DocumentCode :
3223564
Title :
Targeted Change. Are You Aready Irrelevant?
Author :
Noble, Max
fYear :
2008
fDate :
26-28 March 2008
Firstpage :
47
Lastpage :
48
Abstract :
Summary form only given. No change happens in isolation, and the rate of change can have a significant impact on the acceptance level of a change. This paper reviews the interrelationships between technology, people at the micro, and macro level of organisational structure, business goals, and the external business environment as they interact within an IT change cycle. Mixing personal experience with industry case studies this paper examines how the implementation of a change cycle has an immediate feedback into the continued development of the change cycle; it demonstrates that human factors and communication mechanisms have more of an impact on the success level of a change programme than the selection of the ´right´ technology or being an early adopter of new development techniques. Focusing on change within the software and IT domain examples are reviewed from the arenas of IT gaming, air traffic control, and general large-scale complex system integration change cycles. Using the Change Cycle definition developed by Brock and Salerno as a reference structure this paper examines each of the six key phases of the change cycle as they relate to staff and adoption of technical evolutions.
Keywords :
management of change; software development management; IT change cycle; IT domain examples; communication mechanisms; development techniques; human factors; software change; Air traffic control; Australia; Communication industry; Feedback; Human factors; Isolation technology; Large scale integration; Organizational aspects; Software development management; Software engineering;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Software Engineering, 2008. ASWEC 2008. 19th Australian Conference on
Conference_Location :
Perth, WA
ISSN :
1530-0803
Print_ISBN :
978-0-7695-3100-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ASWEC.2008.4483189
Filename :
4483189
Link To Document :
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