Publication | Open Access
Going back to basics in design science: from the information technology artifact to the information systems artifact
180
Citations
20
References
2014
Year
Information SystemsEducationCommunicationIt ArtifactInformation Technology ManagementDesign ScienceOrganizational SystemsInformation Technology ArtifactBusiness Information SystemsDesignTechnology InfrastructureUser ExperienceInformation Systems ArtifactTechnology PolicyInformation ManagementArtifact EvaluationSoftware DesignArchitectural DesignDesign InnovationBusinessDesign ThinkingKnowledge ManagementManagement Of TechnologyTechnologyDesign Management
Abstract The concept of the ‘information technology (IT) artifact’ plays a central role in the information systems (IS) research community's discourse on design science. We pose the alternative concept of the ‘IS artifact’, unpacking what has been called the IT artifact into a separate ‘information artifact’, ‘technology artifact’ and ‘social artifact’. Technology artifacts (such as hardware and software), information artifacts (such as a message) and social artifacts (such as a charitable act) are different kinds of artifacts that together interact in order to form the IS artifact. We illustrate the knowledge value of the IS artifact concept with material from three cases. The result is to restore the idea that the study of design in IS needs to attend to the design of the entire IS artifact, not just the IT artifact. This result encourages an expansion in the use of design science research methodology to study broader kinds of artifacts.
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