🤖 AI Summary
This study addresses the profound transformations in user roles, workflows, and collaboration patterns within enterprise software platforms driven by artificial intelligence, which existing role frameworks—such as the BTP user type matrix—struggle to accommodate. Through 20 expert interviews and a participatory design workshop involving 24 participants, the research employs qualitative methods to investigate structural shifts in developer roles on the SAP Business Technology Platform. Findings reveal three key trends: automation of operational tasks, expanded human-AI collaboration, and increased reliance on agent-based systems. In response, the study argues for a necessary reconfiguration of role taxonomies and governance mechanisms, offering both theoretical grounding and practical guidance for designing and governing AI-native enterprise software.
📝 Abstract
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is rapidly reshaping the nature of work in software development, transforming user roles, workflows, and collaboration patterns across enterprise platforms. This qualitative study investigates how AI alters professional responsibilities within the context of SAP's Business Technology Platform (BTP), combining expert interviews (n=20) and a participatory workshop (n=24). The results reveal substantial shifts in day-to-day tasks and roles in the development domain, characterized by increasing automation of operational tasks, expanding human-AI collaboration, and growing reliance on agentic AI systems. The study further identifies significant implications for existing user-role frameworks, such as the BTP User Type Matrix, which requires adaptation as the workforce is undergoing significant role specific changes. Collectively, these findings highlight a workforce landscape in transition and underscore the need for revised role taxonomies, new governance and oversight functions, and updated design approaches for AI-native enterprise software systems.