| March
2004 Abstracts
MISQ
Abstracts
Order
an Article
MISQ Home
MISQ
Roadmap
MISQ
Archivist
MISQ
Discovery
|
Operationalizing
the Essential Role of the Information Technology Artifact in
Information Systems Research: Gray Area, Pitfalls, and the
Importance of Strategic Ambiguity
Andrew B. Whinston and
Xianjun Geng
Volume 28, Issue 2
Abstract
In this paper we argue that a large gray
area of information systems research exists, whose relevance to
the information technology artifact is subject to significant debate
even among IS scholars who support the essential role of the IT
artifact. As we explain, not explicitly addressing this gray area can
have negative, although often inadvertent, effects on the innovative
nature of IS research; we explore this danger through three pitfalls. We then propose a stance
of strategic ambiguity to
deal with the gray area. Strategic ambiguity calls for deliberately
withholding judgment on the relevance of research in the gray area and
acceptance of gray-area research provided it meets the excellence
required by professional journals. We believe that strategic ambiguity
benefits innovative IS research without harming the essential role of
the IT artifact.
Keywords: IS discipline, IT artifact, gray area,
strategic ambiguity
|