The role of ICTs in the servitisation and degradation of IT professional work

Recently IT work has been subjected to management approaches that apply production methods to service work. Specialised information and communication technologies (ICTs) used by IT professionals have played an important role in this ‘service turn’, but this has not been adequately explored in the li...

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Veröffentlicht in:New technology, work, and employment work, and employment, 2018-07, Vol.33 (2), p.149-170
Hauptverfasser: Trusson, Clive, Hislop, Donald, Doherty, Neil F.
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container_title New technology, work, and employment
container_volume 33
creator Trusson, Clive
Hislop, Donald
Doherty, Neil F.
description Recently IT work has been subjected to management approaches that apply production methods to service work. Specialised information and communication technologies (ICTs) used by IT professionals have played an important role in this ‘service turn’, but this has not been adequately explored in the literature. Via a qualitative study of IT professionals situated across the servitised IT functions of five UK‐based organisations, this article considers how these ICTs are inscribed with managerial logics that afford control benefits to managers while undermining professional autonomy and job quality. The article makes two main contributions to the literature. Firstly, it sheds light on how ICTs introduced into organisational IT functions support managerial control objectives and impact the job quality of IT professionals. Secondly, it suggests that ICTs may infect the logic of professionalism that takes pride in the quality of the work performance with a dominant managerial logic that places an emphasis on meeting management objectives.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/ntwe.12109
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source EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Access via Wiley Online Library; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); EBSCOhost Education Source
subjects autonomy
Communications technology
control
Degradation
de‐skilling
Information technology
IT Service Management
IT work
job quality
Management styles
Professional autonomy
Professionalism
Professionals
Self esteem
servitisation
title The role of ICTs in the servitisation and degradation of IT professional work
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