Internet computing in these firms has
radically
impacted their IT innovation both in development processes and services
Keywords:
Internet computing, innovation theory, disruptive IT innovation, IT
innovation
cores, system development, software management, IT applications
|