2016
DOI: 10.1057/jit.2016.9
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Understanding Individual User Resistance and Workarounds of Enterprise Social Networks: The Case of Service Ltd

Abstract: She has extensive years' experience specialising in investigating the social inclusion and adoption of Information and Communications Technologies on society's 'marginal groups', the adoption, use and diffusion of innovative Information and Communication Technologies in Small to Medium Size Enterprises and large organizations. She has led projects funded by the Royal Academy of Engineering, and Microsoft and headed Knowledge Transfer Partnerships and consultancy projects with organizations such as, British Tel… Show more

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Cited by 57 publications
(79 citation statements)
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“…Studies also commonly explained workarounds as resulting from conflict between top-down pressure and bottom-up constraints from day-to-day operational work. Top-down pressure can include company rules and policies (Choudrie & Zamani, 2016), enterprise systems requirements from headquarters (Malaurent & Avison, 2016), or external pressure from regulations or accrediting (Azad & King, 2012;Huuskonen & Vakkari, 2013). Bottom-up constraints can include material constraints, work ethos, and staff's lack of interest in IS (Azad & King, 2012;Choudrie & Zamani, 2016).…”
Section: Theorizing Workaroundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Studies also commonly explained workarounds as resulting from conflict between top-down pressure and bottom-up constraints from day-to-day operational work. Top-down pressure can include company rules and policies (Choudrie & Zamani, 2016), enterprise systems requirements from headquarters (Malaurent & Avison, 2016), or external pressure from regulations or accrediting (Azad & King, 2012;Huuskonen & Vakkari, 2013). Bottom-up constraints can include material constraints, work ethos, and staff's lack of interest in IS (Azad & King, 2012;Choudrie & Zamani, 2016).…”
Section: Theorizing Workaroundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Top-down pressure can include company rules and policies (Choudrie & Zamani, 2016), enterprise systems requirements from headquarters (Malaurent & Avison, 2016), or external pressure from regulations or accrediting (Azad & King, 2012;Huuskonen & Vakkari, 2013). Bottom-up constraints can include material constraints, work ethos, and staff's lack of interest in IS (Azad & King, 2012;Choudrie & Zamani, 2016). Studies that explained workarounds as resulting from top-down pressure and bottom-up constraints used different approaches, such as institutional theory (Azad & King, 2012;Choudrie & Zamani, 2016), negotiated order (Azad & King, 2008), process theory (Huuskonen & Vakkari, 2013), and activity theory (Malaurent & Avison, 2016).…”
Section: Theorizing Workaroundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Social media (SM) are rapidly diffusing among organizations because they are considered important for competitive advantage (Choudrie & Zamani, 2016;Schlagwein & Hu, 2017). Many scholars underline that SM can bring substantial benefits to knowledge management (KM) thanks to increased communication, better collaboration, enhanced knowledge location and sharing, faster integration of new employees, and so on (Mäntymäki & Riemer, 2016;Weber & Shi, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We can see similar accommodating practices across the information systems literature, albeit not necessarily under the same names. For example, workarounds have been very much influential and authors have written quite extensively around them (e.g., Choudrie et al 2016;Seethamraju 2015;Spierings et al 2017). Rejection, similarly, has appeared in the literature, in different forms, e.g., discontinuance (Cao et al 2019) and Soliman et al (Soliman and Rinta-Kahila 2019) provide a thorough review of the different forms and conceptualizations this may take.…”
Section: The Timeliness Of Our Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%