Failed Sociotechnical Plans and Suggestions
Sociotechnical
plans are designed to integrate technology with social culture, human needs,
goals, and the broader social context
1. Technology: rapid technological changes or failures
2. Culture: organizational resistance to new culture
3. Finance: financial pressure in volatile markets
4. Legal: constant changes in law
5. Ethics: misaligned ethical statements and practice can cause backlash
6. Temporal: enough time may not be available to fully implement
7. Society: social norms/moral relativism about how technology should be integrated
8. Politics: local, national, and global geo-political factors can impact the implementation
The
company’s sociotechnical plan I would like to review is MapQuest. MapQuest came
about in 1996, by GeoSystems Global Corporation
Figure 1
MapQuest Results
for “Coffee” Category, Showing Integrated Yelp Results
Note: This map was generated from mapquest.com on a
PC. Mobile results may vary
Suggested
Sociotechnical Plan
The future of mobile GPS and mapping apps
seems somewhat limited. Some say that Augmented Reality (AR)-based walking
directions may be integrated
One
idea for implementing a new sociotechnical plan could be to acquire the
360-degree imaging data for their top regions/test region. Develop an Augmented
Reality (AR) integrated map/app. Since other companies are projected to
implement AR-based walking navigation (presumably with AR-headsets/smart
glasses), the idea is to acquire the necessary tools and equipment to begin competing
in that market. I envision potential rewards, including financial, for
gathering the missing data. For the navigation, implementing features like speed
trap, workers, and other user reports could also provide rewards to users. All
of those recommendations are essential to competing.
Some
additional ideas that may offer competitive sociotechnical advantages is to
focus on trying to become the default map provider for an automaker or
industry, developing an app to put Heads-up Displays (HUDs) on vehicles, either
by the manufacturer or as a 3rd-party dashboard item, offer users
the ability to browse virtual Augmented Reality (AR) locations, timelines, community
forums, dating apps, and even realistic videos and spaces. Facebook’s Meta
Horizon aims to create similar social experiences, but they do not have a mobile
maps application. By using a Large Geospatial Model (LGM) with these features, unique
apps and features can be developed, like special user feedback videos, guides,
and insights.
Impacts
The impact implementing the suggested
socioeconomical plans into the MapQuest product line would significantly change
its trajectory. Failure to innovate and keep up with competition has led to
MapQuest being hardly known. Switching from a completely subscription-based
service to one that provides modern technology, excitement, and rewards would
have a major culture shift on its users and stakeholders. Most leading mobile
GPS mapping applications are free, provide many extended free features, and a
more user-friendly design. It is worth investing in a beta trial version.
Relevancy
Since most of the major GPS mapping service
providers are already planning on implementing several of these features,
MapQuest may rely on its long-history, speedy innovation, and future planning
consultants so that they can keep up in the current market. While they are
getting up-to-speed, they should also have a product development team planning
on future sociotechnical innovations. As markets expand, failure to keep up
will lead to eventual replacement. It is highly relevant for MapQuest to
aggressively innovate, if it wants to succeed in tomorrow’s mapping environment.
Two Forces That
May Impact Innovation Idea
Two
major forces that may impact the proposed sociotechnical plan for MapQuest
could be: Google Maps as the default Android maps application, and Apple Maps
as the default iOS map application. The prevalence and preference of the Android-
and iOS-based devices over the past decade show no signs of fading away. If
MapQuest is unable to offer something significantly more appealing, there are
limited markets it can target. As I mentioned, the auto industry might be one
to look at, and a separate dating service built-in could be quite a change.
They do have the data and sensors already.
Conclusion
Overall,
MapQuest was a market leader in its time. The service is not terrible, but I
personally hardly ever use it. In fact, every other maps-based business listing
has allowed me to register my ownership and manage the listing for free. In addition,
several webmasters’ tools are available. MapQuest does have integration with
Yelp, which is sometimes more popular for local reviews than Google reviews. They
have an established reputation, presence, and infrastructure. If they could at
least find one niche market to lock in their services with, it could help to
propel them through innovation.
References
Bhai, G.
(2023, August 10). Sociotechnical plan. Retrieved from
thegurusworld.blog:
https://thegurusworld.blog/2023/08/10/sociotechnical-plan/
Chan, S. (2020, February
26). Digital Map market plots towards the future. Retrieved from
newsroom.cisco.com:
https://newsroom.cisco.com/c/r/newsroom/en/us/a/y2020/m02/digital-map-market-plots-towards-the-future.html
MapQuest. (n.d.). Official
MapQuest - Maps, driving directions, live traffic. Retrieved February 17,
2025, from mapquest.com: https://www.mapquest.com/search/Coffee
Shoam, A. (2024, May 13). What
ever happened to MapQuest? Retrieved from techspot.com:
https://www.techspot.com/article/2841-mapquest/
Swartz, J. (2024, December 20). Pokémon Go Data is mapping out this geospatial system - digital CXO. Retrieved from digitalcxo.com: https://digitalcxo.com/article/pokemon-go-data-is-mapping-out-this-geospatial-system/