The MGS Blog

Friday, October 7, 2016

How ICT sourcing and development affects social development

Working Group 9.4 from the International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) is a scholarly forum for dealing with the issues ICT impacting social development.

The IFIP 9.4 Working Croup has a series of scholarly conferences that seek critical perspectives on processes of growth and development, inclusiveness and social transformation through the impacts of global ICT and BPO sourcing.
http://2017.ifipwg94.net/tracks/track-09-global-sourcing-and-development/
(also see
Submission deadline: November 15, 2016
Mt Merapi, the most active volcano in Indonesia (image source Wikipedia)
Our interest is in how ICT sourcing and globally distributed software development activity is implicated in local social development in the regions from which these activities are sourced. Going one step further we assert that the research object of a 'national' need and response is too abstract, that we need to understand the local rather than national context if meaningful engagement in development is to occur. This is because the more abstract the concepts the more easily does organisational and social action dissipate, thus loosing its efficacy and meaning. Worse, they may be subverted as resources by and for other actors and power interests (Cooke, B, 2004). Postcolonial critics of international development drawing upon 'subaltern studies' have exposed global, regional, and national inequalities. Subalterns reveal workers subjectivities in situ, from the local's perspective rather than the development or governmental agency.

One strand of theorising how inequalities arise against people's best intentions is through the unintended consequence of language games in public discourse. Organisation and management theorists assert that the use of spatial signifiers produces actual idealogical realities in the field of international development. That is, spatial labels produce the categories they refer to. This is an old trick from the days of colonialisation, to label the other (the developing or underdeveloped world) in contrast to the West, or the Northern Hemisphere or developed economies etc. The consequence is to justify and legitimise various national, governmental, organisational and managerial interventions in international development (Gupta, 1998).


References and further reading:
Cooke, B. (2004) ‘Managing the (Third) World’, Organization 11(5): 603-629.
Gupta, A. (1998) Postcolonial Developments: Agriculture in the Making of Modern India, Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

also see 43-CMS-2017-Stream-Proposal-Global-South-reconfigured-1.pdf

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Asia-Pacific Global Sourcing Conference

23-25 September 2016
Renmin University, Beijing, China

A call for Papers for the 1st Asia-Pacific Global Sourcing Conference, which will be held on September 23-25, 2016 in Renmin University of China, Beijing, China.

See the website

The conference will aim to explore how new and emerging forms of outsourcing and offshoring challenge sourcing practices and theories, and consequently identify new directions for research and practice. The conference aims to bring together viewpoints from various disciplines, including information systems, international business, operation management and strategy on global sourcing of IT, Business Services and Innovation.

The keynote speech will be delivered by Professor Sirkka Jarvenpaa, Rauscher Pierce Refsnes Chair in Business Administration, University of Texas at Austin. Prof. Jarvenpaa is known for her academic leadership in inter-organisational research, focusing on collaborative modes including outsourcing.

Paper Track


Research articles, work in progress and ‘focus on practice’ papers that investigate topics relating to global outsourcing and offshoring. Some of the specific themes that are of interest include:


* Sourcing decision making
* Sourcing configurations (multi-sourcing, plural sourcing, supplier networks, eco-systems)
* Relational and contractual governance issues
* Supplier and client capabilities and competences
* Innovation through outsourcing
* Cultural and social issues
* Knowledge issues in outsourcing
* Impact sourcing
* Automation in outsourcing
* Cloud services (as service economy)
* Crowdsourcing
* Repatriation/backsourcing

We are interested in papers that are both conceptual and empirically based.

Selected papers from the conference will be published as book chapters in Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing<http://www.springer.com/series/7911> (by Springer<http://www.springer.com>).

Important Dates:
· May 30th 2016: Registration opens
· June 10th 2016: Deadline to submit extended abstract
· June 17th 2016: Notification of accepted extended abstract
· August 1st 2016: Early registration deadline
· August 20th 2016: Deadline to submit full paper
· September 23-25 2016: Conference

Extended abstracts should be in English, between 600-800 words and should include contact details of all authors. Full papers (in English) should not exceed 9,000 words.
All submissions should be sent in MS Word format to: asia.pacific.globalsourcing@gmail.com<mailto:asia.pacific.globalsourcing@gmail.com>
with 'Abstract submission APGSC 2016' as the subject of the e-mail.

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Research articles and areas

You will find articles in academic journals via the UCD Library pages, making sure you are logged into UCD Connect first so that the University's journal access permission is activated.

Two sites worth looking at for both themes and research paper template (look for submission guidelines).
The AIS hosts a digital library, publicly searchable. The AIS library is available at
http://aisel.aisnet.org/ (access is restricted to members of the AIS)

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Answering questions and grading

I use grade descriptors (A+, A... C-, D+ etc) rather than % grades. You should search UCD for definitions/explanations of grade descriptors. I have posted similar material on the website.
In terms of answering prosaic, essay style questions you can employe a couple of approaches, they all amount to the same thing however, know your material, produce your own thoughtful response, practice using past papers.
Sometimes students struggle more with organising their thoughts, the following might be of help:

A simple style of raising questions, responding, and further questioning responding in the Socratic style is ok. So long as you demonstrate your knowledge and answer the question.

