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2004 | Buch

Technological Aspects of Virtual Organizations

Enabling the Intelligent Enterprise

verfasst von: Alea M. Fairchild, Ph.D.

Verlag: Springer Netherlands

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This textbook was inspired by an undergraduate elective course given on virtual organizations and technology. The instructor could not find a suitable text that covered both the organizational and technological aspects including examples based on today's industry. Other books were either too strategic or too technical for an audience of undergraduate business and technology students who were to use the book. But why was that the case? For the same reason that business and IT people in industry tended not to speak the same "language": indeed, the integration of technology into business strategy has been a recent occurrence, and traditional strategy issues have been decided too high in the organizational structure while technology was too detailed in tactical implementation. With the Internet and the advent of e-commerce, m-commerce, and c-commerce (and the other letters of the alphabet soon to follow), business and technology finally started to become closer, and the interest in technology as an enabler for strategic business decision-making evolved into a mainstream concept. How are we defining a virtual organization? Most definitions of the concept of virtual organizations start with stating that it is "a network between organisations or individuals . . . ". The Oxford Concise Dictionary defines 'virtual' as: "that is such/or practical purposes, though not in name or according to a strict definition. " An organization may be thought of as a number of individuals systematically united for some end or work.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Individuals and Technology Interfaces
Abstract
The role of the individual in virtual organizations is critical, as the base unit of analysis of an organization is the individual and the contribution of the individual to the collective organizational knowledge. To integrate both people and technology and to accommodate the intellectual possibilities of cyberspace and cyber valley companies, a broad perspective is necessary. The concept of interfaces opens up such a perspective. In our understanding, interfaces have a number of distinct features.
Alea M. Fairchild
Chapter 2. Groups and Collaborative Technology
Abstract
Moving towards a view of the entire corporation, the group is the next unit of analysis outwards from the individual. In order for groups of individuals to work together, there has to be both methods and tools (including technology) for collaboration to occur. We provide an overview of some of the methods currently used in industry, and discuss why place and time, fit and function, and application and motivation are all elements of a successful collaboration system.
Alea M. Fairchild
Chapter 3. Corporations and Networks
Abstract
The virtual organization is comprised of corporate partnerships, connected via networks: both physical and social networks. The corporation, as we know it, has evolved into a hierarchical structure with the option of flat, multilayered, or decentralized governance. The same cannot necessarily be said for networks. Network structure is based on a seven-layer OSI model, which allows interoperability across diverse network structures.
Alea M. Fairchild
Chapter 4. Overall Virtual Concerns
Abstract
Due to its virtual nature, a virtual organization’s success hinges on assuring parties in the relationship that their use of network services is secure and reliable, that their transactions are safe, and that they will be able to verify important information about transactions and transacting parties. The security, reliability, legal responsibility, and priorities of individuals, groups and corporations are discussed in this chapter.
Alea M. Fairchild
Chapter 5. People and Technology
Abstract
The necessary trends of agility, mass-customization, globalization of markets and supply sources and the increasing demand for extended products by consumers, are shifting the competitive focus to complex and rapidly changing virtual organizations. The primary contribution of this chapter is to discuss the virtual organization and how it provides dynamism to the traditional operational mechanisms.
Alea M. Fairchild
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Technological Aspects of Virtual Organizations
verfasst von
Alea M. Fairchild, Ph.D.
Copyright-Jahr
2004
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Electronic ISBN
978-94-017-3211-6
Print ISBN
978-90-481-6477-6
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-3211-6