24小时知识工厂的先兆

S. Seshasai, Amar Gupta
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引用次数: 3

摘要

最近的学术和政策研究侧重于离岸外包,认为这是一种由劳动力成本驱动的活动,对有关国家的就业机会有直接影响。本文通过引入和评估24小时知识工厂作为信息系统离岸外包的模型,扩大了这一观点,该模型利用了成本节约以外的其他战略因素。一个真正的24小时知识工厂,通过利用全球有才华的信息系统专业人员,确保在一天中的任何时候都能在信息系统相关任务上取得进展。许多组织目前实现了离岸外包的其他变体,这些变体看起来相似,但本质上是不同的。典型的模型是一个服务提供者框架,其中离岸站点向中心站点提供服务,中心站点通常有两个中心,并区分主中心和辅助中心。整个任务通常外包给成本较低的海外基地,完成后再寄回。而24小时知识工厂则是通过将知识创造任务依次、渐进地分布在全球各地,每24小时完成一个周期,实现连续的、协同的24小时知识生产。因此,24小时的知识工厂创建了一个虚拟的分布式团队,而不是在一个地点(陆上或海上)配置的团队。通过以这种方式组织知识任务,24小时的知识工厂有可能更快地工作,提供更便宜的解决方案,并实现更好的整体性能。以前的研究考察了单个团队的时间,并探索了将工作分配给远程团队的各种好处,但没有直接比较搭配与地理分配对信息系统使用的影响,以及两个现实世界的团队在受控条件下处理类似任务的整体表现。本文强调了24小时知识工厂的概念,并在一个受控的现场实验中对该模型进行了测试,该实验直接比较了信息系统的使用及其在并行和全球分布的软件开发团队中的后续性能。中心发现是,虽然搭配与地理分布改变了团队使用信息系统的方式,并在项目中的关键点上进行交互,但每种类型的团队都有使用信息系统的潜力,以利用其固有的优势,克服缺点,并最终表现得同样好。换句话说,一个组织结构并不是天生优越的,也不一定要结构预先决定绩效。地理距离带来了新的挑战,但这些挑战是可以克服的,甚至可以用于战略优势。总之,我们的研究结果表明,企业可以应用24小时知识工厂模型,从服务提供商框架(离岸外包是一种短期和单方面的成本节约策略)转变为中心之间的战略伙伴关系(离岸外包成为全球企业战略的核心组成部分)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Harbinger of the 24-Hour Knowledge Factory
Recent academic and policy studies focus on offshoring as a cost-of-labor driven activity that has a direct impact on employment opportunities in the countries involved. This paper broadens this perspective by introducing and evaluating the 24-hour knowledge factory as a model of information systems offshoring that leverages other strategic factors beyond cost savings. A true 24-hour knowledge factory ensures that progress is being made on information systems related tasks at all times of day by utilizing talented information systems professionals around the globe. Many organizations currently implement other variants of offshoring that appear similar but are fundamentally distinct. The typical model is a service provider framework in which an offshore site provides service to the central site, often with two centers and a distinction between a primary center and secondary center. Entire tasks are often outsourced to the lower-cost overseas site and sent back when completed. In contrast, the 24-hour knowledge factory involves continuous and collaborative round-the-clock knowledge production achieved by sequentially and progressively distributing the knowledge creation task around the globe, completing one cycle every 24 hours. Thus, the 24-hour knowledge factory creates a virtual distributed team, in contrast to a team that is collocated in one site, either onshore or offshore. By organizing knowledge tasks in this way, the 24-hour knowledge factory has the potential to work faster, to provide cheaper solutions, and to achieve better overall performance. Previous studies have examined individual teams over time and explored various benefits of distributing work to distant teams, but have not directly compared the effect of collocation versus geographic distribution on the use of information systems and the overall performance over time of two real-world teams working on a similar task in controlled conditions. This paper highlights the concept of the 24-hour knowledge factory and tests the model in a controlled field experiment that directly compares the use of information systems and subsequent performance in collocated and globally distributed software development teams. The central finding is that while collocation versus geographic distribution changes the way teams use information systems and interact at key points during a project, each type of team has the potential to use information systems to leverage its inherent advantages, to overcome disadvantages, and ultimately, to perform equally well. In other words, one organizational structure is not inherently superior nor must structure pre-determine performance. Geographic distance introduces new challenges but these can be overcome and even leveraged for strategic advantage. In sum, our findings suggest that firms can apply the 24-hour knowledge factory model to transition from a service provider framework in which offshoring is a short-term and unilateral cost-saving tactic to a strategic partnership between centers in which offshoring becomes a core component of a global corporate strategy.
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