In terms or organising your thoughts, as mentioned in class the so-called Hegelian approach; thesis, anti-thesis, synthesis might be useful:

1. Simple bullet points >
2. Detailed definitions >
3. Examples of application >
4. Critical analysis of practical use >
5. Own interpretation and synthesis >

In a similar fashion you might organise a response inspired by Bloom’s cumulative (classification) of knowledge :
1.Data/factual statements (rules)
2.Simple description, explanation (theories)
3.Straight forward application, applied
4.Analysis of unexpected outcomes
5.Synthesis of new or adapted theory
6.Expert reflective application in use.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Own team offshore?

This is a key question for startups, to build your own team or to outsource? Although some organisations have had great experiences building tech purely through outsourcing relationships, nearly everyone advises build your own team, without fail.
But what if you're too small to attract high calibre talent locally or the local market is too small and overheated (Dublin, Ireland anyone?)?
Yousef Awad has written an interesting reflection addressing these questions and his learning from the experience. It's an InfoQ post titled "Build Your Own Offshore Development Team - or Not?"
He is of the opinion that you can and should outsource development when starting out, and continue to do it if you start bringing the work back in-house.

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Governance white board

Notes collected from the workshop on governance.

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Crowd and Microsourcing, who wins, who loses?

Microsourcing, who wins, who loses? Gefen & Carmel (2008) suggest microsourcing works well for the small supplier, and Lehdonvirta's research appears to confirm it (look at slides 9 onwards). Microworkers appear to be treated more equitably.


Gefen & Carmel (2008) show that cost is a significant driver towards microsourcing, but access to skills seems to be a strong incentive for customers to source directly from micro suppliers. Why do the most sophisticated (US) markets seek these offshore micro-suppliers? Principally to address resource shortages in their local markets and furthermore, customers return to the same supplier if initially satisfied and continue to pay a ‘fair price’. The satisfied customer returns again and again, caring less and less if the work is offshore, caring more that they have access to the specialist wherever they are. The world hasn't been 'flattened' (Friedman, 2005), but it appears to be 'flatter'.

References
  • Friedman, T. L. (2005) The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century, Farrar, Straus & Giroux.
  • Gefen, D. & Carmel, E. (2008) Is the World Really Flat? A Look at Offshoring at an Online Programming Marketplace. MIS Quarterly, 32, 367-384.
  • Carmel's student microsourcing exercise (errancarmel.blogspot.com)

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

The 11th Global Sourcing Workshop

An invitation from Ilan Oshri via lists.aisnet.org, posted on 4 Apr 2016.

Following the success of the past Global Sourcing Workshops, we are pleased to release this Call for Papers for the 11th Global Sourcing Workshop which will be held February 22-25, 2017 in La Thuile, Italy.

The workshop will aim to explore how new and emerging forms of outsourcing and offshoring challenge sourcing practices and theories, and consequently identify new directions for research and practice. This workshop aims to bring together viewpoints from various disciplines, including IB, Strategy, OM, OB and IS on global sourcing of IT, Business Services and Innovation. We also focus on teaching aspects related to outsourcing and offshoring with fast track for publishing high quality teaching cases in Journal of Information Technology Teaching Cases<http://www.palgrave-journals.com/jittc/index.html>.

Paper Track

We invite research articles, work in progress and ‘focus on practice’ papers that investigate topics relating to global outsourcing and offshoring. In particular, the workshop will endeavour to present the views from client, supplier and advisory viewpoints, from strategic, operational and social perspectives. Some of the specific themes that are of interest in this workshop are:

  • New and emerging sourcing models including cloud-services, crowdsourcing, Robotics Process Automation & impact sourcing
  • Sourcing decision making
  • Sourcing configurations (multi-sourcing, bundle services, etc.)
  • Supplier and client capabilities and competences
  • Contractual and relational governance
  • Captive (in-house) and shared service centres
  • Backsourcing/re-shoring
  • Knowledge-intensive services and innovation in outsourcing/offshoring
  • Cultural and social aspects of sourcing practice
  • Emerging topics and concepts in sourcing
We are interested in papers that are both conceptual and empirically-based.

Teaching Cases Track

We are interested in teaching cases on outsourcing and offshoring which we would consider for publication in Journal of Information Technology Teaching Cases<http://www.palgrave-journals.com/jittc/index.html> (JITTC).
Please note that a small conference venue has been reserved with guaranteed attendance restricted to those having papers accepted for presentation. Participants need to book early to secure reserved accommodation at the conference location or other rooms nearby. See full details on our website: http://www.globalsourcing.org.uk/workshop
Since 2010 we have been publishing selected papers as book chapters in Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing<http://www.springer.com/series/7911> (by Springer<http://www.springer.com>). It is likely that we will publish another book based on the papers from this Workshop. Furthermore, selected papers will be invited to submit a revised version of their paper to be considered for publication in Journal of Information Technology<http://www.palgrave-journals.com/jit/index.html> and high quality teaching cases in JITTC<http://www.palgrave-journals.com/jittc/index.html>.

