environment
whose construction is determined by an
organization’s structure of signification, domination,
and legitimation. Any change in these structures
indicates the “appropriation” and use of technology.
“Structure of signification” refers to the way the
concepts and procedures intrinsic in the knowledge
embedded in IT directs the manner are interpreted and
work is conducted in the organization (Orlikowski,
1992). “Structure of domination” refers to IT’s
ability to control the work of organizational members
once it is deployed. “Structure of legitimation”
refers to the ability of IT to sanction a particular way
of conducting work and thus, propagate a set of
norms about what is considered legitimate business
practice. Orlikowski also incorporates the three
modalities of structuration --- interpretive schemes,
resources, and norms --- in her application of
structures of signification, domination, and
legitimation in the deployment of IT in an
organization.
2.2
Omni-channel Retailing
The retailing industry was already on its way to
transitioning to omni-channel retailing, but the onset
of the Covid19 pandemic in March 2020 accelerated
this shift. To stem the rapid spread of the virus,
governments worldwide instituted formal measures
mandating lockdowns and social distancing, thus,
severely limiting if not stopping customer traffic to
brick-and-mortar venues for products and services
(Verhoef, 2021; Zeynep, 2021; Weber, 2021;
Kulkarni, 2020). Online purchasing was encouraged
instead resulting in an unexpected and unprecedented
boon for ecommerce and more so, for omni-channel
retailing.
The concept of “omni-channel retailing” has
been
revisited again recently especially with the
onset of the 2020 Covid19 pandemic (Verhoef,
2021; Zeynep, 2021; Weber, 2021). Verhoef,
Kannan, and Inman (2015) refer to omni-channel
retailing as “…a business model in which different
channels are integrated to provide consistency to
consumers throughout their experience."
Brynjolffson, Hu, and Rahman (2013) define omni-
channel retailing as a business model that provides
customers a seamless shopping experience on
account of using integrated sales channels. Picot-
Coupey, Huré, and Piveteau (2016) view omni-
channel retailing as a vehicle that enables customers
to move seamlessly between integrated front-end
and back-end operations (involving order fulfillment
and last-mile delivery options) across different
connected channels. To Vanheems,
omni-channel
retailing refers to “…a strategy of
assembling
various channels into a single distribution
system
promoting interchangeability and the transfer
of
customers between channels...” (Vanheems,
2009).
The Aberdeen Group, an IT consulting firm
in
the U.S., on the other hand, considers omni-channel
retailing “…as a set of integrated processes and
decisions that support a unified view of a brand from
the perspective of product purchase, return, and
exchange, irrespective of the channel (in-store,
online, mobile, call center, or social)….” (The
Aberdeen Group, 2012). The critical role of item-
level RFID tagging has also been articulated by Bill
Hardgrave, founder and former director of the RFID
Research Center of the University of Arkansas
(Hardgrave, 2015, 2012) : “’Anywhere, anytime,
any product’
is the mantra of omni-channel retailing
and retailers of
all types are clamoring to make it
happen….Customers should have a consistent and
seamless experience whether they’re shopping in a
store, on a mobile device, on a home computer or via
a catalog….But omni-channel retailing starts with
operations --- in particular, those that deliver real-
time, accurate inventory data efficiently and cost-
effectively. If you don’t know what you have, where
you have it and when you have it, the great mobile or
online app you created for your customers is
worthless….” (Hardgrave, 2012).
Omni-channel retailing has its specific
technological and business process change
requirements in order to guarantee a successful
customer experience. Customers expect both
information (content) and business process
consistency across the integrated sales channels they
are using to complete a purchase transaction (Hure,
Picot-Coupey, and Ackermann, 2017). Changes will
have to be made in the firm’s enterprisewide- and
supply chain- related business processes to support
an integrated suite of sales channesls. A vital digital
gateway supporting integrated sales channels is a
connected artery linking a firm’s inventory system,
order management system, and warehouse
management system (Zeynep, 2021). Front-end and
back-end ecommerce systems operations also need
to be fine tuned in order to fulfill orders accurately
and on time as elements of even just a single
customer transaction may require synchronizing
elements of that purchase involving different sales
channels (Weber, 2021; Mirsch, Lehrer and Jung
(2016). Front-end operations include the website
user interface that give access to the firm’s
electronic catalog of products, shopping cart
features, and an online ordering process. For
instance, a customer may use a store’s physical store