Information Systems Evaluation ManagementVan Grembergen, Wim Idea Group Inc (IGI), 2001. gada 1. jūl. - 336 lappuses The evaluation of IT and its business value are recently the subject of many academic and business discussions, as business managers, management consultants and researchers regularly question whether and how the contribution of IT to business performance can be evaluated effectively. Investments in IT are growing extensively and business managers worry about the fact that the benefits of IT investments might not be as high as expected. This phenomenon is often called the IT investment paradox or the IT Black Hole: larges sums are invested in IT that seem to be swallowed by a large black hole without rendering many returns. Information Systems Evaluation Management discusses these issues among others, through its presentation of the most current research in the field of IS evaluation. It is an area of study that touches upon a variety of types of businesses and organization ? essentially all those who involve IT in their business practices. |
No grāmatas satura
1.5. rezultāts no 37.
... ............ x Chapter 1. Perceived Value and Technology Adoption Across Four End User Groups ...................................................................................1 Jaak Jurison, Fordham University, USA Chapter 2.
... adoption in the long run based on initial adoption rates and userperceptions oftechnology. Chapter 2 entitled, A Case Study Evaluation of the Use of the Viable SystemModelinInformation SystemsDevelopment by P. KawalekofUniversity of ...
... adopted by many researchers to providemore validalternativesto IS evaluations and discusses these alternatives. Chapter 11 entitled, Expanding Our View of Information Systems Success by Barbara Ann Sherman and G. Lawrence Sanders of ...
... find the timely researchfindings and casestudies an excellentstarting pointfordiscussion orsupplements to their research. IRM Press January 2002 Chapter 1 Perceived Value and Technology Adoption Across Four End xiv.
... adoption by four categories of end users: engineering managers, project engineers, professionals, and secretaries. The data indicate a substantial variance across time, user categories, and applications in terms of adoption rates and ...
Saturs
1 | |
2 | |
17 | |
An Empirical Study Based on Q Methodology | 35 |
Chapter 4 Measuring the Financial Benefits of IT Investments on Coordination | 54 |
Chapter 5 A Benefits Realization Approach to IT Investments | 75 |
accountability | 78 |
action | 92 |
Chapter 13 An Information System for Monitoring of Power Quality Disturbances | 218 |
a priori information | 223 |
Chapter 14 Exploring the Role of Expectations in Defining Stakeholders Evaluations of IS Quality | 231 |
Chapter 15 Research on ISIT Investment Evaluation and Benefits Realization in Australia | 244 |
A Post Modernist Perspective | 255 |
Chapter 17 Designing and Implementing an IT Evaluation Program | 274 |
associated target values | 277 |
adequacy of the measures | 278 |
Chapter 6 The IT Evaluation and Benefits Management Life Cycle | 101 |
active realisation of benefits | 104 |
Chapter 7 Identifying the Contribution of ITIS Infrastructure to Manufacturing Agility | 118 |
APS Advanced Planning and Scheduling | 120 |
agile manufacturing | 122 |
Chapter 8 Defining Meaningful Measures of IT Productivity With the Balanced Scorecard | 132 |
Chapter 9 Conceptual Model for MIS Flexibility Evaluation | 146 |
Chapter 10 A Review of Research Issues in Evaluation of Information Systems | 167 |
Chapter 11 Expanding Our View of Information Systems Success | 195 |
An Exploratory Study | 208 |
Chapter 18 A Framework to Evaluate the Informatization Level | 287 |
architecture | 290 |
A Human Resource Forecasting Model for the Royal Netherlands Navy | 299 |
Chapter 20 Towards a Model for Architectural Coordination of Business and IT Perspective | 311 |
About the Editor | 318 |
Index | 319 |
E | 320 |
K | 321 |
Q | 322 |