Important Dates:

  • September 9th 2016 – Deadline to submit extended abstracts/teaching proposals to the Workshop on Global Sourcing (please note that we welcome early submission of abstracts and will aim to send the decision within 3 weeks).
    • Paper Track: Extended abstracts should be between 600-800 words and should include contact details of all authors.
    • Teaching Track: Proposals for teaching cases should be between 600-800 words and include the teaching case outline and learning objectives. For teaching cases, the submission of full teaching case and teaching notes will be required.
  • September 23rd 2016 - Notification of accepted extended abstracts/teaching proposals
  • November 1st 2016 - Registration deadline. (Registration fees will be £250 (British pounds) per person which include a reception and 2 dinners.)
  • December 16th 2016 – Deadline to submit full papers/teaching cases to the Workshop on Global Sourcing
  • February 1st 2017 – Reviews sent to authors
  • February 22-25, 2017 – Workshop on Global Sourcing, La Thuile, Italy
All submissions should be sent in MS Word format to: theglobalsourcingworkshop@gmail.com<mailto:theglobalsourcingworkshop@gmail.com>
with 'Abstract submission GSW 2017' as the subject of the e-mail.
For preparation of full papers please follow Guidelines for Authors posted on the Workshop site: http://www.globalsourcing.org.uk/workshop/guidelines/

Workshop Organizers:
Julia Kotlarsky, Ilan Oshri and Leslie Willcocks

Information about La Thuile: http://www.lathuile.it/

Prepare research papers "as if" to submit to ICIS 2016

Exercise: Prepare your paper as if for submitting it for review at ICIS 2016
What track would you consider matching your paper with?

This year's conference theme is “Digital Innovation at the Crossroads.”

See  (see http://icis2016.aisnet.org/). See social updates at #icis2016 on Twitter
The document template (link here).
Submission guidelines here
http://icis2016.aisnet.org/call-dates/submission-guidelines/
If you are unclear about how to format your paper review the "Formatting Checklist" (link here)
http://icis2016.aisnet.org/call-dates/submission-guidelines/formatting-checklist/

The thematic tracks are:

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Issues for distributed teams

The following survey aims to establish the level of knowledge and experience of virtual teams and their supporting tool-technology combinations among the survey group. The survey is an adaptation of the one carried out by the Economist Intelligence Unit in the report "Managing virtual teams Taking a more strategic approach" in 2009.

  • What are the primary challenges of managing a virtual team?
  • What are most important for creating a successful virtual team?
  • What device-and-tool combinations do you regularly use to communicate and collaborate with your virtual team?
  • How often do members of your virtual team meet face-to-face?
  • Which of the following best represents the amount of time you spend working within virtual team(s), as opposed to local/physical teams?


Click here to take survey

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Exam timetable

Draft Exam Timetable

MIS40690 Managing Global Sourcing 
Day: Monday 09/05/2016 
Time: 18:00 - 20:00 
Duration: two hours
Location: RDS Simmonscourt Road










Thursday, February 25, 2016

Upcoming Entrepreneurship Events

Towards Acquisition - The Logentries Journey

18.00, Thursday 25th February
Lawrence Crowley Boardroom

A rare opportunity to listen to Trevor Parsons recount his story of the journey from a computer science PhD student at UCD to co-founder and CEO of Logentries which he sold to Rapid7 last year for €68m - one of the biggest spinouts ever from UCD.
http://www.independent.ie/ business/irish/parsing-trevor- how-a-boy-from-blanch- hockeyed-the-competition- 34221575.html
http://www.rte.ie/news/ business/2015/1014/734675- logentries-deal/

http://www.irishtimes.com/ business/technology/ucd-spin- out-firm-logentries-acquired- by-rapid7-for-68m-1.2391425

Register here: http://25022016.eventbrite.ie


UCD Startup Stars Preparation Workshop
09.30-12.30, Monday 29th February
A lean canvas-focused workshop to help prepare students who are entering the UCD Startup Stars competition

Register here: http://startupstars29022016.eventbrite.ie


Startup Grind Dublin 
18.30, Monday 29th February
Google Ireland, Barrow St, D4
Hosting Claire McHugh, CEO of Axonista

Register here: discount code "smurfit_2016_feb"  https://www.startupgrind.com/ events/details/startup-grind- dublin-presents-claire-mchugh- axonista-1#/


Startups 101 for Students
17.00, Wednesday 2nd March
Dogpatch Labs
Join the Dublin Startup Commissioner's Office and Frontline Ventures for a short talk and Q&A on how to break into startups

Register here: https://ti.to/frontline/ startups-101-for-students/ 

IT Fair - Discover IT

UCD IT Services are delighted to announce that we will be hosting an IT Fair Discover IT: Behind the Scenes on Tuesday 8th March, in O’Reilly Hall, Belfield, from 11am to 3pm.

http://www.ucd.ie/itservices/itfair/


There will be over 30 stands showcasing our services, demonstrations and displays. Along with promoting the services we provide such as IT Security, Research IT and Web Services, we will also be joined by a number of our external partners including Dell, Amazon, IBM and others plus our colleagues in UCD Registry and the Library.

