A virus perspective on digital innovation

Mette Strange Noesgaard, Jeppe Agger Nielsen, Tina Blegind Jensen, Lars Mathiassen

Research output: Contribution to conference without publisher/journalPaper without publisher/journalResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Researchers have successfully used contagion metaphors such as diffusion, fashion, and mimicking to shed light on how digital innovations spread across an organizational field. In this paper, we extend this line of inquiry by applying virus theory to a longitudinal investigation of how three Danish public home care organizations adopted mobile technology into their day-to-day operations as part of a national digital innovation program. Focusing on how ideas (the virus) play out within individual organizations (the hosts), virus theory helped us reveal how each of the three organizations adapted the same ideas differently as mechanisms of infectiousness, immunity, replication, incubation, mutation, and dormancy shaped their implementation and extended use of mobile technology. Based on the empirical findings, we argue that virus theory offers new insights into contagion across an organizational field in digital innovation compared to knowledge derived from established theories of diffusion, fashion, and mimicking. In conclusion, we outline future research avenues to advance the virus perspective in IS research.
Original languageEnglish
Publication date14 Aug 2019
Publication statusPublished - 14 Aug 2019
EventIRIS: Information systems research seminar - Nokia, Tampere, Finland
Duration: 12 Aug 201914 Aug 2019
Conference number: 42

Conference

ConferenceIRIS
Number42
LocationNokia
Country/TerritoryFinland
CityTampere
Period12/08/201914/08/2019

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