|






|
Fighting Against Windmills: Strategic
Information Systems and Organizational Deep Structures
Leiser Silva and Rudy Hirschheim
Special Issue on Information Systems in
Developing Countries
Abstract
This paper focuses on the process of implementing strategic
information systems (SIS) by studying the radical changes it may
bring to an organization’s deep structure. It argues that a full
understanding of the process of implementation of such systems
should include not only technical aspects but also the social
dynamics of an organization; specifically core values, distribution
of power and mechanisms of control. A theoretical framework is
formulated based on punctuated equilibrium and previous SIS
literature, and is applied to an exploratory case study conducted in
a Latin American public organization. The case study depicts how the
initiative to implement SIS was the result of external and internal
disturbances. The case analysis highlights relationships between an
organization’s deep structure and SIS implementation. The paper
concludes by discussing the theoretical and practical implications
of the study. These include (a) the role of the formal
organizational structure in influencing the outcome of SIS
implementations, (b) the impact of exogenous contingencies such as
elections and external funding that may create a sense of crisis and
(c) the influence of newcomers who may be brought in to solve the
crisis.
Keywords: Developing countries, strategic information systems, IS
strategy, power, politics, implementation, punctuated equilibrium,
deep structure, case study, public organization, government, Latin
America, Guatemala, corruption, health informatics, health
information systems, hospital information systems
|