posted on 2012-08-02, 09:07authored byPar J. Agerfalk, Brian FitzgeraldBrian Fitzgerald, Helena Holmstrom Olsson, Eoin Ó Conchúir
This paper presents a psychological contract perspective on the use of open
source as an offshore outsourcing strategy – open-sourcing as we term it here. Building
on previous research on IS outsourcing, a theoretical framework for understanding commercial software organizations involvement in open source software (OSS) is derived.
The framework is used in a qualitative case study involving a commercial organization,
the Irish-based global middleware company IONA, as the customer, and representatives
from the open source community, as suppliers of services to IONA. The study reveals an
ongoing shift from OSS as community of individual developers to OSS as community of
commercial organizations, primarily SMEs. It also reveals that outsourcing to the OSS
community provides ample opportunity for companies to headhunt top developers –
hence moving from outsourcing to a largely unknown OSS workforce towards recruitment
of talented developers from the open source community. In a similar fashion, the process
allows the development community to get to know the customer organization better.
Overall, the key watchwords for open-sourcing are partnership, building of mutual trust,
flexibility, tact and complementariness: The customer and community need to establish a
trusted partnership of shared responsibility in building an overall ecosystem to deliver the
product. The customer has to be flexible in accepting consensus on the development
priorities and the functionality that will be built in. The community must be flexible in affording more transparency into the development process. Also, the complementary skills
offered by each stakeholder are key to successfully nurturing the ecosystem.
History
Publication
29th Information Systems Research Seminar in Scandinavia;