<oai_dc:dc xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd">
  <dc:format>application/pdf</dc:format>
  <dc:subject xml:lang="eng">B2B IT Sales</dc:subject>
  <dc:subject xml:lang="eng">Artificial Intelligence (AI)</dc:subject>
  <dc:subject xml:lang="eng">Sociomateriality</dc:subject>
  <dc:subject xml:lang="eng">Professional Identity</dc:subject>
  <dc:subject xml:lang="eng">Workflows</dc:subject>
  <dc:description xml:lang="eng">Adopting Artificial Intelligence (AI) has become an organizational imperative, placing B2B IT sales professionals in a unique and paradoxical position: they are the primary agents promoting this disruptive technology while their own professional lives are being reshaped by it. While existing research has explored AI&#39;s impact on sales, it has often remained at a managerial level. This thesis addresses that gap by providing a bottom-up view that privileges the sellers&#39; own perspectives. The central research question is: how is AI reshaping the workflows, relationships, and professional identities of B2B IT sales professionals? The study adopts a qualitative, exploratory approach guided by a sociomaterial lens. Data was collected through semi structured interviews with seven front-line sellers and analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis. The findings reveal that while AI offers significant efficiency gains, it also introduces a demanding &quot;curation workflow,&quot; creates new relational frictions around surveillance and authenticity, and generates profound anxieties about skill commodification. In response, sellers are actively reconfiguring their value proposition, pivoting to a distinctly &quot;human advantage&quot; rooted in strategic acumen, empathy, and trust to navigate the paradoxes of their evolving role.</dc:description>
  <dc:type xml:lang="eng">Text</dc:type>
  <dc:type xml:lang="eng">Master theses</dc:type>
  <dc:type xml:lang="ita">Testo</dc:type>
  <dc:type xml:lang="ita">Tesi di master</dc:type>
  <dc:date>2025</dc:date>
  <dc:title xml:lang="eng">Emerging workflows, relationships, and identities in business to-business (b2b) information technology (IT) sales</dc:title>
  <dc:contributor>Marguerite Barry</dc:contributor>
  <dc:contributor>Joao Baptista</dc:contributor>
  <dc:type xml:lang="deu">Text</dc:type>
  <dc:type xml:lang="deu">Masterarbeit</dc:type>
  <dc:rights>http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/</dc:rights>
  <dc:language>eng</dc:language>
  <dc:creator>Luan Ferreira de Avila</dc:creator>
  <dc:identifier>https://door.donau-uni.ac.at/o:5735</dc:identifier>
</oai_dc:dc>