The Nordic and Baltic Journal of Information & Communications Technologies is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal promoting debate on ICT developments among academics, analysts, professionals, and practitioners. The journal publishes articles in English.
Aims and scope: “The journal NB!ICT is cross-interdisciplinary and focusses on the interrelationships between technology developments in the ICT field and economic, political and social developments. NB!ICT provides a platform for a critical debate on these areas with a focus on the Nordic/ Baltic area, but with an international and global perspective. NB!ICT provides an in-depth and holistic view of Multi Business Model and Technology Innovation from practical to theoretical aspects covering topics that are equally valuable for practitioners as well as academia – also those new in the field. The journal covers Multi Business Model and Technology Innovation issues and solutions thereof. The publication takes a holistic, strategical, network based, global and sustainable view to the Multi Business Model Innovation Approach. Some example topics are: Multi Business Model Innovation and Technology in Green Energy, ICT, IOT, Recycling, Health Care Business Model Ecosystem, Multi Business Model Innovation Leadership and Management in Start-ups and SME’s, Cloud based Multi Business Model Innovation and Technologies, Business Model Eco systems, Open and Closed Business Models, Persuasive and Sensing Business models. The target audience of the journal is researchers and decision-makers from academia, industry, organisations and ministries as well as regulators.”
Frequency: continuous article publication
Launched: 2018
Peer reviewed: yes, single-blind review
Open access: yes; a publication fee (article processing charge, ARC)
Languages: English
Genres: research article, interview
Length of research articles: N/A
Reference style: N/A
Book reviews: no
Publisher: River Publishers, Denmark
Venue of publication: Gistrup
Publication level: 1 in Finland, 1 in Norway
Indexing: BFI, Google Scholar