Empirical investigation of the relationship between use and impacts of collaborative information technologies

Collaborative information technologies (CIT) to support groups working together or collaborating to accomplish tasks is becoming increasingly popular. Practitioner reports suggest that collaboration can have a significant influence on business performance and can lead to a sustained competitive adva...

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Main Authors: Bajwa, D., Pervan, Graham, Lewis, F.
Other Authors: D. Marc Kilgour
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Wilfrid Laurier University 2009
Online Access:http://info.wlu.ca/~wwwmath/faculty/kilgour/gdn/proceedings.htm
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43147
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author Bajwa, D.
Pervan, Graham
Lewis, F.
author2 D. Marc Kilgour
author_facet D. Marc Kilgour
Bajwa, D.
Pervan, Graham
Lewis, F.
author_sort Bajwa, D.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Collaborative information technologies (CIT) to support groups working together or collaborating to accomplish tasks is becoming increasingly popular. Practitioner reports suggest that collaboration can have a significant influence on business performance and can lead to a sustained competitive advantage in a turbulent global environment (Frost and Sullivan, 2006). However, despite the large investments that organizations have been making in CIT (Hansen and Nohria, 2004), recent empirical evidence suggests that the utilization of CIT in organizations across five global regions is surprisingly limited and it generally does not meet the expectations of the practitioner and academic communities, in spite of substantial efforts of organizations to make such technologies available/accessible to their end-users (Bajwa et al., 2008). Is it plausible that CIT use may not have substantial impacts or lead to impacts that are not desirable to organizations? Our research focuses on addressing this research question through a large-scale macro-level investigation.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-431472022-12-09T07:12:34Z Empirical investigation of the relationship between use and impacts of collaborative information technologies Bajwa, D. Pervan, Graham Lewis, F. D. Marc Kilgour Qian Wang Collaborative information technologies (CIT) to support groups working together or collaborating to accomplish tasks is becoming increasingly popular. Practitioner reports suggest that collaboration can have a significant influence on business performance and can lead to a sustained competitive advantage in a turbulent global environment (Frost and Sullivan, 2006). However, despite the large investments that organizations have been making in CIT (Hansen and Nohria, 2004), recent empirical evidence suggests that the utilization of CIT in organizations across five global regions is surprisingly limited and it generally does not meet the expectations of the practitioner and academic communities, in spite of substantial efforts of organizations to make such technologies available/accessible to their end-users (Bajwa et al., 2008). Is it plausible that CIT use may not have substantial impacts or lead to impacts that are not desirable to organizations? Our research focuses on addressing this research question through a large-scale macro-level investigation. 2009 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43147 http://info.wlu.ca/~wwwmath/faculty/kilgour/gdn/proceedings.htm Wilfrid Laurier University fulltext
spellingShingle Bajwa, D.
Pervan, Graham
Lewis, F.
Empirical investigation of the relationship between use and impacts of collaborative information technologies
title Empirical investigation of the relationship between use and impacts of collaborative information technologies
title_full Empirical investigation of the relationship between use and impacts of collaborative information technologies
title_fullStr Empirical investigation of the relationship between use and impacts of collaborative information technologies
title_full_unstemmed Empirical investigation of the relationship between use and impacts of collaborative information technologies
title_short Empirical investigation of the relationship between use and impacts of collaborative information technologies
title_sort empirical investigation of the relationship between use and impacts of collaborative information technologies
url http://info.wlu.ca/~wwwmath/faculty/kilgour/gdn/proceedings.htm
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43147