Rise and Fall of an Information Technology Outsourcing Program: a qualitative Analysis of a Troubled Corporate Initiative
part of the legitimized bureaucratic ethic and moral code at Icarus
Download 1.05 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
Rise and Fall of an Information Technology Outsourcing Program A
part of the legitimized bureaucratic ethic and moral code at Icarus. The Strategic Staffing Program as a Leitmotif Eventually the reality of SSP as a doomed, infocentric initiative reared its head; it was a bad idea that only got worse over time. The habitus, ouija board strategies, and executives “looking up and looking around” modus operandi could temporarily mask SSP’s shortcomings, but could not provide enough alchemy to turn it into gold. Although beyond the reach of this study, it was unlikely these entrenched leadership behaviors were exclusive to just this single initiative. The Icarus taxonomy represented the institutionalized social order for distributing power and positioned individuals based upon the economic, social, and cultural capital they possessed. Employees and executives commonly recognized individual taxonomizers (i.e. corporate class, badge color, geographic location, and organization chart position), but they did not contemplate these elements as forming a collective social structure. For SSP, Richard and Donald were in a less powerful organization chart location than Brenda and Cynthia in the final year, ComTech was a different badge color than Icarus, the Working Team and employees were in a lower corporate class than the executives at the CIO Staff Meeting. Thus, just as it was with SSP, it is reasonable that chief points of friction on other Icarus initiatives could be across taxonomizers. The tension between Richard and Brenda spread throughout the IT taxonomy. It legitimized how their teams mirrored their respective positions for and against SSP. The executives and employees who worked for Richard and Brenda advanced or defended the positions of their patrons following the bureaucratic ethic and organizational rules in use of their 217 superiors. Beyond SSP, it is indeed possible that employees would align their loyalties to the executive whose patronage they are beneficiaries of. This study highlighted what happened when Icarus IT executives attempted to implement a managed services agreement without forcing a definition of terms or bringing up relevant data from previous attempts at ITO attempts. Said differently, IT executives failed to explore why Project Phoenix was never truly successful—yet they perused an even risker managed services agreement in SSP that they believed would yield a “better” outcome and somehow not be susceptible to similar shortcomings. The Icarus habitus did not incent executives to call into question what they thought they knew. Leading up to SSP, the model was to do things well and do them quickly. Icarus as a company had been successful enough for executives to get by with believing that once they achieved consensus (real or faked) they were usually doing the “right” thing. This infocentric approach to strategy setting and execution caused executives to suffer from what Brown and Duguid (2000) described as a form of social and moral blindness surmountable only by embracing the “fuzzy stuff that lies around the edges.” Therefore, it is surmisable that the Strategic Staffing Program was representative of other Icarus IT strategies rife with their own battles for controlling economic, social, and cultural capital. While these other strategies were outside the scope of this research, it is reasonable that the Icarus habitus would influence the general success or failure of any number of initiatives involving high stakes, power, and executives furthering their moral careers. Download 1.05 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling