Intensifying to Cease: Unpacking the Process of Information Systems Discontinuance

Legacy information systems consume a large portion of information technology budgets and often impose serious limitations on organizations’ flexibility and innovation. Despite the extensive literature on how organizations adopt and use new IS, we know little about how organizations discontinue their...

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Veröffentlicht in:MIS quarterly 2019-03, Vol.43 (1), p.141-165
Hauptverfasser: Rezazade Mehrizi, Mohammad Hosein, Rodon Modol, Joan, Zafar Nezhad, Milad
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container_title MIS quarterly
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creator Rezazade Mehrizi, Mohammad Hosein
Rodon Modol, Joan
Zafar Nezhad, Milad
description Legacy information systems consume a large portion of information technology budgets and often impose serious limitations on organizations’ flexibility and innovation. Despite the extensive literature on how organizations adopt and use new IS, we know little about how organizations discontinue their legacy IS. Current studies suggest some actions and events to cease mechanisms such as legitimization, learning, and routinization that give continuity to the systems. However, we do not know when these actions emerge in the discontinuance process to gradually reduce the organizational commitments to legacy IS, nor do we know how ceasing one mechanism can facilitate or, conversely, hamper ceasing other mechanisms, especially when these systems involve interdependences between various components. Based on a process analysis of four software companies, we show that, contrary to the current literature, IS discontinuance is not a matter of merely ceasing each and every mechanism of an established IS; rather, it often requires that some mechanisms be temporarily intensified to prevent premature discontinuance and enable subsequent cessation of other mechanisms. Through cross-case analysis, we articulate a set of causal mechanisms that expands our understanding of how the discontinuance process can be differently shaped by organizational commitments and interdependences involved in legacy IS.
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subjects Information systems
Information technology
Innovations
Interdependence
Organizations
title Intensifying to Cease: Unpacking the Process of Information Systems Discontinuance
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