Important Notes

Please read the following notes before contacting us and/or submitting your application:

  • The Chair of Information Systems and Strategic IT Management can offer supervision of Bachelor/Master theses only to students enrolled as Business Information Systems (Wirtschaftsinformatik) students or students of the Faculty of Business Administration and Economics. All other students are required by examination regulations to have supervision by their faculty. Those requirements are not subject to any exceptions so please only apply in case you meet them to avoid unnecessary time effort and rejections.
  • The Chair of Information Systems and Strategic IT Management can offer supervision of Bachelor/Master theses written only in English language.
  • We would like to inform you that due to capacity constraints, we are currently only accepting new supervisees on a waiting list basis. Interested students should send their proposed research topic, curriculum vitae, and transcript of records to the designated supervisor. However, you should be aware that you will be placed on a waiting list and that it will take 3 to 9 months, depending on the topic area, before you will be offered a supervison. Thank you for your understanding.

Offered Subjects

[BA] Developing and Analyzing an Indicator System for a Specific Smart City Domain

Art der Arbeit
  • Bachelorarbeit Wirtschaftsinformatik
Status
Themenangebot
Ansprechpartner*in

Kurzfassung

Background and Motivation

Smart City initiatives aim to address a wide range of urban challenges, such as sustainable mobility, climate adaptation, flood protection, or energy transition. To monitor and evaluate progress in these areas, municipalities increasingly rely on indicator-based assessments and key performance indicators (KPIs). However, while numerous KPIs are discussed in academic literature and policy frameworks, many of these indicators are not systematically collected or readily available in municipal practice.

In particular, cities often face limitations in terms of data availability, data quality, and organizational capacity, which restrict the feasibility of comprehensive indicator-based assessments. As a result, Smart City studies frequently rely on proxy indicators or technology-driven metrics, while domain-specific and context-sensitive indicators remain underdeveloped or underutilized. 

Domain-specific indicator systems therefore need to balance analytical ambition with practical feasibility. They should reflect the specific characteristics of individual Smart City domains while taking into account which KPIs are realistically measurable and accessible for municipalities. Such systems can support more meaningful assessments and improve the interpretability of comparative Smart City analyses.

Research Objectives

The objective of this bachelor thesis is to develop and analyze an indicator system for one selected Smart City domain. The specific domain (e.g., mobility, climate adaptation, flood protection, energy) will be defined in coordination with the supervisor.

The thesis aims to:

  • Identify and review relevant indicators and indicator frameworks for the selected Smart City domain in academic literature and applied studies;

  • Systematically structure domain-specific indicators within a coherent indicator system;

  • Analyze qualitative relationships and interdependencies between indicators within the selected domain;

  • Assess the practical applicability and feasibility of the indicators from a municipal perspective, including data availability and collection effort;

  • Derive recommendations for the design of domain-specific indicator systems for Smart City assessments.

Methodology

The thesis will follow a structured qualitative research approach, including:

  • A systematic literature review focusing on indicators and KPIs for the selected Smart City domain;

  • Conceptual analysis and structuring of indicators into a coherent indicator system;

  • Qualitative assessment of indicator relevance, data availability, and feasibility, potentially supported by expert interviews with municipal practitioners;

  • Synthesis of findings into a domain-specific indicator system proposal.

The methodological scope will be aligned with the requirements of a bachelor thesis.

Expected Contribution

This bachelor thesis will provide a structured and practice-oriented analysis of indicators for a specific Smart City domain. The results will contribute to a better understanding of how domain-specific indicator systems can be designed to balance analytical rigor with practical feasibility in municipal contexts.

Interested students are invited to send an e-mail to: tim.bree (at) uni-due.de

Further Thesis Topics

In the context of our research project on Individual Productivity we offer a diverse set of bachelor and master theses. The following list contains potential topics that may be tailored and refined according to the current state of the research project and individual preferences:

Bachelor/Master:

  • Charting Productivity Tool Innovations (Marktanalyse)
  • Personal Productivity and Productivity Tools in Information Systems Research – A Comprehensive Literature Review
  • Research on Personal Productivity Tools – A Literature Review
  • Towards An Object Model for the Personal Productivity Domain

Master:

  • Toxic Productivity and Its Influence on Well-Being: An Exploratory Study
  • Current Research on Attention and Focus and its Implications for Personal Productivity Software Design
  • Current Research on Memory and Learning and its Implications for Personal Productivity Software Design
  • Current Psychological Research on Creativity and its Implications for Personal Productivity Software Design
  • Current Psychological Research on Multitasking and its Implications for Personal Productivity Software Design
  • Investigating the Phenomenon of Technostress and its Implications for Personal Productivity
  • Gamification and its Potential and Implications for the Design of Personal Productivity Software
  • The Role and Potential of Visual Framing for the Design of Personal Productivity Software
  • Artificial Intelligence and its Potential for Personal Productivity Software
  • The Role of Habits for Personal Productivity
  • The Role of (Life) Goals for Personal Productivity

In case you are interested in one of the topics, please do not hesitate to contact us for further information.