What drives Web 2.0 adoption in South African civil society organisations

Background: The impact and consequences of social media adoption on society are only just being realised and studied in detail; consequently, there is no universal agreement as to the reasons for the adoption of these services. Even understanding why some social media services are popular remains to...

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Main Authors: Kiru Pillay, Manoj S. Maharaj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2014-10-01
Series:South African Journal of Information Management
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spelling doaj-33dd9047500c4b82b750a706447cc15e2020-11-25T00:10:05ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Information Management2078-18651560-683X2014-10-0110.4102/ sajim.v16i1.603What drives Web 2.0 adoption in South African civil society organisationsKiru Pillay0Manoj S. Maharaj1School of Management, Information Technology and Governance, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa School of Management, Information Technology and Governance, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa Background: The impact and consequences of social media adoption on society are only just being realised and studied in detail; consequently, there is no universal agreement as to the reasons for the adoption of these services. Even understanding why some social media services are popular remains to some extent elusive. The practical use of Web 2.0 does not provide any answers either with, for example, a noticeable difference in the way social media was strategically used by Barack Obama and Mitch Romney in the lead-up to the 2009 American elections. However, recent studies that have focused on social media adoption within specific sectors have begun to shed some light on these emerging adoption patterns; two studies in particular are illustrative: a 2012 study on the newspaper sector and a study on social media adoption and e-government. Objectives: This study investigates why South African civil society organisations (CSOs) adopt Web 2.0 services and the perceived and actual benefits of such adoption. Method: A survey questionnaire was sent to 1712 South African CSOs listed in the Prodder database to explore why certain social media services were adopted and the perceived benefits thereof. Results: Internal reasons for the adoption of social media services by South African CSOs coalesce around organisational visibility and access to information. External reasons focus on organisations needing to become more relevant and more connected to like-minded organisations and initiatives. Conclusion: The pervasiveness of Web 2.0 technologies makes it inevitable that CSOs will have to restructure themselves to remain relevant.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kiru Pillay
Manoj S. Maharaj
spellingShingle Kiru Pillay
Manoj S. Maharaj
What drives Web 2.0 adoption in South African civil society organisations
South African Journal of Information Management
author_facet Kiru Pillay
Manoj S. Maharaj
author_sort Kiru Pillay
title What drives Web 2.0 adoption in South African civil society organisations
title_short What drives Web 2.0 adoption in South African civil society organisations
title_full What drives Web 2.0 adoption in South African civil society organisations
title_fullStr What drives Web 2.0 adoption in South African civil society organisations
title_full_unstemmed What drives Web 2.0 adoption in South African civil society organisations
title_sort what drives web 2.0 adoption in south african civil society organisations
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Information Management
issn 2078-1865
1560-683X
publishDate 2014-10-01
description Background: The impact and consequences of social media adoption on society are only just being realised and studied in detail; consequently, there is no universal agreement as to the reasons for the adoption of these services. Even understanding why some social media services are popular remains to some extent elusive. The practical use of Web 2.0 does not provide any answers either with, for example, a noticeable difference in the way social media was strategically used by Barack Obama and Mitch Romney in the lead-up to the 2009 American elections. However, recent studies that have focused on social media adoption within specific sectors have begun to shed some light on these emerging adoption patterns; two studies in particular are illustrative: a 2012 study on the newspaper sector and a study on social media adoption and e-government. Objectives: This study investigates why South African civil society organisations (CSOs) adopt Web 2.0 services and the perceived and actual benefits of such adoption. Method: A survey questionnaire was sent to 1712 South African CSOs listed in the Prodder database to explore why certain social media services were adopted and the perceived benefits thereof. Results: Internal reasons for the adoption of social media services by South African CSOs coalesce around organisational visibility and access to information. External reasons focus on organisations needing to become more relevant and more connected to like-minded organisations and initiatives. Conclusion: The pervasiveness of Web 2.0 technologies makes it inevitable that CSOs will have to restructure themselves to remain relevant.
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