Industry-wide information systems standardization as collective action: The case of the US residential mortgage industry
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Markus, Lynne; Steinfield, Charles W.; Wigand, Rolf T.; Minton, Gabe
署名单位:
Bentley University; Michigan State University; University of Arkansas System; University of Arkansas Little Rock; University of Arkansas Fayetteville
刊物名称:
MIS QUARTERLY
ISSN/ISSBN:
0276-7783
发表日期:
2006
页码:
439-465
关键词:
GROUP HETEROGENEITY
CRITICAL MASS
MODEL
diffusion
consortia
DYNAMICS
EDI
摘要:
Vertical information systems (VIS) standards are technical specifications designed to promote coordination among the organizations within (or across) vertical industry sectors. Examples include the bar code, electronic data interchange (EDI) standards, and RosettaNet business process standards in the electronics industry. This contribution examines VIS standardization through the lens of collective action theory, applied in the literature to information technology product standardization, but not yet to VIS standardization, which is led by heterogeneous groups of user organizations rather than by IT vendors. Through an intensive case analysis of VIS standardization in the U.S. residential mortgage industry, VIS standardization success is shown to be as problematic as IT product standardization success, but for different reasons. VIS standardization involves two linked collective action dilemmas-standards development and standards diffusion characteristics, such that a solution to the first may fail to resolve the second. Whereas prior theoretical and empirical research shows that IT product standardization efforts tend to splinter into rival factions that compete through standards wars in the marketplace, successful VIS standards consortia must encompass heterogeneous groups of user organizations and IT vendors without fragmenting. Some tactics successfully used to solve the collective action dilemma of VIS standardization (e.g., governance mechanisms and policies about intellectual property protection) are also used by IT product standardization efforts, but some are different, and successful VIS standardization requires a package of solutions tailored to fit and jointly resolve the specific dilemmas of particular VIS standards initiatives.