Abstract

This paper addresses the design problem of providing IT support for emerging knowledge processes (EKPs). EKPs are organizational activity patterns that exhibit three characteristics in combination: an emergent process of deliberations with no best structure or sequence; requirements for knowledge that are complex (both general and situational), distributed across people, and evolving dynamically; and an actor set that is unpredictable in terms of job roles or prior knowledge. Examples of EKPs include basic research, new product development, strategic business planning, and organization design. EKPs differ qualitatively from semi-structured decision making processes; therefore, they have unique requirements that are not all thoroughly supported by familiar classes of systems, such as executive information systems, expert systems, electronic communication systems, organizational memory systems, or repositories. Further, the development literature on familiar classes of systems does not provide adequate guidance on how to build systems that support EKPs. Consequently, EKPs require a new IS design theory, as explicated by Walls et al. (1992). We created such a theory while designing and deploying a system for the EKP of organization design. The system was demonstrated through subsequent empirical analysis to be successful in supporting the process. Abstracting from the experience of building this system, we developed an IS design theory for EKP support systems. This new IS design theory is an important theoretical contribution, because it both provides guidance to developers and sets an agenda for academic research. EKP design theory makes the development process more tractable for developers by restricting the range of effective features (or rules for selecting features) and the range of effective development practices to a more manageable set. EKP design theory also sets an agenda for academic research by articulating theory-based principles that are subject to empirical, as well as practical, validation.

Keywords

Computer scienceKnowledge managementInformation systemProcess (computing)Organizational architectureSystems designSituational ethicsNew product developmentEmpirical researchSet (abstract data type)DesigntheoryProcess managementSoftware engineeringHuman–computer interactionBusinessEngineering

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Institutions and organizations

Institutions—the structures, practices, and meanings that define what people and organizations think, do, and aspire to—are created through process. They are “work in progress” ...

1995 Choice Reviews Online 8140 citations

Publication Info

Year
2002
Type
article
Volume
26
Issue
3
Pages
179-212
Citations
1079
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1079
OpenAlex

Cite This

M. Lynne Markus, Ann Majchrzak, Les Gasser (2002). A design theory for systems that support emergent knowledge processes. MIS Quarterly , 26 (3) , 179-212. https://doi.org/10.5555/2017167.2017170

Identifiers

DOI
10.5555/2017167.2017170