Successful ICT projects depend on complex, interrelated sociological and technical factors for which there are no standard theoretical framework for prediction or analysis. Morphological analysis is a problem-solving method for defining, linking, and evaluating problem spaces that are inherently nonquantitative. In this article, the authors show how their research team created a telephony impact model using morphological analysis to strategically select a national ICT telephony project for South Africa from several possibilities, based on nonquantitative, socio-technical criteria. The telephony impact model provides a rigorous framework to the diagnostic and planning phases of our action research that is a vast improvement over “best practices” guidelines. They believe that this approach takes a first step toward predictive models and theories for ICT deployment.
Reference:
Plauché, M, De Waal, A, Sharma Grover, A and Gumede, T. 2010. Morphological analysis: a method for selecting ICT applications in South African government service delivery. Information Technologies and International Development, Vol 6(1), pp 1-20
Plauché, M., De Waal, A., Sharma Grover, A., & Gumede, T. (2010). Morphological analysis: a method for selecting ICT applications in South African government service delivery. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5504
Plauché, M, A De Waal, A Sharma Grover, and T Gumede "Morphological analysis: a method for selecting ICT applications in South African government service delivery." (2010) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5504
Plauché M, De Waal A, Sharma Grover A, Gumede T. Morphological analysis: a method for selecting ICT applications in South African government service delivery. 2010; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5504.
Copyright: 2010 University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism. This paper was published under the Creative Commons License