Managerial work revisited:shadowing in an IT company

This master’s thesis is an ethnographic study, exploring managerial work in an IT company in Finland. This study follows the model set by Mintzberg’s (1973) classic investigation of managerial work, and Tengblad’s (2006) follow-up study 30 years later. I collected over 30 hours of data by shadowing...

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Main Author: Vainionpää, F. (Fanny)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Oulu 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:oulu-201706022486
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:fi:oulu-201706022486
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spelling ndltd-oulo.fi-oai-oulu.fi-nbnfioulu-2017060224862018-06-22T04:50:48ZManagerial work revisited:shadowing in an IT companyVainionpää, F. (Fanny)info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess© Fanny Vainionpää, 2017Information Processing ScienceThis master’s thesis is an ethnographic study, exploring managerial work in an IT company in Finland. This study follows the model set by Mintzberg’s (1973) classic investigation of managerial work, and Tengblad’s (2006) follow-up study 30 years later. I collected over 30 hours of data by shadowing one IT manager and then compared the results to the earlier studies. By combining the qualitative method of shadowing and the method of quantifying information, the study offers information from an outsider’s perspective. Interviews and discussion were also a part of the study, which offer the perspective of the manager. Based on the observations of the day-to-day activities, modern managerial IT work is surprisingly similar to the descriptions found in previous literature. The work is fragmented and composed of a lot of communication. Yet, some behavioural patterns are different. Compared to the previous studies, the IT manager’s work includes more desk work. This is largely due to the use of digital use in communication with people working in different locations. Instant messages and calls allow information to be passed on at a fast pace. Online tools help modern managers visualise information, enabling them to make forecasts and aiding in decision-making. It is also visible that there is a low power distance and characteristics of a feminine culture; managers look for consensus in their decision-making. The manager plans mainly for the short term, as situations change quickly in the project-based IT business. This study provides future directions and discusses its limitations. For example, the organisation was going through structural changes, which may explain the large amount of person-to-person communication.University of Oulu2017-06-02info:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttp://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:oulu-201706022486urn:nbn:fi:oulu-201706022486eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Information Processing Science
spellingShingle Information Processing Science
Vainionpää, F. (Fanny)
Managerial work revisited:shadowing in an IT company
description This master’s thesis is an ethnographic study, exploring managerial work in an IT company in Finland. This study follows the model set by Mintzberg’s (1973) classic investigation of managerial work, and Tengblad’s (2006) follow-up study 30 years later. I collected over 30 hours of data by shadowing one IT manager and then compared the results to the earlier studies. By combining the qualitative method of shadowing and the method of quantifying information, the study offers information from an outsider’s perspective. Interviews and discussion were also a part of the study, which offer the perspective of the manager. Based on the observations of the day-to-day activities, modern managerial IT work is surprisingly similar to the descriptions found in previous literature. The work is fragmented and composed of a lot of communication. Yet, some behavioural patterns are different. Compared to the previous studies, the IT manager’s work includes more desk work. This is largely due to the use of digital use in communication with people working in different locations. Instant messages and calls allow information to be passed on at a fast pace. Online tools help modern managers visualise information, enabling them to make forecasts and aiding in decision-making. It is also visible that there is a low power distance and characteristics of a feminine culture; managers look for consensus in their decision-making. The manager plans mainly for the short term, as situations change quickly in the project-based IT business. This study provides future directions and discusses its limitations. For example, the organisation was going through structural changes, which may explain the large amount of person-to-person communication.
author Vainionpää, F. (Fanny)
author_facet Vainionpää, F. (Fanny)
author_sort Vainionpää, F. (Fanny)
title Managerial work revisited:shadowing in an IT company
title_short Managerial work revisited:shadowing in an IT company
title_full Managerial work revisited:shadowing in an IT company
title_fullStr Managerial work revisited:shadowing in an IT company
title_full_unstemmed Managerial work revisited:shadowing in an IT company
title_sort managerial work revisited:shadowing in an it company
publisher University of Oulu
publishDate 2017
url http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:oulu-201706022486
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:fi:oulu-201706022486
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