Corporate intranet failures: Interpreting a case study through the lens of formative context
Journal article, 2006
Although intranets are well-established information environments, companies complain that their intranets are left under-utilised. Consulting the
standard management literature, it seems the medicine typically prescribed is tighter management control. In this study, we examine the use of and the attitudes towards an international company’s intranet. Although the respondents’ testimonies seem to be in line with existing literature, advocating centrality and control, we argue that this is only a superficial pattern. When the
informants’ statements are not accepted as facts but instead critically questioned to reveal the underlying attitudes, an alternative view emerges. Applying the notion of formative context to the intranet, we uncover the institutionalised
cognitive frames governing the actors’ reasoning and explain the clashes
between the espoused theory of intranet usage and the theory-in-use. In compliance with previous studies of information infrastructure, we conclude
that intranet management, too, is centred on control as the supreme management objective.
formative context
empowerment
intranet management
infrastructure