How Technology Shapes the Actor-Network of Convergence Services: A Case of Mobile Banking

The continuous advancement of mobile technologies offers an opportunity for mobile carriers and banks to offer mobile banking services. However, such convergence of services from mobile carriers and banks raises many complex issues, particularly because it requires alliances among the actors who have different and sometimes conflicting interests. Using the mobile banking sector in Korea, this paper examines how the alliances between mobile carriers, banks, and other related parties are formed, and analyzes how technology affects competition and collaboration among them when a new convergence service is created by two, previously unrelated industries, in this case, by banks and mobile carriers. In so doing, we use the actor– network theory (ANT). As ANT helps analyze how actors form alliances and enroll other actors including nonhuman actors (i.e., technology) to secure their interests through the use of the technology, there is a fit between ANT and the emergence of new, converged services. This paper shows that it is technology that shapes the actor–network of convergence services, and that competition between banks and mobile carriers in mobile banking is about how to inscribe their interests in a given technology and thereby who can translate customers into their own network.

[1]  Jonathan P. Allen Redefining the network: enrollment strategies in the PDA industry , 2004, Inf. Technol. People.

[2]  Jonny Holmström,et al.  Drifting technologies and multi-purpose networks: the case of the Swedish cashcard , 2001, Inf. Organ..

[3]  Henrik Linderoth,et al.  An Actor Network Theory Perspective on IT-projects: A Battle of Wills , 2003 .

[4]  Eric Monteiro,et al.  Inscribing behaviour in information infrastructure standards , 1997 .

[5]  Geoff Walsham,et al.  GIS for District-Level Administration in India: Problems and Opportunities , 1999, MIS Q..

[6]  M. Callon The Sociology of an Actor-Network: The Case of the Electric Vehicle , 1986 .

[7]  Heejin Lee,et al.  Do we need broadband? Impacts of broadband in Korea , 2005 .

[8]  Stephanie Watts,et al.  Contested artifact: technology sensemaking, actor networks, and the shaping of the Web browser , 2004, Inf. Technol. People.

[9]  Heejin Lee,et al.  The Growth of Broadband and Electronic Commerce in South Korea: Contributing Factors , 2003, Inf. Soc..

[10]  Christopher J. Atkinson,et al.  The multidimensional systemic representation of actor networks: modelling breast cancer treatment decision-making , 2002, Proceedings of the 35th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences.

[11]  M. Callon,et al.  Mapping the dynamics of science and technology : sociology of science in the real world , 1988 .

[12]  M. Callon Some Elements of a Sociology of Translation: Domestication of the Scallops and the Fishermen of St Brieuc Bay , 1984 .

[13]  Gary McCulloch,et al.  Documentary Research: In Education, History and the Social Sciences , 2004 .

[14]  Ralf Klischewski,et al.  Commitments Enabling Co-Operation in Distributed Information Systems Development , 2001, ECIS.

[15]  Ramiro Montealegre,et al.  Trojan actor-networks and swift translation: Bringing actor-network theory to IT project escalation studies , 2004, Inf. Technol. People.

[16]  Marc Berg,et al.  The nature of the Net: constructing reliability of health information on the Web , 2004, Inf. Technol. People.

[17]  M. Callon Society in the making: The study of technology as a tool for sociological analysis , 1987 .

[18]  Marc Berg,et al.  Guest editors' introduction: Actor-network theory and information systems. What's so special? , 2004, Inf. Technol. People.