Focusing on imbrication change as conducted by designers during design and development, we undertook a 2.5-year long case study to examine how 10 hospitals configured technology and planned routine changes as they sought to transform their organizations. Our observations revealed a phenomenon we call ruptures, defined as situations that occur due to breakdowns in the process of IT-enabled change. Ruptures allow us to unpack the temporal process of identifying and resolving instances of disruptive problems during IT-enabled change. Our analysis of ruptures in this context expands the theory of imbrication to account for the role of designers. We demonstrate that three imbrication types—historical, envisioned, and realized—exist cognitively during design and influence the design process. Our results demonstrate how problems arise, how dynamic change unfolds through sensemaking, and how fractal, embedded, imbrications complicate the IT-enabled change process.
Ruptures During IT-enabled Change: A Sensemaking and Imbrication Analysis
In stock
SKU
49.1.03
Publication History
Received: May 19, 2020
Revised: June 4, 2021; June 4, 2022; September 29, 2023; December 28, 2023; April 7, 2024
Accepted: April 16, 2024
Published as Forthcoming: July 25, 2024
Published in Issue: March 1, 2025
Abstract
Additional Details
Author | Nicole Haggerty and Deborah Compeau |
Year | 2025 |
Volume | 49 |
Issue | 1 |
Keywords | IT-enabled change, sociotechnical systems, sensemaking, imbrications, affordance |
Page Numbers | 61-90 |