Abstract

This special issue comprises selected papers from the 24th and the 25th Bled eConference. The Bled eConference is an annual conference addressing especially eCommerce and eBusiness related topics. Furthermore, the conference targets all aspects of “e” and beyond. The 24th Bled eConference was titled “eFuture: Creating Solutions for the Individual, Organisations and Society”, and the 25th anniversary conference carried the overall title “eDependability: Reliable and Trustworthy eStructures, eProcesses, eOperations and eServices for the Future”. From both conferences selected papers have been invited to Electronic Markets by the respective research track and conference chairs. Subsequent submissions had to be clearly advanced and substantially revised compared to the original conference papers. All submissions underwent rigorous review procedures, as all submissions to Electronic Markets do. At this point, we would like to thank the authors for further developing their respective conference contributions. We are happy to present six research papers from the 24th and 25th Bled eConference. This special Issue includes three papers from the 24th Bled eConference addressing new data collection methods in IS research, procurement maturity and IT-alignment, and virtual worlds. Thus, all three papers are contributing to the overall theme of the 24th Bled eConference: eFuture. In their paper “Novice-based data collection methods for the study of IOIS: practice probes and learning communities”, the authors Kai Reimers, Robert B. Johnston, Xunhua Guo, Stefan Klein, Bin Xie, and Mingzhi Li address methodological issues in information systems research. As practice theory is rapidly gaining academic currency in the information systems literature, new methodological approaches have to be developed as well, the authors argue. The paper presents a systematic analysis of new methods of data collection versus other established and newly proposed methods specifically through the lens of practice theory. The research derives two essential requirements regarding data collection methods specific to practice theory and classifies existing data collection methods in view of these requirements. Afterwards, the authors present two new data collection methods and discuss their novelty. In the second paper titled “Procurement maturity and ITalignment models: overview and a case study” the authors bring together procurement maturity and IT-alignment models. The authors Johan Versendaal, Marjan van den Akker, Xiaochun Xing, and Bastiaan deBevere first present business/IT-alignment principles focussing on the procurement domain. In a second step, maturity levels for the procurement domain are developed. Finally, the business/ITalignment principles for procurement are being applied to the construction industry through a detailed case study. The study includes a validation of the findings. In their paper “Virtual worlds in competitive contexts: Analyzing eSports consumer needs”, Thomas Weiss and Sabrina Schiele address new 3D graphical environments on the Internet virtual worlds. The authors elaborate the question of what to offer in order to fulfill customers’ needs in those virtual worlds using the example of eSports environments. They apply Uses and Gratifications theory reporting on ten in-depth expert interviews as well as survey data collected from 360 eSports players. Afterwards, the results are reflected against the literature. The 25th Bled eConference in 2013 was entitled “eDependability: Reliable and Trustworthy eStructures, eProcesses, eOperations and eServices for the Future”. The first 25 years of the Bled eConference saw innovations and changes, and the “silver” issue asked whether the stormy years are over and whether we will mastered the arts and crafts of building new systems that we can depend on them. There are three papers from the 25th Bled eConference in this special issue addressing the conference’s topic: eDependability H.<D. Zimmermann (*) IPM-FHS, FHS St. Gallen University of Applied Sciences, Rosenbergstrasse 59, 9001 St. Gallen, Switzerland e-mail: hansdieter.zimmermann@fhsg.ch

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