Prizes! There will be plenty of prizes to be won such as a Dell laptop, Apple iPad, a Kindle Fire and many more, plus pick up a goody bag on your way out! There will also be an opportunity to get a professional photo taken and see how IT security savvy you are by taking a quick Phishing quiz.

Refreshments will be provided for attendees. The IT Fair takes place from 11am to 3pm, Tuesday 8th March in O’Reilly Hall. All staff and students are invited. We look forward to seeing you on the day!

More information can be found on our website.


Kind Regards

Seamus Shaw, Chief Technology Officer, UCD IT Services

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

ICIS 2016 Dublin

The call for ICIS 2016 has been announced, key dates and the call for papers is online (see http://icis2016.aisnet.org/). See social updates at #icis2016 on Twitter

This year's conference theme is “Digital Innovation at the Crossroads.”
Research tracks include:
Completed research papers are full-length papers of completed research projects. Accepted completed research papers will be presented at ICIS 2016, and published in the ICIS 2016 proceedings. Research-in-progress submissions are also encouraged. These are papers developed from promising but incomplete research projects that will benefit from the feedback of other ICIS participants. Accepted research-in-progress papers will be presented as posters at ICIS 2016, and published in the ICIS 2016 proceedings. Furthermore, posters will be grouped by track (see track titles above) and made available for the duration of the conference.

Important dates:
  • Scholar One open for submission 31 January 2016
  • Deadline for paper submissions 6 May 2016 - Midnight Int’l Dateline West (UTC-12:00)
  • Scholar One opens to reviewers 10 May 2016
  • Deadline for all reviews 15 June 2016
  • Initial decision notifications to authors 8 August 2016
  • Deadline for revised, camera-ready papers 8 September 2016
  • Final decision notifications of acceptances 22 September 2016
  • ICIS 2016 Conference dates 11-14 December 2016
Conference Co-Chairs: Brian Fitzgerald and John Mooney
Program Co-Chairs: PĂ€r Ågerfalk, Natalia Levina and Sia Siew Kien
Doctoral Symposium Co-Chairs: Mary-Beth Watson-Manheim, Patrick Finnegan and Stefan Klein
Local Arrangements Co-Chairs: Niamh O Riordan, Allen Higgins
Local Organizing Committee: Brian Donnellan, Fergal Mc Caffery, Frederic Adam, Aidan Duane, Fergal McGrath, Gabriel Costello, Kevin Curran.
Local Arrangements Doctoral Symposium: Lisa van der Werff.
Junior Faculty Symposium: Izak Benbasat, Susan Scott, Bernard Tan,
Treasurer: Lorraine Morgan
Communications Co-Chairs: Klaas-Jan Stol, Theo Lynn.
Sponsorship Co-Chairs: Tom Butler, Kieran Conboy, Theo Lynn.
Social Arrangements: Graham Hunt, Brian O Flaherty.
Review Chair: Klaas-Jan Stol.
Volunteer Coordinator: Roisin Lyons

Friday, February 19, 2016

What's in a one page research idea?

After reading the proposal and talking about it we should be able to answer the following questions.
  • Do we know what you propose investigating? (a one sentence statement, often the title)
  • Motivation, why is it interesting? (might be something puzzling at work or a question you have)
  • What sources of data do you think will you use? (speculation is ok)
  • What kind of data do you expect to gather and how will the data be gathered? (speculation is ok)
  • In what theory, knowledge area, discipline do you start from? (provide some references to theory)
Basic structure as follows:
TITLE (a couple of words, a phrase or a short sentence)
ABSTRACT (- around 300 words - a very short 'story' from which answers to the questions above can be inferred )
REFERENCES (3 TO 8)
  1. Justify your idea using at least three academic references (not magazine articles, web posts or news items).
  2. Justify the most important statements using citation (see note above).
  3. Do not include spurious references in the bibliography, that is, only include a reference if you have cited it in the text.
  4. For an abstract: three references is about right, more than ten is too many. None is too few.
  5. An abstract should fit on a single page (including title, author's name and references).

Submission closing for the 2016 IAM Conference, Dublin Aug 31- Sept 2nd

The deadline for submission of abstracts for the 2016 Irish Academy of Management Conference is February 29th.

The 2016 Irish Academy of Management Conference is being hosted by the UCD Michael Smurfit Graduate School of Business, Dublin, from Aug 31st to Sept 2nd, 2016.

The conference theme is ‘Ireland 2016: Re-imagining business and the role of ethics’. 2016 is an historic year for Ireland as we commemorate the 1916 Easter Rising. The official commemorations invite us to remember our past and imagine a better future. As part of these commemorations, the 2016 IAM Conference will examine ethics in business - past, present and future. We invite papers and roundtable symposiums that explore the concept of ethics in its broadest sense and across multiple levels – individual, organisational, sectoral, national and international – and enhance our understanding of building a sustainable and ethical economy and society.

