UNIFYING THE ROLE OF IT IN HYPERTURBULENCE AND COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE VIA A MULTILEVEL PERSPECTIVE OF IS STRATEGY
Authored by Ning Nan, Huseyin Tanriverdi
Date Published: 2017
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Abstract
While information technology (IT) serves as a new source of sustainable
competitive advantage for firms, it also induces hyperturbulent
environments (or hyperturbulence) that erode that sustainable
competitive advantage. In this paper, we posit that these contradictions
might be due to cross-level nonlinear causality between firm-level
IT-based strategic actions and collective-level IT-induced
hyperturbulence. We develop a multilevel perspective of IS strategy for
theorizing this causality, and unifying novel with established research.
Complex adaptive systems theory is employed as the overarching framework
for its strength in formalizing cross-level nonlinear causal paths.
Using literature-based theorization and agent-based modeling, we
establish two bottom-up nonlinear causal paths by which IT drives
hyperturbulence: IT can act as an external force (i.e., component IT
innovation) to locally instigate firm strategic actions that aggregate
to temporary hyperturbulence or as an internal force (i.e.,
architectural IT innovation) to drive pervasive firm strategic
interactions that aggregate to persistent hyperturbulence. Each causal
path produces varied amounts of reducible and irreducible uncertainties
and thereby renders a top-down nonlinear effect that reshapes the
opportunity for IT to contribute to competitive advantage. This
multilevel theorization paves the way for new, IS-specific theory
regarding IT's unique role in inducing nonlinear dynamics and in
affording new business strategies in today's competitive environments.
Tags
Agent-based modeling
Uncertainty
Complex adaptive systems
Innovation
alignment
Modularity
Model
rugged landscapes
technology
Complex-systems
Generativity
Is strategy
It innovation
Hyperturbulence
Role of information
Big
data
Information-systems strategy
Turbulent environments
Digital business