Manufacturing in the Digital Age: Exploiting Information Technologies for Product Realization
Information Systems Frontiers
An Evaluation Model for Electronic Commerce Activities within SMEs
Information Technology and Management
The relationship between information and communication technologies adoption and management
Information and Management
Consumer choice, information product quality, and market implications
Seeking sucess in E-business
Trading digital information goods based on semantic technologies
Journal of Theoretical and Applied Electronic Commerce Research
The strategic virtual corporation: bridging the experience gap
International Journal of Web Based Communities
Web 2.0 and beyond: implications for electronic commerce
Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Electronic commerce
Foucault's corollary: agency theory and the economics of self-monitoring
International Journal of Networking and Virtual Organisations
Organizing master data management: findings from an expert survey
Proceedings of the 2010 ACM Symposium on Applied Computing
Education-oriented people-to-people association network (E-PAN)
ICWL'10 Proceedings of the 2010 international conference on New horizons in web-based learning
IT service management education in Tanzania: an organizational and grassroots-level perspective
Proceedings of the 13th annual conference on Information technology education
Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance
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Information, Organization and Management is a comprehensive treatment of the economic and technical foundations for new organizational forms, relations and processes. It provides a wide range of underlying concepts and frameworks that help the reader understand the major forces driving organizational and marketplace change, rather than presenting these changes as simple outcomes of technological or management fads. "The book has a heavier than usual economic bent, yet also considers the human cognitive aspects. The emphasis throughout is on the total concepts, with subsections at the end of each chapter describing the role of information and the implications for management. The content is well worth reading." Paul Gray, Claremont Graduate School and University of California at Irvine.