We welcome contributions from within business and management schools, but also from other disciplines across academia and from civil society, NGOs and practitioners.

While the conference will have a strong Irish and ethical focus, we warmly welcome international scholars and papers from all business disciplines on a wide range of topics.

Abstracts of 1500 words are due by February 29th for papers and roundtable symposiums. If accepted, full papers (6,000-8,000 words) will be due by June 30th. Submission details and further information about the conference can be found on the conference website. http://www.iamireland.ie/annual-conference/2016-annual-conference-ucd.html

A Doctoral Colloquium will also form part of the conference and we welcome submissions from PhD students at all stages of their doctoral studies. Abstracts of 500 words are required to be submitted by February 29th.

The deadline for all abstract submissions is February 29th 2016. All abstracts will be double peer-reviewed. More information is available on the conference website:

http://www.iamireland.ie/annual-conference/2016-annual-conference-ucd.html

We look forward to welcoming you to Dublin!

Dr Colm McLaughlin
Conference Chair
UCD College of Business
E-mail: IAM2016@ucd.ie

Monday, February 15, 2016

Overlapping ideas; outsourcing and value chain mapping

Simon Wardley links the value chain mapping idea and extends it with the technology adoption lifecycle product maturity model. His opinion piece on Computer Weekly includes a really nice illustration of how this can be applied to a 'sourcing' analysis (link).
An illustration of Wardley's strategic mapping applied for sourcing analysis (link)


Friday, February 5, 2016

Do Irish government policies and supports help or hinter entrepreneurs?

Tuesday 9th February, UCD Michael Smurfit Graduate School of Business, Blackrock.

Invitation to an industry panel debating the topic "Do Irish government policies and supports help or hinter entrepreneurs?"

Panel of Niamh Bushnell (Dublin Commissioner for Start-ups), Chris Horn (co-founder and former CEO Iona Technologies, now Venture Partner at Atlantic Bridge Ventures) and Brendan Cremen (UCD Director of Enterprise and Commercialisation). (link to register).

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

@ucddi for Digital Innovation

As part of the newly changed programme title, MSc Digital Innovation, we will use the @ucddi Twitter account for items of public interest and mindshare for the student body.

Do please @ucddi for items on your own Twitter feed you think would be of interest to Digital Innovation.

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

CEMS+ Ethics and Responsible Leadership in the Digital Society

UCD Business is organising a 2-day conference on Ethics and Responsible Leadership in the Digital Society to be held on the 11th and 12th of February 2016. The conference will be held under the auspices of CEMS and is primarily for the benefit of our 50 CEMS students. These students are required to take a set of seminars on the topic of Responsible Global Leadership, and this year these seminars will take the form of a 2-day conference structured around keynote presentations, group breakouts and plenary discussion sessions. The conference will be held in MH201 in the Blackrock campus.

We are also opening the conference to about 40 interested and engaged students from a number of our MSc programmes. Our vision is to encourage these students to critically reflect and engage with the pressing issues of Ethics and Responsible Leadership in a Digital world and also to spark a wider discussion on this area in our school.

We should also have space available for up to 10 faculty at each of the sessions. If you are interested, and sure you will be able to attend, please register for one or more of the sessions via EventBrite (click on REGISTER below). If you have questions, please contact one of the event organisers—Andrew Keating, Colm McLaughlin, Donncha Kavanagh, Gianluca Miscione or SĂ©amas Kelly.

Thursday 11th Feb, morning: REGISTER

Lucas Introna, Professor of Organisation, Technology and Ethics at Lancaster University.
SeĂĄn Kelly, Professor of Philosophy, Harvard University.
Adrian MacKenzie, Professor of Sociology at Lancaster University

Thursday afternoon: REGISTER

Ronan Harris, Head Google Ireland and VP Google EMEA
Ultan O'Carroll, Technology Advisor at Office of Data Protection Commissioner
Olinga Ta'eed, Professor of Social Enterprise and Director of the Centre for Citizenship, Enterprise, University of Northampton
Kristy Milland, Amazon Mechanical Turk activist.

Friday 12th Feb, morning: REGISTER


Robert Kitchin, Professor at NUI Maynooth
Gerardine Meaney, Professor of Cultural Theory and Director of the UCD Humanities Institute
Danielle Clarke, Associate Professor of English Renaissance Language, UCD.
Pauline Walley, Lawyer and writer.

Friday afternoon: REGISTER


John Herlihy, Linkedin’s Vice-president and Managing Director for EMEA (Former Google Ireland CEO and VP International Sales)
Paul Maher, Security Consultant with Integrity Solutions Ltd.
SeĂĄn Rooney, Technical Director, Integrity360

TechnĂȘ, Technology, and Truth from Aristotle to Foucault'

Prof. SeĂĄn D. Kelly will be giving a public lecture on the philosophy of creativity (entitled 'TechnĂȘ, Technology, and Truth from Aristotle to Foucault') at 5pm on Tuesday 2 February in the UCD Lochlann Quinn School of Business, Belfield.  The abstract for the talk is appended below and a copy of the paper is attached.

