[AISWorld] Consumerization of IT, Call for Papers, IT Professional

San Murugesan san at computer.org
Thu Oct 24 13:10:55 EDT 2013


*IEEE IT Professional
*www.computer.org/itpro/
Consumerization of IT

*Submission deadline: 1 February 2014
Publication: September/October 2014*

This special issue of *IT Professional* will review trends, risk factors,
and approaches that businesses must consider to capitalize on demographic
and technological shifts in the information environment and avoid the
pitfalls brought about by the blurring line between consumer and business
technologies.

In today's enterprise, the consumerization of IT is being pushed by a
younger, more mobile workforce comprising active users of new technologies
and applications. Employees expect to be able to use their personal devices
— and applications they are familiar with — at work, which relates to
concepts of BYOX — Bring Your Own Device, Cloud, App, and Network. Instead
of new technology flowing down from business to the consumer, as it did
with the desktop computer, the flow has reversed and the consumer market
often gets new technology before it enters (and is fully leveraged by) the
enterprise.

This blending of personal and business technology is having a significant
impact on corporate IT departments, which traditionally issue and control
the technology that employees use to do their jobs. Consequently, IT
departments must decide how to protect their networks and manage technology
that they perhaps did not procure or provision.

We are looking for high-quality contributions from industry, government,
business, and academia that address these trends, issues, and challenges.
Topics of interest include:

   - How organizations have successfully embraced the consumerization of IT
   - Frameworks for governance and policy development
   - Risk identification and mitigation, including regulatory issues and
   protection of IP
   - Assessing impact on processes and legacy environments
   - Changes to technology evaluation criteria
   - Vendor strategies around consumerization issues
   - Pros and cons of consumerization
   - Cultural implications around adoption and buy in
   - Impact on innovation, collaboration, and economic performance
   - Applying consumer technology development approaches to internal
   development processes
   - Understanding and modeling business users from a consumer perspective
   - Security challenges

Submissions

We also welcome multimedia features (related videos, demos, audio clips,
and so on). Feature articles should be no longer than 4,200 words (with
tables and figures each counting as 300 words) and have no more than 20
references. Illustrations are welcome. For author guidelines, including
sample articles see
http://www.computer.org/portal/web/peerreviewmagazines/acitpro.

Submit your article at
https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/itpro-cs<https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/itpro-cs%20>
.
*Questions?*

For further information contact the Guest Editors:

   - Seth Earley, seth at earley.com, Earley & Associates, Inc.
   - Robert Harmon, harmonr at pdx.edu, Portland State University
   - Maria R. Lee, maria.lee at mail.usc.edu.tw,
<maria.lee at mail.usc.edu.tw>Shih Chien University
   - Sunil Mithas, smithas at umd.edu, University of Maryland
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