IS

Rose, Gregory M.

Topic Weight Topic Terms
0.741 innovation innovations innovative organizing technological vision disruptive crowdsourcing path implemented explain base opportunities study diversity
0.152 internet peer used access web influence traditional fraud world ecology services impact cases wide home
0.124 behavior behaviors behavioral study individuals affect model outcomes psychological individual responses negative influence explain hypotheses
0.112 technology organizational information organizations organization new work perspective innovation processes used technological understanding technologies transformation
0.105 model research data results study using theoretical influence findings theory support implications test collected tested
0.103 knowledge transfer management technology creation organizational process tacit research study organization processes work organizations implications

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Lyytinen, Kalle 2 Carlo, Jessica Luo 1
Internet computing 2 Absorptive capacity 1 disruptive IT innovation 1 innovation theory 1
IT applications 1 IT innovation cores 1 innovation ecology 1 IT innovation 1
knowledge base models 1 mediation 1 organization knowledge base 1 routines 1
software management 1 system development 1

Articles (2)

A KNOWLEDGE-BASED MODEL OF RADICAL INNOVATION IN SMALL SOFTWARE FIRMS. (MIS Quarterly, 2012)
Authors: Abstract:
    In this paper, we adopt the lens of absorptive capacity (ACAP), defined by two dimensions--the knowledge base (consisting of knowledge diversity, depth, and linkages) and routines (consisting of sensing and experimentation)--to explain how a software firm's knowledge endowments influence its level of radical information technology innovation during a technological breakthrough. We distinguish three types of IT innovations--base, processes, and service innovation--that form an innovation ecology. We posit that (1) ACAP is a relational construct where the impact of the knowledge base is mediated by routines; (2) IT innovations are either externally adopted or internally generated; and (3) knowledge antecedents associated with different types of innovations differ. We hypothesize a three-step, mediated path (knowledge base → sensing → experimentation → innovation) for external innovation adoption, and a two-step path (knowledge diversity/depth → experimentation → innovation) for internal innovation creation to explain the software firm's level of radical innovation across three IT innovation types. We validate the model through a cross-sector study that examined how 121 small software firms innovated with Internet computing. We confirm the mediated nature of ACAP for external base innovations, which are driven by all three knowledge-based factors as follows: (1) knowledge depth (direct positive effect); (2) knowledge diversity (mediated three-step path), (3) knowledge linkages (mediated three step path). Process innovations are externally driven by a three-step mediated path for knowledge linkages, as well as being directly affected by knowledge diversity, but negatively and directly impeded by knowledge depth. Service innovations are not driven by any mediated influence of ACAP, but driven directly by knowledge diversity. At the same time, both service and process innovations are strongly influenced by prior IT innovations: base and/or service. Several directions for future studies of radical IT innovation are proposed.
THE DISRUPTIVE NATURE OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INNOVATIONS: THE CASE OF INTERNET COMPUTING IN SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS. (MIS Quarterly, 2003)
Authors: 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.