Author List: Pawlowski, Suzanne D.; Robey, Daniel;
MIS Quarterly, 2004, Volume 28, Issue 4, Page 645-672.
This interpretive case study examines knowledge brokering as an aspect of the work of information technology professionals. The purpose of this exploratory study is to understand knowledge brokering from the perspective of IT professionals as they reflect upon their work practice. As knowledge brokers, IT professionals see themselves as facilitating the flow of knowledge about both IT and business practices across the boundaries that separate work units within organizations. A qualitative analysis of interviews conducted with 23 IT professionals and business users in a large manufacturing and distribution company is summarized in a conceptual framework showing the conditions, practices, and consequences of knowledge brokering by IT professionals. The framework suggests that brokering practices are conditioned by structural conditions, including decentralization and a federated IT management organization, and by technical conditions, specifically shared IT systems that serve as boundary objects. Brokering practices include gaining permission to cross organizational boundaries, surfacing and challenging assumptions made by IT users, translation and interpretation, and relinquishing ownership of knowledge. Consequences of brokering are the transfer of both business and IT knowledge across units in the organization.
Keywords: Boundary spanning; internal knowledge transfer; IS skill requirements; IT professionals; knowledge broker; organizational communication; organizational learning
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#144 0.244 knowledge transfer management technology creation organizational process tacit research study organization processes work organizations implications practice explicit models consultants transfers
#237 0.155 boundary practices capacity new boundaries use practice absorptive organizational technology work field multiple study objects actors actor theory practical spanning
#68 0.139 business units study unit executives functional managers technology linkage need areas information long-term operations plans mission large understand knowledge current
#54 0.121 approach conditions organizational actions emergence dynamics traditional theoretical emergent consequences developments case suggest make organization point outcomes recent trajectory claims
#294 0.097 development systems methodology methodologies information framework approach approaches paper analysis use presented applied assumptions based proposed described examines basis proposes
#72 0.094 skills professionals skill job analysts managers study results need survey differences jobs different significantly relative required motivation programmers technical factors
#134 0.056 users end use professionals user organizations applications needs packages findings perform specialists technical computing direct future selection ability help software