Journal of Information Technology
Document Type
Research Article
Abstract
We discuss three industry-level changes in the US residential real estate industry due, in part, to the take up and uses of information and communication technologies (ICT): (1) changes in the processes of transacting residential real estate, (2) changing roles for information, and (3) changing nature of intermediation, with the real estate transaction as more complex than the seller-agent-buyer simplification would suggest. We speculate that these changes are currently indeterminate due to ongoing confusion among the impacts of first and second-level effects, the roles of ICT in redefining access to data, and the importance of localized, social structures of real estate markets. To develop these findings, we take an institutional perspective and draw on multiple data collection methods. This provides us a means to highlight the value of an institutional perspective for studying industrial-level change.
DOI
10.1057/palgrave.jit.2000049
Recommended Citation
Sawyer, Steve; Wigand, Rolf T; and Crowston, Kevin
(2005)
"Redefining Access: Uses and Roles of Information and Communication Technologies in the US Residential Real Estate Industry from 1995 to 2005,"
Journal of Information Technology: Vol. 20:
Iss.
4, Article 2.
DOI: 10.1057/palgrave.jit.2000049
Available at:
https://aisel.aisnet.org/jit/vol20/iss4/2