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MISQ Archivist
Transformational Technologies and the Creation
of New Work Practices: Making Implicit Knowledge Explicit in
Task-Based Offshoring
Paul M. Leonardi and Diane E. Bailey
Abstract
Studies have shown the knowledge transfer problems that
arise when communication and storage technologies are employed to
accomplish work across time and space. Much less is known about
knowledge transfer problems associated with transformational
technologies, which afford the creation, modification, and
manipulation of digital artifacts. Yet, these technologies play a
critical role in offshoring by allowing the distribution of work at
the task level, what we call task-based offshoring. For
example, computer-aided engineering applications transform input
like physical dimensions, location coordinates, and material
properties into computational models that can be shared
electronically among engineers around the world as they work
together on analysis tasks. Digital artifacts created via
transformational technologies often embody implicit knowledge that
must be correctly interpreted to successfully act upon the
artifacts. To explore what problems might arise in interpreting this
implicit knowledge across time and space, and how individuals might
remedy these problems, we studied a firm that sent engineering tasks
from home sites in Mexico and the United States to an offshore site
in India. Despite having proper formal education and ample tool
skills, the Indian engineers had difficulty interpreting the
implicit knowledge embodied in artifacts sent to them from Mexico
and the United States. To resolve and prevent the problems that
subsequently arose, individuals from the home sites developed five
new work practices to transfer occupational knowledge to the
offshore site. The five practices were defining requirements,
monitoring progress, fixing returns, routing tasks
strategically, and filtering quality. The extent to which
sending engineers in our study were free from having to enact these
new work practices because on-site coordinators acted on their
behalf predicted their perceptions of the effectiveness of the
offshoring arrangement, but Indian engineers preferred learning from
sending engineers, not on-site coordinators. Our study contributes
to theories of knowledge transfer and has practical implications for
managing task-based offshoring arrangements.
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