Author List: Roepke, Robert; Agarwal, Ritu; Ferratt, Thomas W.;
MIS Quarterly, 2000, Volume 24, Issue 2, Page 327-353.
Increasingly, business leaders are demanding that IT play the role of a business partner and a strategic enabler. In such an environment, IT human capital has assumed considerable significance. Insightful IT leaders recognize that the greatest impediments to success are often related to people rather than to information, technology, and systems. What is not quite clear to IT leaders, however, is exactly how to develop and leverage this human capital in support of business needs. The transformation of IT from a back-office support role to a strategic business partner requires new roles and competencies for IT leaders and professionals. Key challenges for IT leaders are to envision these roles and competencies and to develop and implement programs to translate this vision to reality. This paper describes the IT human resource vision that is guiding such a transformation at 3M--a large multi-product, diversified manufacturing firm (1998 sales: $15 billion)--and focuses on the implementation of its leadership initiative. This initiative was instrumental in not only allowing 3M to develop needed skills and behaviors among its IT professionals, it also helped 3M evade an industry-wide recruitment and retention trend. The major conceptual models guiding the leadership initiative as well as implementation details are presented. Challenges encountered on the way and the lessons learned from the journey are discussed. 3M's experiences provide opportunities for managers in other organizations to develop valuable insights regarding the management of human capital in IT.
Keywords: Information systems professionals; leadership development; human resource strategy; managing IT professionals; recruiting and retaining IT professionals
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#212 0.189 business digital strategy value transformation economy technologies paper creation digitization strategies environment focus net-enabled services processes insights challenges key response
#80 0.188 organizations new information technology develop environment challenges core competencies management environmental technologies development emerging opportunities levels based change business technical
#119 0.141 implementation systems article describes management successful approach lessons design learned technical staff used effort developed organization experiences large managing discusses
#109 0.128 career human professionals job turnover orientations careers capital study resource personnel advancement configurations employees mobility jobs management individuals pay non-it
#2 0.120 leadership leaders effective leader roles authority assume slow responsibility structure recognize responsibilities look size inevitable attain trend held articulate dominate
#246 0.087 strategic benefits economic benefit potential systems technology long-term applications competitive company suggest additional companies industry operating costs difficult substantial total
#240 0.057 systems information management development presented function article discussed model personnel general organization described presents finally computer-based role examined functional components