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|Title=Unblackboxing Decision Makers’ Interpretations of IS Certifications in the Context of Cloud Service Certifications | |Title=Unblackboxing Decision Makers’ Interpretations of IS Certifications in the Context of Cloud Service Certifications | ||
|Year=2018 | |Year=2018 |
Version vom 9. August 2018, 07:59 Uhr
Unblackboxing Decision Makers’ Interpretations of IS Certifications in the Context of Cloud Service Certifications
Unblackboxing Decision Makers’ Interpretations of IS Certifications in the Context of Cloud Service Certifications
Veröffentlicht: 2018 Mai
Journal: Journal of the Association for Information Systems (JAIS)
Referierte Veröffentlichung
Kurzfassung
IS literature has predominantly taken a black box perspective on IS certifications and studied the diverse set of their outcomes, such as signaling superior quality and increased customer trust. As a result, there is little understanding about the structure of certifications and its role in decision makers’ evaluations of certifications to achieve these outcomes. However, idiosyncrasies of novel IT services such as cloud services create a need to ‘unblackbox’ certifications and theorize about their constituting structural building blocks and structural elements, and to examine the key features that might lead to a more favorable evaluation of a certification by decision makers. To advance theory building on certifications, this article develops an empirically grounded typology of certifications’ key structural building blocks and structural elements, and examines how they interpret substantive features within these elements. Using evidence from 20 interviews with decision makers of a wide range of industries in the context of cloud service certifications, we find that a decision maker’s aggregate evaluation of a certification is a function of their interpretations of its features guided by cognitive interpretive schemas along six key structural elements contrasted with the decision makers’ expectations regarding the certification’s outcomes. This study contributes by conceptualizing certifications’ necessary and sufficient elements, constructing a nascent theory on decision makers’ evaluations of certifications, and illuminating the dynamics between certifications’ structural elements and outcomes as a co-evolutionary process. We discuss implications for the certification literature and give managerial advice regarding the factors to consider when designing and evaluating certifications.
Critical Information Infrastructures