All are very welcome and please feel free to circulate this notice further.  For those wishing to attend, please register for the event here so that we might have a good indication of numbers.

Register at EventBrite


TechnĂȘ, Technology, and Truth from Aristotle to Foucault'

  Sean D. Kelly : Harvard University

Technology and human existence stand in a deep and revealing relation with one another. It is not just that human beings are tool-using creatures, or that human history is basically co-extensive with the history of technological innovation.  Rather, and more fundamentally, technology is a central means by which human beings establish the truth of what is, and in particular of what human beings are. To understand this claim properly, however, we need to know what truth is and how technĂȘ – the Greek word for skill or craft – is related to it. This paper starts with Aristotle’s account of these phenomena, digs back towards a deeper and more revealing account of them in the work of the poets, prophets, and kings of the Archaic Greek era, and ends with the appropriation of this deeper account in the works of Heidegger and Foucault. It develops the claim that the master craftsmen, through the masterly practice of his or her craft, can literally establish what is true.


Sunday, January 24, 2016

Technology for organisational configurations

This page...  Offers pointers to some essential and interesting services that business owners, product managers and producers of digital goods should know about; some old some new (this list will grow and grow).

For example: Conversational software for persistent collaboration covers a few different application categories. The area is fast evolving with lots of feature/functionality replication washing across all the various offerings...
Team communication tools: any kind of open Wiki, Slack, Google+Hangouts, Skype, etc.
Social networking tools: FB, SnapChat, WhatsApp, Yammer, LinkedIn, etc.
Collaborative software: any kind of Wiki, plus a whole range of other products mixing database, web and markup (like wiki, structured text, restructured text, rich text, native Word, html, etc), with features like fine grained (or not) user/account/rights, workflow, content management, discussion, blogging, file systems, change tracking, versioning, tagging, bookmarking, etc.

Our growing list of interesting / essential digital services


@github The most active of the quasi-open source software-service offerings for versioning digital artefacts and source code control

@sensu for monitoring operational infrastructure; control, report, configurations, availability etc

@nagiosinc, also for operational infrastructure monitoring.

@tortoisesvn Subversion (svn) + Tortoise SVN (the very nice workstation client for svn). The worthy heir to cvs; industrial strength + open source source code control and versioning system

@Zendesk 'software for better customer service'! Highly regarded I hear.

@SlackHQ Don't forget the wonderfully fluid and open ended SLACK! What is it? A kind of Lego for collective mind? Interested? Then ask to be added to https://mscdigitalinnovation.slack.com/

@CrazyEgg for integrating gaze heatmap and other tracking tools with website analytics.

And then there is @vtigercrm an open source web based sales and marketing platform
@mantisbt the venerable web based issue tracking system, open source, an excellent system for customer issue management.

@bugzilla another excellent problem tracking system, again, open source, web based.

@UniTuitionHQ a market for matching tutors with students at Uni level, and perhaps even secondary school? https://www.unituition.com/

@servicenow a scarily polished crm, issue tracking, service and it management system. Customer self-service portal system thingys.

@HP SAW. Their service access workbench has been mentioned as a 'good thing'. What they are calling 'hybrid infrastructure'.

@jetbrains Awesomely good TeamCity for continuous integration, i.e. automated build, package, test.

@Atlassian 's @JIRA issue, sprint, project, product tracking software system wonderfulness.

@trello visual to-do lists and project management in the cloud.

On the topic of CRM I suppose we should mention one of the elephants in the room @MSFTDynamics

@SonarQube (previously sonarsource) can be a useful additional tool for assessing the quality of your source code. See http://www.sonarqube.org/ and demo at http://nemo.sonarqube.org/

@aha_io for Product Roadmap and/or project manager views of the world.

@moqups for wireframe designs and software mock-ups.

@balsamiq also for wireframe designs and software mock-ups.

LICEcap from @Cockos for simple animated screen captures, great for teaching and explaining stuff on the web.

Saturday, January 23, 2016

Research topic challenge: Who can give me access?


The student groups have to identify their own topics. Not an easy task!

I recommend you read through the case and research papers in the 'READINGS' folder and widen your investigation to other outsourcing research articles to start getting ideas and be inspired.

Consider addressing a couple of prerequisites first.

1. Access. Who can give me access to an organisation or many organisations?

2. Data. What am I going to ask or discover, what kind of data do I think I can gather?

Then brainstorm, capture, structure, write.

Question: Why is there no template?
I would like this to be taken as an opportunity for you to create something of real value, your own research project, an exercise that you can define and conduct independently. In the first instance you should attempt to create your own research output, built with your own creative energy and enthusiasm, something that is yours, that is substantial and original.
However, to say that there is no template is incorrect. Research nearly always conforms to a limited range of presentation genres. The guidelines document (link) is merely one of the most general formats

I look forward to reading through your ideas.

