Journal of International Technology and Information Management
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Previous research has focused on a number of important variables that can influence the observed payoffs from information systems investments. In the current investigation conducted in the spring of 2002, personal, on-site interviews were conducted in 138 small and medium sized businesses. Vendor involvement in systems development was less related to systems cost than previously. Unfortunately, vendor involvement was unrelated to any of the four measures of systems success in the entire sample. Further analysis revealed a strong relationship between information system generation and payoffs. Specifically, there appeared to be a point of diminishing return with subsequent generations of information technology.
Recommended Citation
Evans, Gerald E. and Morton, Neil
(2004)
"Empirical Evidence of Diminishing Payoff from Successive Generations of Information Systems,"
Journal of International Technology and Information Management: Vol. 13:
Iss.
3, Article 5.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.58729/1941-6679.1196
Available at:
https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/jitim/vol13/iss3/5
Included in
Business Intelligence Commons, E-Commerce Commons, Management Information Systems Commons, Management Sciences and Quantitative Methods Commons, Operational Research Commons, Technology and Innovation Commons