Technology innovation has dramatically altered the way IS are being conceived, developed, and managed in organizations. For example, rapid automation of processes using machine learning and artificial intelligence have impacted virtually every facet of IS design, development, and project management. IS development processes increasingly integrate operations with cross-functional software teams (i.e., DevOps) to manage complexity and respond with agility to changing market conditions. On the implementation front, new software development approaches combined with diverse software platforms and application environments provide the opportunity to broaden the array of approaches to design and development available to IS project managers. This enhances the prospect of approaches that fit better with organizational settings, personnel skills, and task demands. But given the complex and dynamic nature of IS projects, many projects continue to run over budget, extend past schedule, and deliver less than or different products than anticipated, needed, or preferred. Additionally, in response to the need for the large-scale digital transformation objectives, IT program management has emerged as a distinct discipline. Given that IS development projects and programs play a pivotal role in shaping the strategic direction of organizations and enabling them to gain and sustain a competitive advantage, researchers have unique opportunities to investigate not only the social, organizational, and technical challenges and risks associated with IS project management as well as the theoretical underpinnings of the myriad practices that have emerged over time.

Track Co-Chairs
Alanah Mitchell, Ph.D., Drake University
Barney Tan, Ph.D., UNSW Sydney
Xiao Xiao, Ph.D., Copenhagen Business School

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Schedule
2023
Monday, December 11th
12:00 AM

Designing a Method to Nudge Analytics with Artificially Generated Data

Peter Kowalczyk, University of Würzburg
Marco Röder, University of Würzburg
Janine Rottmann, University of Würzburg
Frédéric Thiesse, University of Würzburg

12:00 AM

12:00 AM

Navigating paradigm shifts and transitioning challenges for Customer Success: Learning from SaaS business models

Taskeen Iqbal, Ruhr University of Bochum
Raji Gogulapati, University of Phoenix
Kiram Iqbal, Ruhr-Universität Bochum

12:00 AM

12:00 AM

Scaled Agile Framework Meets Traditional Management – A Case of a Financial Services Provider

Michael Bitzer, Augsburg University of Applied Sciences
Franziska Maria Brax, Augsburg University of Applied Sciences
Antonie Teuchert, Augsburg University of Applied Sciences

12:00 AM

12:00 AM

Scaling Agility in Incumbent Firms: A Literature Review

Julian Frey, University of Bamberg

12:00 AM

12:00 AM

Searching for Product-Market Fit with Externally Developed Components: Effects on Time to Product-Market Fit

Yichen Sun, National University of Singapore
Shi-Ying Lim, National University of Singapore
Khim Yong Goh, National University of Singapore

12:00 AM

12:00 AM

The Innovation Waltz: Unpacking Developers’ Response to Market Feedback and Its Effects on App Performance

Yusheng Zhou, Nanjing University School of Information Management
Bingqing Xiong, Deakin University
Jiantao Zhu, University of Science and Technology of China
Eric Lim, UNSW Sydney
Chee-Wee Tan, Copenhagen Business School

12:00 AM

12:00 AM

The Role of Process and Outcome Accountability Claims for Shaping AI Developers’ Perceived Accountability

Jan-Hendrik Schmidt, Technical University of Darmstadt
Sebastian Clemens Bartsch, Technical University of Darmstadt
Martin Adam, Technical University of Darmstadt

12:00 AM

12:00 AM

Towards understanding open-coopetition – Lessons from the automotive industry

Jose Teixeira, Åbo Akademi University

12:00 AM