Positioning e-skills within an organisation: An information systems management viewpoint

The intersection of business and IT in an organisation requires people with diverse business- and technology-related competences and skills, commonly referred to as ‘e-competences’ and ‘e-skills’. The positioning of these competences within an IT function in an organisation is (arguably) well define...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zoran Mitrovic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2010-10-01
Series:South African Journal of Information Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajim.co.za/index.php/sajim/article/view/427
id doaj-200d0504b2fa4d2ca32d905b33d58831
record_format Article
spelling doaj-200d0504b2fa4d2ca32d905b33d588312020-11-24T23:48:06ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Information Management2078-18651560-683X2010-10-01121e1e710.4102/sajim.v12i1.427402Positioning e-skills within an organisation: An information systems management viewpointZoran Mitrovic0University of the Western CapeThe intersection of business and IT in an organisation requires people with diverse business- and technology-related competences and skills, commonly referred to as ‘e-competences’ and ‘e-skills’. The positioning of these competences within an IT function in an organisation is (arguably) well defined, but their place in other areas of business managerial concern in an organisation, such as business processes or organisational strategy, is still not sufficiently clear. As e-skills and e-competences are inevitably associated with the use of organisational information systems (IS), this paper reports an initial study aimed at positioning these competences and skills within an organisation from an IS perspective. The positioning was done by examining models of IS, e-competences and e-skills and identifying their possible areas of intersection, which resulted in mapping these competences and skills to the areas of managerial concern in an organisation – as seen from an IS perspective. This mapping has revealed an initial understanding of how business value, here seen as business benefits, is created by using the e-skills and e-competences (supposedly) possessed by employees throughout an organisation.https://sajim.co.za/index.php/sajim/article/view/427e-skillse-competencesinformation systemspositioningbenefits
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zoran Mitrovic
spellingShingle Zoran Mitrovic
Positioning e-skills within an organisation: An information systems management viewpoint
South African Journal of Information Management
e-skills
e-competences
information systems
positioning
benefits
author_facet Zoran Mitrovic
author_sort Zoran Mitrovic
title Positioning e-skills within an organisation: An information systems management viewpoint
title_short Positioning e-skills within an organisation: An information systems management viewpoint
title_full Positioning e-skills within an organisation: An information systems management viewpoint
title_fullStr Positioning e-skills within an organisation: An information systems management viewpoint
title_full_unstemmed Positioning e-skills within an organisation: An information systems management viewpoint
title_sort positioning e-skills within an organisation: an information systems management viewpoint
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Information Management
issn 2078-1865
1560-683X
publishDate 2010-10-01
description The intersection of business and IT in an organisation requires people with diverse business- and technology-related competences and skills, commonly referred to as ‘e-competences’ and ‘e-skills’. The positioning of these competences within an IT function in an organisation is (arguably) well defined, but their place in other areas of business managerial concern in an organisation, such as business processes or organisational strategy, is still not sufficiently clear. As e-skills and e-competences are inevitably associated with the use of organisational information systems (IS), this paper reports an initial study aimed at positioning these competences and skills within an organisation from an IS perspective. The positioning was done by examining models of IS, e-competences and e-skills and identifying their possible areas of intersection, which resulted in mapping these competences and skills to the areas of managerial concern in an organisation – as seen from an IS perspective. This mapping has revealed an initial understanding of how business value, here seen as business benefits, is created by using the e-skills and e-competences (supposedly) possessed by employees throughout an organisation.
topic e-skills
e-competences
information systems
positioning
benefits
url https://sajim.co.za/index.php/sajim/article/view/427
work_keys_str_mv AT zoranmitrovic positioningeskillswithinanorganisationaninformationsystemsmanagementviewpoint
_version_ 1725487290389626880