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ECIS
2001

Rethinking competence systems for innovative organizations

14 years 1 months ago
Rethinking competence systems for innovative organizations
Information technology (IT) support for managing competence is based on a rationalistic view of competence. While these competence systems might work in rationalistic organizations, we argue that in more dynamic settings, such as in innovative organizations, the interest-informed actions that capture the emergent competencies of tomorrow require different types of IT support. We theorize about these two separate forms of organizations and use them as a means to interpret and classify empirical findings from an action case study of an implemented interest-activated recommender system prototype. The interviews show that competence is perceived as complex and multifaceted and three categories emerge: competence as a formal merit; interest as a complementary aspect of competence; and interest as something that transcends competence. The findings offer an empirical platform for rethinking competence systems for innovative organizations. We suggest a new design rationale promoting systems t...
Rikard Lindgren, Dick Stenmark, Magnus Bergquist,
Added 31 Oct 2010
Updated 31 Oct 2010
Type Conference
Year 2001
Where ECIS
Authors Rikard Lindgren, Dick Stenmark, Magnus Bergquist, Jan Ljungberg
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