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

How to do really well with this subject

Read the readings. Go to the library and read the books.

The term paper is your project, you do the field research, you analyse, interpret, write up and create!

Target your writing towards ECIS, one of the main IS conferences. Word or LaTeX templates can be downloaded from https://goo.gl/TcN31Z

The following high quality, general conferences may be good sources for searching for similar research.
  • IFIP Working Group Conferences (esp. 8.2, 8.4, 8.6, 9.4) 
  • Academy of Management Conference 
  • ICIS 
  • EGOS
  • other local conferences like the Irish Academy of Management annual conference, UKAIS etc.
The following journals are potentially good quality sources for relevant related research. Register with a relevant journal to receive notifications of new publications; for example: Palgrave e-alerts (European Journal of Information Systems).
  • MIS Quarterly 
  • Information Systems Research 
  • Communications of The ACM 
  • Information & Organization 
  • European Journal of Information Systems 
  • Journal of Information Technology 
  • Information Systems Journal 
  • Journal of Strategic Information Systems 
  • Journal of Management Information Systems 
  • IT & People 
  • Scandinavian Journal of IS 
  • The Information Society 
  • Communications of the AIS 
  • Information and Management

UCD Smurfit Entrepreneurship Series Events in February 2016

Organised by Majella Murphy UCD College of Business Entrepreneur-in-Residence

Monday, 1st February: 19.00-20.30 in Lawrence Crowley Boardroom
Hear about start-up early stage and growth strategies with Justin Keating, co-founder and CEO Version 1 (www.version1.com). Version1 is one of the fastest growing IT services companies in Western Europe with over 700 employees, 8 International offices and €75m in annual revenue.
To register for this event: http://1drv.ms/1W8B4SN

Tuesday, 2nd February: 18.00-19.00 in MH102
Find out about a number of Student Entrepreneurship Competitions, including: EI Student Entrepreneur of the Year Award, Enactus Social Entrepreneurship Competition, Accenture Leaders of Tomorrow programme and UCD Startup Stars competition.
To register for this event: http://02022016.eventbrite.ie

Tuesday, 9th February: 18.30 in Main Hall
Participate in an enaging and fiery debate on the topic "Do Irish governement policies and supports help or hinter entrepreneurs?". Niamh Bushnell (Dublin Commissioner for Start-ups), Chris Horn (co-founder and former CEO Iona Technologies, now Venture Partner at Atlantic Bridge Ventures) and Brendan Cremen (UCD Director of Enterprise and Commercialisation) will share their opinions. Dr Bruce Martin (UCD Lecturer and Director of MSc Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Design) will moderate the evening's discussion. Note - additional panel members may be added.

Tuesday, 16th February: 18.30 in Main Hall
An evening focused on Social Entrepreneurship - what exactly is social entrepreneurship? who is involved in the eco-system? Meet a number of social entrepreneurs and find out how or why they became social entrepreneurs, what skills are required in their work and what "a day in the life" of a social entrepreneur is like.

Thursday, 25th February: 18.30 in Main Hall
A rare opportunity to listen to Trevor Parsons recount his story of the journey from a computer science PhD student at UCD to co-founder and CEO of Logentries which he sold to Rapid7 last year for €68m - one of the biggest spinouts ever from UCD.

Startup Grind in January:
Tuesday, 26th January: 18.30 at Google, Barrow Street
Fireside chat with Deborah Magid, Director of the IBM Venture Capital Group. Deborah is responsible for sharing insights about emerging markets, technologies, and business models with venture firms and entrepreneurs around the world. She scouts for emerging business opportunities, and shares views on innovation and growth areas of the market. As a director of strategy in IBM Software Group, she also brings insight from the venture community to the development of IBM’s growth strategies. Deborah is responsible for fuelling the ecosystem pipeline in strategic areas related to building a “smarter planet” and contributes to filling out the IBM product portfolio through M&A.
To register for this event (with a Smurfit Student discount): https://www.eventbrite.com/e/startup-grind-dublin-hosts-deborah-magid-ibm-venture-capital-group-tickets-20017478818?discount=smurfit_2016_jan

Monday, January 18, 2016

Welcome to New Proudly Made in Africa Fellow: Dr Penelope Muzanenhamo

Message from Professor Ciarán Ó hÓgartaigh, College Principal and Dean of Business, UCD.
"We are delighted to welcome Dr Penelope Muzanenhamo as the new Proudly Made in Africa Fellow in Business and Development, based at the UCD Quinn and Smurfit Schools."
Penelope has studied the contribution of Brand Africa to Sustainable Development from a diasporan perspective. She holds a PhD from Warwick Business School (WBS) and two Masters degrees (in Strategic Management and in Business Administration) from the University of Innsbruck, Austria.
Dr Penelope Muzanenhamo Room Q108, UCD Lochlann Quinn School of Business, University College Dublin.
W: www.proudlymadeinafrica.org

On 10/Feb/2016 Penelope delivered a seminar titled "Why Africa"
She described the potential for shifting value added activities to different sites as a means of better distributing the resources of a value chain; to shift benefits towards primary producers. The supply chain / value chain perspective offers an intriguing way of looking the Global Sourcing phenomenon.

