Open strategy initiatives: open, IT-enabled episodes of strategic practice

The concept of openness has become widespread in organizations, driven by the advent of the internet and advances in information technology, with open approaches now a particular interest to information systems researchers. Open principles have more recently been adopted by organizations in a strate...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Josh Morton, Alex Wilson, Louise Cooke
Format: Default Conference proceeding
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/22071
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id rr-article-9499964
record_format Figshare
spelling rr-article-94999642016-01-01T00:00:00Z Open strategy initiatives: open, IT-enabled episodes of strategic practice Josh Morton (3151839) Alex Wilson (1252392) Louise Cooke (1252065) Other commerce, management, tourism and services not elsewhere classified Information technology Information systems Open strategy Strategy-as-practice Strategic episodes Business and Management not elsewhere classified The concept of openness has become widespread in organizations, driven by the advent of the internet and advances in information technology, with open approaches now a particular interest to information systems researchers. Open principles have more recently been adopted by organizations in a strategic context, through openness in strategy processes. Widely labelled ‘open strategy’, research into the phenomenon has primarily focused on increased transparency and participation in strategy-making, with less attention on the actual practice of open strategy. In particular, there has been limited focus on its episodic nature, with open strategy, in many cases, representing temporary instances of strategic ideation within the wider operational and strategic conduct of organizations. This paper intends to extend current open strategy definitions by conceptually expanding Hendry and Seidl's (2003) framework for studying ‘strategic episodes’, helping to explain the temporary complexion of the phenomenon. This analysis also explores how information systems are central to this form of open, ITenabled strategic practice. We introduce empirical data from two case studies to conceptualize the intermittent nature of what we define as ‘open strategy initiatives’, and conclude by outlining what this on-going research intends to contribute in the future. 2016-01-01T00:00:00Z Text Conference contribution 2134/22071 https://figshare.com/articles/conference_contribution/Open_strategy_initiatives_open_IT-enabled_episodes_of_strategic_practice/9499964 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
institution Loughborough University
collection Figshare
topic Other commerce, management, tourism and services not elsewhere classified
Information technology
Information systems
Open strategy
Strategy-as-practice
Strategic episodes
Business and Management not elsewhere classified
spellingShingle Other commerce, management, tourism and services not elsewhere classified
Information technology
Information systems
Open strategy
Strategy-as-practice
Strategic episodes
Business and Management not elsewhere classified
Josh Morton
Alex Wilson
Louise Cooke
Open strategy initiatives: open, IT-enabled episodes of strategic practice
description The concept of openness has become widespread in organizations, driven by the advent of the internet and advances in information technology, with open approaches now a particular interest to information systems researchers. Open principles have more recently been adopted by organizations in a strategic context, through openness in strategy processes. Widely labelled ‘open strategy’, research into the phenomenon has primarily focused on increased transparency and participation in strategy-making, with less attention on the actual practice of open strategy. In particular, there has been limited focus on its episodic nature, with open strategy, in many cases, representing temporary instances of strategic ideation within the wider operational and strategic conduct of organizations. This paper intends to extend current open strategy definitions by conceptually expanding Hendry and Seidl's (2003) framework for studying ‘strategic episodes’, helping to explain the temporary complexion of the phenomenon. This analysis also explores how information systems are central to this form of open, ITenabled strategic practice. We introduce empirical data from two case studies to conceptualize the intermittent nature of what we define as ‘open strategy initiatives’, and conclude by outlining what this on-going research intends to contribute in the future.
format Default
Conference proceeding
author Josh Morton
Alex Wilson
Louise Cooke
author_facet Josh Morton
Alex Wilson
Louise Cooke
author_sort Josh Morton (3151839)
title Open strategy initiatives: open, IT-enabled episodes of strategic practice
title_short Open strategy initiatives: open, IT-enabled episodes of strategic practice
title_full Open strategy initiatives: open, IT-enabled episodes of strategic practice
title_fullStr Open strategy initiatives: open, IT-enabled episodes of strategic practice
title_full_unstemmed Open strategy initiatives: open, IT-enabled episodes of strategic practice
title_sort open strategy initiatives: open, it-enabled episodes of strategic practice
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/22071
_version_ 1797557019695120384