Customer Relationship Management System (CRM) and Information Ethics in Call Centres - 'You are the Weakest Link. Goodbye!'

This paper catalogues the rise and rise of call centres in the North West of England, UK and their use of CRM systems. CRM systems often imply new technologies and new ways of working. However, in this account we explore the historical development of the telegraph and work in early telephone exchang...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Helen Richardson, Kate Richardson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Australasian Association for Information Systems 2002-05-01
Series:Australasian Journal of Information Systems
Subjects:
CRM
Online Access:http://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/203
id doaj-5523efc6764c46089329c0f2fc0c7cf5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5523efc6764c46089329c0f2fc0c7cf52021-08-02T12:21:25ZengAustralasian Association for Information SystemsAustralasian Journal of Information Systems1449-86181449-86182002-05-019210.3127/ajis.v9i2.203169Customer Relationship Management System (CRM) and Information Ethics in Call Centres - 'You are the Weakest Link. Goodbye!'Helen RichardsonKate RichardsonThis paper catalogues the rise and rise of call centres in the North West of England, UK and their use of CRM systems. CRM systems often imply new technologies and new ways of working. However, in this account we explore the historical development of the telegraph and work in early telephone exchanges and find the same old story. Our consideration of the ethics of CRM system use and some inherent contradictions are in terms of privacy, communication richness, management methods and computer ethics in an organizational context. Call centres today are viewed by some as offering satisfying employment of intrinsic value, for others, they are the 'new sweatshops of the 21st century' (Belt et al 2000). Our interpretative field study makes a contribution to this debate.http://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/203CRMUnited Kingdomethics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helen Richardson
Kate Richardson
spellingShingle Helen Richardson
Kate Richardson
Customer Relationship Management System (CRM) and Information Ethics in Call Centres - 'You are the Weakest Link. Goodbye!'
Australasian Journal of Information Systems
CRM
United Kingdom
ethics
author_facet Helen Richardson
Kate Richardson
author_sort Helen Richardson
title Customer Relationship Management System (CRM) and Information Ethics in Call Centres - 'You are the Weakest Link. Goodbye!'
title_short Customer Relationship Management System (CRM) and Information Ethics in Call Centres - 'You are the Weakest Link. Goodbye!'
title_full Customer Relationship Management System (CRM) and Information Ethics in Call Centres - 'You are the Weakest Link. Goodbye!'
title_fullStr Customer Relationship Management System (CRM) and Information Ethics in Call Centres - 'You are the Weakest Link. Goodbye!'
title_full_unstemmed Customer Relationship Management System (CRM) and Information Ethics in Call Centres - 'You are the Weakest Link. Goodbye!'
title_sort customer relationship management system (crm) and information ethics in call centres - 'you are the weakest link. goodbye!'
publisher Australasian Association for Information Systems
series Australasian Journal of Information Systems
issn 1449-8618
1449-8618
publishDate 2002-05-01
description This paper catalogues the rise and rise of call centres in the North West of England, UK and their use of CRM systems. CRM systems often imply new technologies and new ways of working. However, in this account we explore the historical development of the telegraph and work in early telephone exchanges and find the same old story. Our consideration of the ethics of CRM system use and some inherent contradictions are in terms of privacy, communication richness, management methods and computer ethics in an organizational context. Call centres today are viewed by some as offering satisfying employment of intrinsic value, for others, they are the 'new sweatshops of the 21st century' (Belt et al 2000). Our interpretative field study makes a contribution to this debate.
topic CRM
United Kingdom
ethics
url http://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/203
work_keys_str_mv AT helenrichardson customerrelationshipmanagementsystemcrmandinformationethicsincallcentresyouaretheweakestlinkgoodbye
AT katerichardson customerrelationshipmanagementsystemcrmandinformationethicsincallcentresyouaretheweakestlinkgoodbye
_version_ 1721232613895569408