Impact sourcing or ethical sourcing raises the potential to make better use of the links between entrepreneur and enterprise motivation, social need, value production with region branding and the strategic goal of Country Selection for Global Sourcing. We consider why issues of location branding are typically not evident or employed by digital enterprises (software and service firms). Some authors have claimed that the notion of national culture and national myths surrounding professional identity should be significant determinants of levels of outsourcing activity actually appear to be largely ignored in the tech industry where it is rare to associate a product or service so closely with a location (country, culture, etc.).

Friday, January 15, 2016

Themes in Managing Global Sourcing

This site covers material for dealing with the following challenges...
  • How should one manage sourcing relationships? (and how does this vary according to the mode?)
  • Relationship development - Important stages of sourcing relationships.
  • Formulating sourcing contracts and service level agreements.
  • Relationship governance structures and practices.
  • Risk management.
  • Facilitating effective communication and learning in context of cultural diversity and distributed work.
  • The enabling role of ICT across organisational boundaries.
  • Identifying and addressing emerging relationship problems.
  • What are the emergent trends in sourcing relationships that are likely to be important in the future?

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Responsible Sourcing and Ethics of Digital Supply

A potential general theme is offered as a starting point for your Term-Paper.

Consideration of the ethics of digital sourcing highlights the issues of leadership, the person, connections, responsibility and responsible sourcing for technology services and business processes.
Topics of interest include:
  • Issues of global, geographical separation, and teams
  • Hybrid organisations
  • Cultural clash and compatibility
  • New trends, impact of emerging forms of organisation and technology
  • Impact sourcing for social change
  • Waste and value, sustainability
  • Social responsibility
Research papers in this field could address areas such as:
  • Raising awareness of issues surrounding the global sourcing of IT and Business Process capability.
  • Study the role of NGOs in Ireland and the challenges they face in developing countries in raising the level of key human development indicators.
  • Develop new ideas broadly aligned with the theme of sustainable responsible sourcing.
  • Literature reviews.
  • Desk research analysing aggregate social/economic indicators.
  • Reversals in directionality of innovation; from developing countries into developed economies.
  • Develop case studies of sourcing enterprises from the perspective of:
    • suppliers
    • clients
    • consumers
    • regulators
    • mediators
    • NGOs
    • venture capital or other investment organisations
    • government development agencies
    • public services
  • Option of general cases or research into any one or more of the main themes from the global offshore and outsourcing literature including:
    • Sourcing models and decisions
    • Country attractiveness
    • Supplier capabilities and strategies
    • Knowledge
    • The client perspective
    • The IT outsourcing lifecycle
    • Governance and regulation
    • Distributed teams

Monday, January 11, 2016

Irish Academy of Management CFP 2016

Abstracts of 1500 words are due by February 1st. If accepted, full papers (6,000-8,000 words) will be due by June 30th. Submission details and further information about the conference can be found on the conference website. http://www.iamireland.ie/annual-conference/2016-annual-conference-ucd.html



The 2016 Irish Academy of Management Conference is being hosted by the UCD Michael Smurfit Graduate School of Business, Dublin, from Aug 31st to Sept 2nd, 2016.

The conference theme is ‘Ireland 2016: Re-imagining business and the role of ethics’. 2016 is an historic year for Ireland as we commemorate the 1916 Easter Rising and Proclamation. The official commemorations invite us to remember our past and imagine a better future. As part of these commemorations, the 2016 IAM Conference will examine ethics in business - past, present and future. We invite papers and roundtable symposiums that explore the concept of ethics in its broadest sense and across multiple levels – individual, organisational, sectoral, national and international – and enhance our understanding of building a sustainable and ethical economy and society.

We welcome contributions from within business and management schools, but also from other disciplines across academia and from civil society, NGOs and practitioners.

While the conference will have a strong Irish and ethical focus, we warmly welcome international scholars and papers from all business disciplines on a wide range of topics.

Sunday, January 3, 2016

Suhas Pathak, Sarth Systems

Suhas Pathak, based in Pune, India.
He has 30+ years of experience in the software industry including working in USA, Australia, UK, Belgium and Ireland.  Strong expertise in offshore product development, mentoring and project management areas.  Has learnt, adopted and respected the agile methodologies in software development and also provides training on Agile implementation to software companies. Experience with various business models working with customers for product and services development success. Connected with a strong pool of experienced technology experts in various technologies in India. Works with customers in Europe and the USA, successfully implementing a virtual remote sourcing model with production teams distributed between the USA, India and China. The model is based on close-coupled teams with which customers can enjoy the outsourcing advantages with in-sourcing benefits.

Suhas is happy to explore any collaboration for outsourcing any product work.

Contact details are:
website: https://sarthsystems.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pathaksuhas/