[AISWorld] AMCIS Minitrack "Mobile Enterprise"

Prof. Dr. Stefan Stieglitz stefan.stieglitz at uni-muenster.de
Wed Feb 13 08:40:55 EST 2013


Call for Papers: 19th Americas Conference on Information Systems
Chicago, Illinois, August 15-17, 2013
 
Track: Strategic and Competitive Use of Information Technology
 
MINI-TRACK: MOBILE ENTERPRISE
Mini Track Chairs: Stefan Stieglitz, Kristine Dery, Tobias Brockmann
 
DESCRIPTION
 
The application of mobile technologies opens new possibilities for the efficient and effective design of business processes in various enterprise areas (Enriquez et al. 2007). In recent years, the diffusion of smartphones and other mobile devices such as tablets has rapidly increased and offers new potentials for companies’ business processes (Cheon-Pyo & Shim, 2006). Especially the emergence of so-called mobile apps has yielded novel possibilities in the use of mobile phones that can be valuable adopted by companies. The ubiquitous availability of crucial enterprise information through mobile devices leads to an increasing independence of employees from their stationary workplace. As a consequence, the traditional workplace begins to lose its importance and a growing share of work-related activities takes place outside the office, resulting in a “mobile enterprise” (Venezia & Alee, 2007). Generally “mobile enterprise” is defined as a corporation or large organization that supports business processes by the use of enterprise applications via wireless mobile devices such as smartphones or tablets (Panos & George, 2012). In this sense, “mobile enterprise” implies external utilization, with a strong focus on marketing and distribution activities, as well as an internal perspective where organizational issues are the focal point of interest. Employees are enabled to use mobile devices to interact with colleagues or customers, to get access to all needed information, as well as to share information e.g. uploading data into enterprise information systems while being “on the road” (Stieglitz & Brockmann, 2012; Unhelka & Murugesan, 2010; Wajcman et al., 2008). However, the rapidly emerging diffusion of mobile devices like smartphones and tablets in enterprises presents new challenges for CIOs and decisions makers as they respond to these technologies to achieve competitive organizational performance (Dery & MacCormick, 2012). Mobile technologies have a rapid innovation rate and as usual in IT, enterprises must be always prepared to respond to new technologies and upcoming trends like, Bring Your Own Device (BYOD), Tablets, Long Term Evolution (LTE) or Near Field Communications (NFC). Therefore, corporate wide strategies are necessary to manage risks, ensure competitive organizational performance and consider upcoming trends. The transformation of emerging mobile technologies into organizational performance is currently particularly under researched. Therefore the goal of this mini-track is to provide a forum for academics and practitioners to identify and explore issues, opportunities, and solutions surrounding the valuable transformation process towards a mobile enterprise. Empirical (both quantitative and qualitative) as well as theoretical work is very welcome.
 
SUGGESTED TOPICS
 
In this mini-track we are inviting papers from the following fields (however, it is not limited to these areas of research):
 
• Theories related to mobile enterprises and competitive organizational performance
• IT-business value creation throughout mobile services
• Organizational strategies for enabling a mobile enterprise
• Enterprise related discussion of upcoming technologies (e.g. NFC, LTE)
• Bring Your Own Device (adoption, security, policies, laws)
• Business vs. enterprise applications
• Mobile Device Management (MDM)
• Mobile Knowledge Worker / Mobile Employee
• Mobile Work – challenges for Work-Life Integration
• Utilization of mobile applications in organizations (best practices and implications for research)
• Change management strategies for mobile applications
• Distance Leadership
• M-collaboration
• Utilization of mobile application in organizations (best practices and implications for research)
• Changing role for the CIO in a mobile enterprise
 
SUBMISSION PROCEDURE
 
Submit your manuscript using the Bepress system at http://amcis2013.aisnet.org
 
IMPORTANT DATES
 
• January 4, 2013: Paper submissions officially begins
• February 22, 2013: Paper Submission Deadline 11:59 PM CST
• April 22, 2013: Program Chairs Notify Authors of Paper Acceptance
• May 9, 2013: Camera-ready Copy of Accepted Papers Due
• Updated information at http://amcis2013.aisnet.org
 
MINI-TRACK CHAIRS
 
Stefan Stieglitz
University of Münster
Department of Information Systems
Germany
stefan.stieglitz at uni-muenster.de
 
Kristine Dery
The University of Sydney
Business School
Australia
kristine.dery at sydney.edu.au
 
Tobias Brockmann
University of Münster
Department of Information Systems
Germany
tobias.brockmann at uni-muenster.de
 
REFERENCES
·         Cheon-Pyo L. and Shim, J. P., "An Empirical Study on User Satisfaction with Mobile Business Applications Use and Hedonism,” Journal of Information Technology Theory and Application (JITTA): (8:3), 2006, Article 6.
·         Dery,K and MacCormick, J “The CIO’s management of mobile technology: the shift from mobility to connectivity for executives” MIS Quarterly Executive (11:4), 2012.
·         Enriquez L., Schmitgen S., and Sun G., “The true value of mobile phones to developing markets,” McKinsey Quarterly, 2007.
·         Panos E.K., George M.G., "Introduction to the Special Issue Mobile Commerce: The Past, Present, and Future of Mobile Commerce Research", International Journal of Electronic Commerce (16:4), 2012, pp. 5-18.
·         Stieglitz S., and Brockmann T., “Increasing the Organizational Performance by Reorganization into a Mobile Enterprise”, MIS Quarterly Executive (11:4), 2012.
·         Unhelkar B., Murugesan S., "The Enterprise Mobile Applications Development Framework," IT Professional, (12:3), 2010, pp. 33-39.
·         Venezia C. and Allee V., “Supporting mobile worker networks: components for effective workplaces,” Journal of Corporate Real Estate (9:3), 2007, pp. 168-182.
·         Wajcman J., Bittman M., and Brown J.E. “Families without Borders: Mobile Phones, Connectedness and Work-Home Divisions,” Sociology (42:4), 2008, pp. 635-652.



--
Prof. Dr. Stefan Stieglitz

Research Group for Communication and Collaboration Management

University of Muenster, Department of Information Systems
Leonardo-Campus 11, 48149 Muenster, Germany

T: +49 (0) 251 83 38 115
F: +49 (0) 251 83 28 002
E: stefan.stieglitz at uni-muenster.de 

Web: www.wi.uni-muenster.de/kuk
Twitter: @wikuk | Facebook: fb.com/wikuk | YouTube: youtube.com/wikukunims

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.aisnet.org/pipermail/aisworld_lists.aisnet.org/attachments/20130213/924f3546/attachment.html>


More information about the AISWorld mailing list