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First published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
This book addresses the measurement of the effect of information
technology (IT) investments on a firm's productivity. Determining a
quantifiable impact of a firm's IT has plagued senior executives,
researchers, and policy-makers for several years, as evidenced by
articles in trade magazines such as Fortune and Businessweek and in
academic journals such as Management Science. Simple statistical
techniques for measuring IT impact in a firm are fraught with
methodological problems, as these techniques do not account for
either the causal direction in managerial decision making or the
behavioral assumptions about firms. Therefore, such studies have
led to results and inferences that are not generalizable. While
studies that measure the satisfaction of people who use IT are
important, management typically would like to know whether IT has
reduced operation costs by streamlining processes or increased
revenues by increasing the demand-meeting capability of the firm.
This book attempts to determine cost-reduction or
output-enhancement that may be linked to IT investments through
methodological sophistication.
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