Abstract
RFID Technology has been in existence since the 1940’s when it was used to differentiate between friendly and enemy aircraft in World War II. Its application in the business world is however relatively new. RFID has the potential to revolutionize supply chains and take product tracking to a new level. However, its adoption has been slow not only because of the higher cost of tags compared to barcodes but also because many companies have not been able to figure out how to effectively use it. In this study we focus on one of the key issues companies face when they try to evaluate RFID i.e. its radical and disruptive nature. Using data from semi-structured interviews we build a case for why organizations may perceive RFID as a disruptive and radical technology. Perceived radicalness of a technology is presented as a second order formative with five critical dimensions. Testable hypotheses are proposed for each dimension and its contribution towards the “radicalness of RFID”.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Ciganek, A., Zahedi, F.M.: Radical! The Influence of Perceived Radicalness on Technology Acceptance. In: Proceedings of the Tenth Americas Conference on Information Systems, New York, NY (August 2004)
Chandy, R.K., Tellis, G.J.: The Incumbents Curse? Incumbency, Size, and Radical Product Innovation. Journal of Marketing 64, 1–17 (2000)
Damanpour, F.: Organizational Complexity and Innovation: Developing and Testing Multiple Contingency Models. Management Science 42(5), 693–716 (1996)
DeSanctis, G., Poole, M.S.: Capturing the complexity in advanced technology use: Adaptive structuration theory. Organization Science 5, 121–147 (1994)
Dewar, R.D., Dutton, J.E.: The adoption of radical and incremental innovations: an empirical analysis. Management Science 32(11), 1422–1433 (1986)
Ettlie, J.E., Bridges, W.P., O’Keefe, R.D.: Organization Strategy and Structural Differences for Radical Versus Incremental Innovation. Management Science 30(6), 682–695 (1984)
Gatignon, H., Tushman, M.L., Smith, W., Anderson, P.: A Structural Approach to assessing Innovation. Management Science 48(9) (September 2002)
Gopalakrishnan, S., Damanpour, F.: Patterns of Generation and Adoption of Innovations in Organizations: Contingency Models of Innovation Attributes. Journal of Engineering and Technology Management 11, 95–116 (1994)
Hage, J.: Theories of Organizations. John Wiley and Sons, New York (1980)
Henderson, Clark: Architectural Innovations, The reconfiguration of existing product technologies and failure of the firms. Administrative Science quarterly 35 (1990)
Kauffman, R.J., Riggins, F.J., Curtin, J.: Working paper. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis (2004/2005)
Karimi, J., Konsynski, B.R.: Globalization and information management strategies. Journal of Management Information Systems 7, 7–26 (1991)
Krotov, V., Junglas, I.: RFID as a disruptive innovation. Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce Research 3(2), 44–59 (2008)
Lee, A.S.: Integrating positivist and interpretive approaches to organizational research. Organization Science 2, 342–365 (1991)
Lyytinen, K., Rose, G.M.: The Disruptive Nature of Information Technology Innovations: the Case of Internet Computing in Systems Development Organizations. MIS Quarterly 27(4), 557–595 (2003)
O’Connor, G.C., McDermott, C.M.: The Human Side of Radical Innovation. Journal of Engineering Technology Management 21, 11–30 (2004)
Sood, A., Tellis, G.J.: Technological Evolution and Radical Innovation. Journal of Marketing (69), 152–168 (July 2005)
Tushman, Anderson: Technological Discontinuities and Organizational Environments. Administrative Science Quarterly (31) (1986)
Yin, R.K.: The Information Systems Research Challenge: Qualitative Research Methods. In: Cash Jr., J.I., Lawrence, P. (eds.), vol. 1, pp. 1–6. Harvard Business School, Boston (1989)
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2010 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Sharma, A., Thomas, D., Konsynski, B. (2010). When Is RFID Perceived as a Radical Technology?. In: Sharman, R., Rao, H.R., Raghu, T.S. (eds) Exploring the Grand Challenges for Next Generation E-Business. WEB 2009. Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing, vol 52. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-17449-0_29
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-17449-0_29
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-17448-3
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-17449-0
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)