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EGOS 2021 Sub-Theme - Organizing Platforms: What Are the New Forms and Practices?

  • 1.  EGOS 2021 Sub-Theme - Organizing Platforms: What Are the New Forms and Practices?

    Posted 11-17-2020 08:12

    Sub-theme 61: Organizing Platforms: What Are the New Forms and Practices?

    Online EGOS Colloquium (July 8-10, 2021)

    Convenors:

    Georg Reischauer, WU Vienna, Austria & Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria

    Ivanka Visnjic, ESADE Business School, Spain

    Stefan Häfliger, City, University of London, United Kingdom


    Submit here:
     https://www.egosnet.org/2021_amsterdam/Call_for_Short-Papers


    Submission Deadline:
    Tuesday, January 12, 2021

     

    Call for Papers:

    With the rise of digital technologies, scholars are paying increasing attention to how these technologies are changing the organization of innovation and strategy processes and how organizations use this technology to shape social life more broadly (Haefliger, 2019; Reischauer & Mair, 2017). Platforms have been at the heart of many debates about how digital technologies shape organizing (Gawer, 2011), crossing disciplinary boundaries between economics, strategy, and organization studies (Ciborra, 1996; Robertson & Ulrich, 1998; Rochet & Tirole, 2003). A recent surge in interest could be attributed to deeper interest in how purpose and value creation extends beyond any one firm to cover ecosystems (Jacobides et al., 2018; Parida et al., 2019;): the key questions include when and how platforms add value, what forms they take and what practices they support.
     
    An important line of inquiry examines organizational forms that allow platforms to thrive and innovate. For example, studies of business incubators showcased the challenges and dynamics involved in attaining legitimacy in new institutional settings (Reischauer, 2018; Tracey et al., 2018). Studies of organizations operating a digital platform to connect multiple sides hold specific challenges when connecting value creation with value capture, that is the business model they build, implement and change (Baden-Fuller & Haefliger, 2013; Haefliger et al., 2011; Reischauer & Mair, 2018a).
     
    Another important body of research examines practices to organize innovation and strategy processes on platforms. For instance, scholars showcased how narrative practices can be used to construct a steady influx of captivating stories of transformative change vis-à-vis rapid technological change (Dalpiaz & Di Stefano, 2018). A rising interest in how portfolios of business models can be managed (Aversa et al., 2017) points to practices of customer engagement and positive as well as negative network effects between customer groups. Likewise, practices within and targeted at online communities to nurture collaboration have been identified as a key means to innovate and to drive collaborative strategy processes (Garud et al., 2008; Reischauer & Mair, 2018b). The question of openness represents an ongoing puzzle for innovation and strategy in that opening up innovation processes can lead to fundamental gains as well as invite risks (Bogers et al., 2016) and the strategic implications can point to the core of what the organization is about (Hautz et al., 2017).
     
    The process of becoming a platform leader is a fundamental challenge to incumbents who need to decide about the level of access and openness when inviting complementors and ecosystem participants, clients as much as competitors. Adoption can be a key advantage of openness and free revealing (Alexy et al., 2013) and tensions require careful management for incumbents who are platform leaders (Wareham et al., 2014).
     
    While research has progressed, there is still much to learn about how to organize with and for platforms as well as how they are organized. To further advance research in an inclusive manner, we invite papers rooted in organization studies, innovation studies, strategy, information systems, philosophy, economics, psychology, and sociology, amongst others. While we specifically seek innovative empirical studies that utilize new data sources, all kind of papers – qualitative, mixed methods, quantitative, conceptual – are equally welcome. Possible topics include but are not limited to:

    • Which theoretical perspectives are most adequate to better understand how to organize platforms for effective innovation?
    • How can we better understand the cultural, material, spatial, and temporal dimensions of organizing for innovation and strategy processes?
    • What is the role of digital technologies in organizing for innovation and strategy, especially with respect to materiality and performativity?
    • What social and organizational practices do actors use to organize innovation and strategy processes and how do these practices differ over time?
    • How to individuals respond to new ways to organize innovation and strategy processes?
    • Under what conditions at the individual, organizational, industry, and/or institutional level are which forms and practices to organize innovation and strategy more and less suitable?
    • How do social evaluations (e.g., stigma, legitimacy, identity) influence the organization of innovation and strategy and how do social evaluations change due to participating in these collaborations?
    • What social and organizational practices do actors use to organize innovation and strategy processes and how do these practices differ over time?
    • How to individuals respond to new ways to organize innovation and strategy processes?
    • What roles and digital tools do individuals use to navigate these processes?
    • What are the ethics of digital innovation and strategy processes?

     



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    Georg Reischauer
    WU Vienna & JKU Linz
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