Title: Qualitative Research in Information Systems
1Qualitative ResearchinInformation Systems
Modern thinking and approaches to analysing
Information Systems
Steven Harris BA MSc MBCS CITP
2Agenda
- What is QR in IS
- QR methods
- Key theories in IS
- Summary
31. What is QR in IS?
- 1.1 Overview
- 1.2 Definition
- 1.2 3 major philosophies
41.1 Definition
- Qualitative research is a field of inquiry
where qualitative researchers aim to gather an
in-depth understanding of human behaviour and the
reasons that govern such behaviour. The
qualitative method investigates the why and how
of decision making, not just what, where, when.
Source Wikipedia 2009
51.2 Overview
- Quantitative
- Natural sciences
- Study natural phenomena
- Methods include Labs, mathematical modelling,
surveys etc.
- Qualitative
- Social sciences
- Study social and cultural phenomena
- Methods include case study, participatory
research and ethnography
61.3 Philosophies
- What constitutes valid research ?
- 3 basic philosophies
- Positivist
- Interpretive
- Critical
71.3.1 Positivist
- Believe in a set of fixed relationships that can
be discovered using structured instrumentation - Serves to test theories
- Examples propositions, hypotheses, drawing
inferences from a sample to the general
population
81.3.2 Interpretive
- Understanding phenomena through accessing the
meanings that participants assign to them
Orlikowski / Baroudi 1991
Instead of factual accounts there is a
relativistic understanding of phenomena Examples
Increase understanding within the context,
examine phenomena from participants perspective
91.3.3 Critical
- Critique social systems
- Aim is to expose deep-seated structural
contradictions within social systems Orlikowski
/ Baroudi 1991 - Example Revealing historical, ideological and
contradictory nature of existing social practice
10Summary
Qualitative research
I n f l u e n c e s / G u i d e s
Positivist
Interpretive
Critical
U n d e r l y I n g e p i s t e m o l o g y
112. QR methods
12Methods
- 2.1 Case studies
- 2.2 Action research
- 2.3 Ethnographic research
132.1 Case research strategy
- Most common form of research
- Investigates phenomena within their context
14- Questions to be determined
- Choose a site
- Determine the unit of analysis
- Determine how many
- How will data be collected?
- How will data be analysed?
152.2 Action research
- Joint collaboration
- To add to the body of knowledge
- History can be traced to the 1940s and the idea
of social action for battlefield social disorders - Not without controversy
162.3 Ethnographic research
- Historically comes from anthropology
- Immersion in the life of the people he studies
Lewis, 1985
173. Key theories in IS
18Theories
- 3.1 Critical Success Factors
- 3.2 IS Evaluation
- 3.3 IS Benefits Realisation
- 3.4 Resistance
193.1 Critical Success Factors
20- Top 5 CSFs
- Top management support
- Project team competence
- Inter-departmental co-operation
- Clear goals and objectives
- Project management
Source Somers and Nelson, 2001, EJoIS
21Case study ERP in Aviation industry
- Akkermans and van Helden, 2001
- Decision in 1997 to install a new ERP
- Initially very bad progress
- Supplier contracted with consultant
- (11th hour)
- Eventually October 1998 deadline met
22- Top 22 CSFs
- Top management support
- Project team competence
- Inter-departmental co-operation
- Clear goals and objectives
- Project management
- Interdepartmental communication
- Management of expectations
- Project champion
- Vendor support
- Careful package selection
- Data analysis and conversion
12. Dedicated resources 13. Steering
committee 14. User training 15. Education on new
business processes 16. BPR 17. Minimal
customisation 18. Architecture choices 19. Change
management 20. Vendor partnership 21. Vendors
tools 22. Use of consultants
Source Somers and Nelson, 2001, EJoIS
23Examples ?
243.2 IS Evaluation
- S Smithson R Hirschheim, 1998
- Complex and difficult due to organisational and
political factors - Becoming more demanding and complex
25Objective / Rational
EFFICIENCY ZONE
EFFECTIVENESS ZONE
UNDERSTANDING ZONE
Subjective / Political
Adapted from S Smithson R Hirschheim, 1998
26Example
Objective / Rational
e.g. benchmarking, QA teams, QA Management
Standards
e.g. CSFs, risk analysis, cost-benefit analysis,
finance based techniques
e.g. business transformation, life cycle
methodologies, discourse
Subjective / Political
27Business transformation
Strategic systems
Inter-organizational systems
Infrastructure
MIS and decision support systems
Direct value added systems
Automation
Mandatory changes
Benefits evaluation ladder Farbey et. Al. 1993
28Case Study Alpha
- Fortune 500 company
- Outsourced IT
- Difficulty in evaluating its success
- E.g. Lower corporate costs
- E.g. Lower service levels
- E.g. useful alliance versus shortfall in
relationships
29Examples ?
303.3 Benefits Realisation
- Lifecycle approach to benefits
- Recognition of the weakness of current methods
- Recognition that IS/IT enables benefit
opportunities does NOT deliver them of itself
Source J.Ward, P.Taylor, P.Bond, 1996, EJofIS
31Source Cranfield Management School
32How do organisations go about capturing the
benefits that IS delivers?
Headlines lt50 used an appraisal technique lt25
considered intangibles 75 failed to reveal all
the benefits most were 'working, on time, to
budget'.
Source J.Ward, P.Taylor, P.Bond, 1996, EJofIS
33Examples ?
343.4 Resistance
35People-determined
e.g. persons or groups have resisted due to
internal factors
Solution Change behaviour or change the person
/ group
36System-determined
e.g. poor system design, poor performance, not
user friendly etc.
Solution Solve the technical issues / change
the software and resistance will be overcome
37Interaction theory
POWER
people or groups resist systems because of an
interaction between characteristics related to
the people and characteristics related to the
system Source M. Lynne Marjus, 1983,
Communications of the ACM
38Case Study GTC Corporation
- Financial Information System
- Divisional versus Corporate accountants
- Managerial versus financial accounting
- Technical Downtime, late reports, lack of codes
- People Career development allowed people to move
jobs and appreciated the problems from a
different perspective
39What does the interaction theory of IS mean for
the IS implementations?
- It will always be difficult
- Changing people will only have a marginal effect
- Changing systems will only have a marginal effect
40Examples ?
414. Summary
424.1
Information Systems dont just happen!
434.2
Information Systems are collaborative
444.3
Information Systems are different from software
applications
45Software Application
Information System
Multiple stakeholders Application is contained
within the solution Multiple users Different
aims Range of ways to implement
Focus on function Focus on UI Focus on end
user Single aim Technical implementation
46Further reading
- Communications of the ACM - www.cacm.acm.org/
- Proceedings of the Intl. Conf. on IS Mgmt.
- http//www.academic-conferences.org/icime/icime201
0/icime10-home.htm - Management Science - http//www.informs.org/site/M
anSci/ - MIS Quarterly - http//www.misq.org/
- European Journal of Information Systems
- http//www.palgrave-journals.com/ejis/index.html
- International Journal of Innovation and
Technology Management - http//www.worldscinet.com/ijitm/
- IS Research - http//www.informs.org/site/ISR/
- Journal of IT - http//www.palgrave-journals.com/j
it/index.html
47Thanks!
harris.steven_at_virgin.net